Categories
AFNewsNG Logo
Economy Special Report

New Naira to dollar exchange rate on the parallel market hits all time high

chuks oti

Sep 15, 2020

The naira on Monday fell by 1.09 per cent to N460 on the parallel market. The naira decline followed President Muhammadu's directive to the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) to stop dollar sales for food and fertiliser imports.

READ ALSO: Pastra Arinze Etie Explains How Governor Otti is Ending Revenue Leakages in Abia State

On the official market supported by the CBN, the naira traded at N381 to the dollar, while it was quoted at N385.83 naira on the spot market yesterday.

READ ALSO: How Trump's Threat Triggered N2.8 Trillion Stock Market Crash In Nigeria - Investors Panic As Confidence Plummets

Buhari last Thursday directed the CBN to stop selling foreign exchange for those imports, similar to an order issued last year.

READ ALSO: Bring Back Cashless Policy, Naira Will Increase Value - Yul Edochie Begs Tinubu

Nigeria faces its worst economic crisis in four decades triggered by an oil price crash induced by the novel coronavirus pandemic. The crisis has slashed government revenue, weakened the currency and created large financing gap for the economy.

READ ALSO: 7 Online Money Traps Young Nigerians Are Falling Into

A trader attributed the high dollar demand in the parallel market to importers who have to make payments to bring in goods for end-of-year sales.

READ ALSO: Grimsby 2-2 Manchester United (Pens: 12-11) - Bryan Mbeumo misses key penalty as United crash out of Carabao Cup

The naira had firmed sharply two weeks ago on the parallel market after the CBN resumed dollar sales to individuals and investors to clear their demand.

READ ALSO: How CBN's New Policy Will Force Banks To Instantly Refund Failed ATM Transactions

But sales have not being enough, traders say, with pressure piling up on the currency. Nigeria has spent 16.6 per cent of its dollar reserve from last year to $35.77 billion.

READ ALSO: Birthday Tribute: Hon. Chinasa Celebrates Chief James Umeh, Describes Him as Rare Gift to Humanity

Dollar liquidity dried up on the spot market after foreign investors dumped Nigerian assets following the oil price crash. However, CBN's forex sales has also been inadequate.

READ ALSO: Nigeria's Economy Set to Grow 4.7% in 2026 - Edun Projects Job-Rich, Investment-Led Growth

Credits

Related Stories

""

— chuks oti

Join the Conversation

Signed in as Member