Players in
the retail segment of the Nigerian interbank foreign exchange (forex) market
received a $306.3 million boost from the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) on
Friday,
following bids received from forex dealers by the Bank.
This is just
as the naira appreciated by 21 kobo week-on-week to close at N360.43 kobo on
the NAFEX.
The central
bank on Friday indicated that the deals in the retail window represent requests
from the various sectors in the Secondary Market Intervention Sales (SMIS),
thereby providing a boost to the respective sectors.
The Acting
Director, Corporate Communications Department, Mr. Isaac Okorafor, revealed
that the central bank would continue to increase liquidity based on genuine
demands in the market to enhance forex stability.
He reminded
Nigerians that the CBN had kept faith with its resolve to sustain liquidity in
the forex market and that the Bank had ensured that pressures on the market
were removed by its continuous interventions.
But the naira
exchanged at an average of N364 to a dollar on the Bureau de Change (BDC)
segment at major trading points in
Lagos, Abuja, Port-Harcourt and Kano.
While
receiving his Forbes’ 2017 ‘Best of Africa Achievement’ award in Washington DC
last week, CBN Governor, Mr. Godwin Emefiele, disclosed that in the past six
months, Nigeria has seen about $10 billion in inflows through the Investors’
and Exporters’ (I & E) window.
He commended
foreign investors for showing the confidence in Nigeria once again.
“But I think
all this also is because President Muhammadu Buhari has always said that: we
had unfortunately been hit by this exogenous shock and it had resulted in
inflation and plummeting in reserves, but that we needed at some point to look
at the items Nigeria imports into the country.
“Nigeria is
a big market no doubt, 180 million people growing at an average population rate
of three per cent annually. It is certainly a big market. But then it is
important to cast our mind back and begin to ask ourselves: There was a time in
Nigeria when we produced everything we were eating.
“We were
producing rice, palm oil etc. Nigeria was the highest producer and exporter of
palm oil in the world with over 40 per cent market share sometimes in the 60s
and 70s. But unfortunately because we found oil, we decided to take things
easy. What we are saying is that: the President said we had tested this before,
we had done it before, it is not about re-inventing it again,” Emefiele
explained.

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