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Naira Appreciating Against The Dollar - Politics - Nairaland

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Naira Appreciating Against The Dollar by adeyemik: 2:34pm On Aug 03, 2015
The Nigeria Naira is gradually appreciating against the dollar. A dollar now goes for NGN207 at the parallel (black) market in Abuja. As at last Last Wednesday, the dollar sells for NGN225. The new CBN policy is forcing all the Dollar hoarders to flood the market with dollar causing the Naira to appreciate.

If the market continue at this rate, the dollar may sell for NGN180 before the end of the week. We wait and see.
Re: Naira Appreciating Against The Dollar by VickyRotex(f): 2:39pm On Aug 03, 2015
Lovely improvement.

Just checked Oanda, its about 199 Naira.
Re: Naira Appreciating Against The Dollar by shaiba(f): 2:40pm On Aug 03, 2015
Good news. Just got a call that confirmed this. Good mop up of dollars only that it has a negative effect on import/exports.

2 Likes

Re: Naira Appreciating Against The Dollar by skyface00(m): 2:42pm On Aug 03, 2015
Best news
Re: Naira Appreciating Against The Dollar by wachakuta(m): 2:46pm On Aug 03, 2015
Do u know dat he wailing wailers shameless kicked against dis news 2day? Infact one foolish member of d NAWW opened a thread on NL to insult our presido on dis moves....

As I said b4 all dis wailing wailers are Enemys of progress.. they don't want this nation to move forward at all

4 Likes

Re: Naira Appreciating Against The Dollar by Papishi(m): 2:48pm On Aug 03, 2015
Re: Naira Appreciating Against The Dollar by adeyemik: 2:52pm On Aug 03, 2015
shaiba:
Good news. Just got a call that confirmed this. Good mop up of dollars only that it has a negative effect on import/exports.

Nigeria being an import dependant economy, the policy will bring the price of imported goods down. The effect will be for on export.
Re: Naira Appreciating Against The Dollar by atlwireles: 2:52pm On Aug 03, 2015
http://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2015-08-02/no-access-to-dollars-imperils-nigeria-retailers-stokes-prices

Mojeed Jamiu is cutting jobs and raising prices to prevent his furniture and clothing store in Lagos from closing after Central Bank of Nigeria Governor Godwin Emefiele restricted foreign currency supply for some imports.

Emefiele in June banned importers from using official foreign-currency channels leaving many to use illegal markets for about 40 categories of goods, including furniture, textiles and rice, the latest in a series of controls since December that have dried up dollar supplies in Africa’s biggest economy and oil producer.

Due to a dearth of local manufacturing, companies like Jamiu’s FM Best Bargain Ltd. have no choice but to import goods.
“One must survive,” the 47-year-old father of three said in low tone in one of his show rooms in a four-story building on a busy road in the Lagos district of Ogba. “Businesses will close shop if you don’t know where to get the next dollars and at what cost. Jobs that were done by two people, we now engage one person.”

Emefiele’s push to cut imports is clashing with his mandate to keep prices in check as the economy struggles to cope with a 50 percent fall in Brent crude prices over the past year. While the curbs have kept the naira almost unmoved on the official interbank market at 199 per dollar since March, parallel rates on the black market have dropped to record lows of 240 per dollar as businesses buy foreign currency where they can.

Rising Inflation
The parallel rate may still weaken a further 20 percent within two weeks if the restrictions continue, said Aminu Gwadabe, president of the Association of Bureaus de Change of Nigeria.
Inflation accelerated 9.2 percent in June, quickening for the seventh straight month to take the rate beyond the central bank’s target band of 6 percent to 9 percent.

With 21 percent of all Nigeria’s imports affected by the restrictions, the pace of price increases will probably remain above the policy maker’s goal for the rest of the year, according to Standard Bank Group Ltd., Africa’s biggest lender.
Companies being hurt by the policy can start producing the goods they are selling, Ibrahim Mu’azu, a central bank spokesman, said by phone from the capital, Abuja. “I don’t think the restriction will cause inflation or unemployment.”

