Nigeria’s Naira gains in parallel market, Dollar supply increases

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The gap between Nigeria’s official exchange rate and the black-market level narrowed to the least in three weeks after the country’s apex bank, Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) introduced a measure to increase the supply of dollars to licensed money changers.

The difference between the two rates fell to 24% on Thursday from as much as 32% after the regulator’s announcement on November 30 that it would allow beneficiaries of remittances to be paid in dollars. The Naira has strengthened by 6% to 470 per dollar in the parallel market since Monday, according to abokifx.com, while the spot rate weakened 0.6% to 391.90.

Nigeria’s black-market Naira level is moving closer to the official exchange rate

The CBN directed banks to pay dollars to the beneficiaries of remittances from abroad via international money-transfer operators to boost supply of the U.S. currency. Recipients were paid the Naira equivalent previously. The low greenback liquidity at the official exchange window, where the central bank maintains a largely inflexible rate, has increased demand in the parallel market where the rate is freely determined.

“The directive deepened dollar supply and reduced pressures in unofficial exchange markets. At the investors and exporters forex window, the gap between demand and supply will remain wide,” said Emmanuel Adeleke, an analyst at Asset Resource Management in Lagos, South-West Nigeria.

 

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