CBN hopeful Naira’ll settle at N250 per dollar
THE Central Bank of
Nigeria, CBN is “reasonably optimistic” the naira will settle at around N250 to
the U.S. dollar after an initial period of weakness following a flotation on
Monday, the bank’s governor has said in a letter to President Muhammadu Buhari.
Central Bank said on Wednesday it would begin market-driven foreign currency
trading next week, abandoning the peg of 197 naira per dollar that it has
supported for 16 months.
The naira is
expected to fall sharply when inter-bank trading begins on Monday, but the
central bank said it did not have a target for the currency and the price would
be “purely” market-driven.
The naira was trading on the black market at around
370 to the dollar on Thursday. Giving the first indication of a target,
Governor Godwin Emefiele said in a June 3 letter to Buhari — seen by Reuters —
that the central bank hopes the naira will eventually trade at around 250 per
dollar, a level the president has “approved”.
“I must assure Your Excellency
that we are indeed reasonably optimistic that at some point the rate will
settle around 250 naira,” Emefiele says in the letter. The letter, which briefs
Buhari on the foreign exchange plan announced on Wednesday, says it could take
three to four weeks to clear a $4 billion backlog of foreign exchange demand.
Buhari has for months said that he does not want the naira to be devalued, but
backed a more flexible exchange rate policy when the central bank outlined its
plans in May, without elaborating.
The presidency has not commented on the new
regime, with Buhari’s spokesman declining to comment when Reuters called on
Wednesday. The central bank could not be immediately reached for comment.
Africa’s biggest economy, which contracted by 0.4 percent in the first quarter,
faces its worst crisis in decades after the decline in oil prices since 2014
and last year’s introduction of a currency peg, which prompted a large-scale
capital flight. With a likely sharp fall for the naira, Nigerian products will
become relatively cheap and imports more expensive, which should stimulate the
domestic economy but also lift inflation.
Buhari has previously raised concerns
about the inflationary impact that a weaker currency will have on Nigeria’s
poor.
Nigeria, Africa’s largest crude exporter, has resisted devaluing its
currency for more than a year despite other major oil producers, including
Russia, Kazakhstan and Angola, allowing currencies to fall after crude prices
collapsed.
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