Domestic businesses don’t yet have the capacity to produce those goods and the central bank’s decision will cause unemployment, said Muda Yusuf, chief executive officer of the Lagos Chamber of Commerce and Industry.

Black-Market Pressure

Nigeria’s unemployment rate rose to 8.2 percent in the second quarter from 7.5 percent in first quarter, the nation’s statistics bureau said in statement on its Twitter account. The chamber is planning to carry out a study of the impact on its members, Yusuf said.
“The restricted items account for as much as $6 billion of goods imported in the country every quarter and it’s putting pressure on naira on the streets,” Gwadabe said.

Nigeria’s manufacturing industry contracted by 0.7 percent in the first quarter of 2015, after expanding 15.4 percent in the same quarter a year earlier. While the Lagos chamber has met with central bank officials, who promised to review the policy, there hasn’t been any change.
The regulator said it is waiting for President Muhammadu Buhari to detail his economic plans. That’s on hold until September, when Buhari said he will appoint his cabinet. Monetary policy remains “handicapped” without fiscal guidance, Emefiele told reporters on June 24. The central bank may increase the list of items that can’t be imported, Emefiele was cited as saying in an interview with Lagos-based ThisDay newspaper on Monday.

An official devaluation of the naira is inevitable and it’s best for Nigeria to take the hit now, Yusuf said.
“It’s better to allow the naira to find its level so that all of us can have peace,” he said.
Re: Naira Appreciating Against The Dollar by Adeyinka12(m): 2:57pm On Aug 03, 2015
Thank God . I don't mind if it equal 1naira to 1 dollar
Re: Naira Appreciating Against The Dollar by eleven(m): 2:58pm On Aug 03, 2015
While you are busy celebrating this short term effect on the Naira, please take some time to also reflect on the long term implications on the economy. For me this move is cosmetics with short term positive effects on the Naira, main question is is this policy sustainable in the long run? Will our economy be better for it in the long run? I honestly don't think so but time again will tell.
Re: Naira Appreciating Against The Dollar by FOLYKAZE(m): 3:01pm On Aug 03, 2015
Now I see the reason Buhari did not sack the CBN governor
Re: Naira Appreciating Against The Dollar by UncleJudax(m): 3:08pm On Aug 03, 2015
FOLYKAZE:
Now I see the reason Buhari did not sack the CBN governor
Lol. As though he has the constitutional power to SACK him.
Re: Naira Appreciating Against The Dollar by FOLYKAZE(m): 3:10pm On Aug 03, 2015
UncleJudax:

Lol. As though he has the power to SACK him.

He can use the one GEJ used

2 Likes

Re: Naira Appreciating Against The Dollar by UncleJudax(m): 3:13pm On Aug 03, 2015
FOLYKAZE:


He can use the one GEJ used
I think GEJ used 'the terminal leave' provision. Emefile still has some three years.

So, do the maths. shocked
Re: Naira Appreciating Against The Dollar by zik4ever: 3:38pm On Aug 03, 2015
Commercial banks inNigeria sitting on as much as one billion dollars in their vaults which they cannot use should expect no help from the Central Bank, Governor Godwin Emefiele told Business-Day at the weekend.

For some of the banks, panic has already set in, but the apex bank says the commercial banks got into the predicament by choice and they would have to dig themselves out of the pit without help.

“Nigerian banks today are awash in dollar cash they cannot bring to the Central Bank because if the banks bring it to us, what is the Central Bank going to do with cash?” the governor asked. “If we were dealing with cash in naira, the banks are allowed to bring excess naira cash to the Central Bank and when they do this, we credit their account.

“ We cannot do the same for foreign currencies. It is what we call non-earning asset in banking and it is up to the banks to manage it.

“ The banks sent out circulars to their customers at the end of last week, saying they will no longer accept foreign currency deposits in cash and this movehas t he full support of the Central Bank.

Speaking in a wide ranging interview, his first sit-down and elaborate chat with a Nigerian newspaper, the governor said, “what we have started to see is that as a result of the speculative activities, as a result of round tripping activities, people haresorted to just the business of converting their naira into dollar, into what we call currency substitution.

