
The Central Bank of
Nigeria (CBN) wednesday disclosed plans to hold a special intervention
in the Bureau de Change (BDC) segment of the market thursday.
This is just as findings showed that the
country’s external reserves increased by $21 million to $30.318 billion
as of April 4, compared to $30.297 billion on March 31.
Disclosing this in Abuja, wednesday CBN
spokesman, Isaac Okorafor, said the special intervention of $10,000 for
BDCs was meant to meet the upsurge in forex requests of low-end
customers, which has been on the rise in recent days.
He said the special
intervention did not in any way contradict the CBN’s newly amended sale
policy of selling not more than $10,000 only to BDCs once a week.
He further explained that the
intervention arose due to the increasing demand for forex by Nigerians
to address other legitimate needs.
The CBN spokesman also disclosed to
journalists that the CBN was collating retail requests from authorised
dealers upon which sales would be finalised.
The move by the central bank is expected
to tame the rising demand for FX on the parallel market which led to
the depreciation of the naira yesterday.
The nation’s currency fell to N397 to the dollar yesterday, as against N390 the previous day.
The CBN on Tuesday fulfilled its commitment to sell $10,000 to BDCs in line with its new policy.
In addition, auhorised FX dealers fully
subscribed to the $150 million offered by the CBN at its auction on the
interbank wholesale window on Tuesday.
Also, the central bank revealed
Tuesday that it will offer dollar forwards to be delivered within two
months to offset a backlog of matured foreign exchange obligations to
manufacturers, airlines, fuel importers and agriculture businesses.
The bank had last Monday offered $150
million wholesale forwards to banks and said it also released $90
million for invisible transactions to ensure liquidity in the forex
market.
The CBN, since February 21, has made
over 10 offers in the interbank wholesale market ranging from $100
million to $500million per auction. The last three auctions ranging from
$100million to $150 million were fully subscribed.
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