The acute scarcity of foreign exchange,
especially the dollar, continued on Wednesday with the naira closing at
372 against the United States currency at the parallel forex market.
Forex dealers linked the persistent fall
of the naira to panic buying of the dollar and other major
international currencies by importers, individuals and businessmen.
With the naira exchanging at 372 to the
dollar, the local currency has lost 20 per cent of its value at the
parallel market in the last 10 days.
The Central Bank of Nigeria has, however, left its official rate unchanged at N197 to the dollar at the interbank window.
The naira, which hit a record low of 352 against the greenback on Tuesday, had closed at 345 on Monday.
On Friday, the local currency fell to
338 against the US currency, a day after the Bankers’ Committee
expressed concern over the mounting foreign exchange bills for school
fees and medical bill payment.
The naira, which has been on a free fall
in the past few weeks, fell steadily at the parallel market from 310
last Monday to 335 last Thursday.
Equities stocks fell almost by two per
cent on Wednesday, hit by a major decline in cement companies’ shares,
including Dangote Cement, which accounts for the third of local bourse
capitalisation, Reuters reported.
The local bourse index dropped by 1.81 per cent to 24,070 points as investors took profits from previous gains on the stocks.
“Due to the rapid decline of the naira’s
value, some offshore investors are booking profit and selling down
their holdings,” one stockbroker said.
Shares in Dangote Cement fell by 4.11
per cent; Ashaka Cement was down by four per cent, while Cement Company
of Northern Nigeria dropped by 8.89 per cent to drag the index down.
The currency and stock markets have been
hit hard by the persistent fall in crude oil prices, Nigeria’s main
export, causing a decline in government revenues and the exit of foreign
investors from the local bourse.
A forex dealer at the international wing
of the Murtala Muhammed Airport, Lagos, Mr. Saliu Mohammed, said the
increasing demand for the greenback was overwhelming the market.
This, he said, was responsible for the naira’s free fall.
“Most individuals who sell (dollars) to
us are no longer willing; but demand is piling up,” another dealer in
Ikeja, who identified himself as Ibrahim Tukur, said.
Last month, the CBN banned dollar sales
to the BDC operators, sending the naira to a record low at the black
market, and later stopped the daily sale to the interbank market, in an
effort to conserve the external reserves, now at their lowest in more
than 11 years.
The nation realises around 90 per cent
of its foreign exchange earnings from crude oil exports. The foreign
reserves have fallen to $27.83bn as of February 12, data from the CBN
website showed.
Commenting on the development, the
Managing Director, Cowry Assets Management Limited, Mr. Johnson Chukwu,
said, “The CBN does not have the forex to manage the exchange rate
today. Unless we adjust the exchange rate, things may continue to get
worse. As it is today, the naira can no longer be a store of value,
going by the rate at which it is losing its value at the parallel
market.
“Most people are buying dollar to
store their wealth. We cannot ignore the parallel market because that is
where most people are holding their transactions. A timely intervention
by the Ministry of Finance and the CBN to give a clear guidance on how
they intend to manage the exchange rate will save the day.”