Finance

Naira Crashes Against Dollar at Black Market

  • Naira Crashes Against Dollar at Black Market

The naira weakened by one per cent on the black market on Thursday to 370 against the United States dollar, its weakest since August 2017.

Traders said some black market outlets were hoarding dollars, fearing a recent sharp fall in oil prices could lead to a shortage of the US currency, according to a report by Reuters on Thursday.

Global prices of oil, Nigeria’s chief export, have dropped more than 20 per cent this month. Traders now fear that the Central Bank of Nigeria may not have enough reserves to defend the currency against a possible further weakening of oil prices as foreign investors have been pulling money out of Nigerian assets.

“There’s no new investment coming in and oil prices have been dropping, so investors are watching while some are exiting,” one trader said.

The central bank has been using up foreign exchange reserves to keep the naira stable, spending $2.2bn in October to prop up the currency as foreign investors have also left the market in favour of rising interest rates in developed economies.

The CBN data released on Thursday showed that the nation’s foreign reserves stood at $41.9bn as of November 27, down 12.3 per cent from a peak of $47.8bn reached in June.

Investors have also been pulling out funds from equities. On Thursday, the benchmark stock index fell by 1.33 per cent to 30,611 basis points.

The naira also weakened on the over-the-counter market where it is traded by banks. It was exchanged for between 364 and 364.50 to the dollar on Thursday, compared to 363 a week earlier. At forex bureau, it was quoted at 366 per dollar, while a unit fetched 306.30 on the official market.

The central bank has kept the official rate stable at N306.30/$1 for over a year by frequently intervening in the market.

The CBN on Tuesday said it intervened in the wholesale segment of the foreign exchange market, with $100m to dealers in that window.

In the latest intervention, it said it also made interventions of $55m each in the Small and Medium Enterprises and invisibles segments to meet the needs of customers.

Samed Olukoya

Is the CEO and Founder of Investors King Limited. He is a seasoned foreign exchange research analyst and a published author on Yahoo Finance, Business Insider, Nasdaq, Entrepreneur.com, Investorplace, and other prominent platforms. With over two decades of experience in global financial markets, Olukoya is well-recognized in the industry.

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