Naira, yesterday, suffered its
biggest daily depreciation against the dollar as it exchanged for N345 to one
dollar in the parallel market.
N20 depreciation when compared with
the closing exchange rate of N325 per dollar in the market on Friday.
Naira also depreciated by N45 against the
British pound as the parallel market exchange rate rose to N485 per pound,
yesterday, from N340 on Friday.
Bureaux de Change sources, who
confirmed the development to Vanguard, attributed the sharp depreciation to
persistent scarcity of the dollar and pound sterling in the market.
According to an Abuja-based BDC
operator, who spoke on condition of anonymity, “the market is experiencing huge
demand for dollars but there is no supply.
Even those who have dollars are not
willing to sell. The way things are going, the rate might reach N350 per dollar
before it stabilises.”
This development widened the gap
between the interbank rate and the parallel market rate to N147.53 per dollar
from N127.53 per dollar last week.
Naira has been on steady decline
since January 12, 2016, when the Central Bank of Nigeria, CBN, stopped weekly
dollar sale to BDCs. Prior to this action, naira traded at N265 per dollar in
the parallel market. Consequently, the naira has depreciated by N80 in the
parallel market since the CBN took the action.
The steady depreciation was also aggravated by
inability of the CBN to meet foreign exchange demand.
The parallel market is being bedeviled
by demand for foreign exchange from importers of the 41 items excluded from the
official market by CBN last year as well as importers of items not excluded
from the official market.
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