“ Today, there is a large volume of foreign currency sitting in the vaults of the banks and the banks cannot handle it because it useless to them.”
The apex bank governor blamed the situation on Nigerians who have abandoned their own national currency, in pursuit of the dollar and the pound sterling.

He said, “I wonder why people will not have faith in their country, why people will want to take advantage of the situation that we are in as a nation to begin to speculatively attack the currency.

“If you and I and all other Nigerians prefer to store our values in the dollar or pounds, 170 million people store up their values in dollars, pound, Yuan, the Chinese currency, there will be chaos and it means we do not have faith in our local tender, it means you will have spiraling exchange rate, it means you will not have any reserves.”

Emefiele acknowledged that the situation the banks face today arose from the liberty given to bank customers to maintain domiciliary accounts in foreign exchange but he said this has been abused massively.

“I am not so sure how the policy of domiciliary accounts came about in Nigeria”, he said. “But I do know that this was meant to target exporters. For example if you are an exporter and you wanted to receive the proceeds of your export, this was an added incentive to encourage exporters to repatriate their foreign exchange proceeds.

“So that was how the issue of domiciliary account came into being. But we have seen every and anybody go to their banks, as they open a naira
account they also open a domiciliary account.

“What is the purpose? It is for them to convert naira into dollar cash and begin to store them or to collect illicit money and they think the best way to hide it is to open domiciliary account and they go on to deposit cash into their accounts.”
http://businessdayonline.com/2015/08/banks-sit-on-over-1bn-they-cant-use/#.Vb82szNw1it

3 Likes

Re: Naira Appreciating Against The Dollar by badttrader(m): 4:01pm On Aug 03, 2015
zik4ever:
Commercial banks inNigeria sitting on as much as one billion dollars in their vaults which they cannot use should expect no help from the Central Bank, Governor Godwin Emefiele told Business-Day at the weekend.

For some of the banks, panic has already set in, but the apex bank says the commercial banks got into the predicament by choice and they would have to dig themselves out of the pit without help.

“Nigerian banks today are awash in dollar cash they cannot bring to the Central Bank because if the banks bring it to us, what is the Central Bank going to do with cash?” the governor asked. “If we were dealing with cash in naira, the banks are allowed to bring excess naira cash to the Central Bank and when they do this, we credit their account.

“ We cannot do the same for foreign currencies. It is what we call non-earning asset in banking and it is up to the banks to manage it.

“ The banks sent out circulars to their customers at the end of last week, saying they will no longer accept foreign currency deposits in cash and this movehas t he full support of the Central Bank.

Speaking in a wide ranging interview, his first sit-down and elaborate chat with a Nigerian newspaper, the governor said, “what we have started to see is that as a result of the speculative activities, as a result of round tripping activities, people haresorted to just the business of converting their naira into dollar, into what we call currency substitution.

“ Today, there is a large volume of foreign currency sitting in the vaults of the banks and the banks cannot handle it because it useless to them.”
The apex bank governor blamed the situation on Nigerians who have abandoned their own national currency, in pursuit of the dollar and the pound sterling.

He said, “I wonder why people will not have faith in their country, why people will want to take advantage of the situation that we are in as a nation to begin to speculatively attack the currency.

“If you and I and all other Nigerians prefer to store our values in the dollar or pounds, 170 million people store up their values in dollars, pound, Yuan, the Chinese currency, there will be chaos and it means we do not have faith in our local tender, it means you will have spiraling exchange rate, it means you will not have any reserves.”

Emefiele acknowledged that the situation the banks face today arose from the liberty given to bank customers to maintain domiciliary accounts in foreign exchange but he said this has been abused massively.

“I am not so sure how the policy of domiciliary accounts came about in Nigeria”, he said. “But I do know that this was meant to target exporters. For example if you are an exporter and you wanted to receive the proceeds of your export, this was an added incentive to encourage exporters to repatriate their foreign exchange proceeds.

“So that was how the issue of domiciliary account came into being. But we have seen every and anybody go to their banks, as they open a naira
account they also open a domiciliary account.

“What is the purpose? It is for them to convert naira into dollar cash and begin to store them or to collect illicit money and they think the best way to hide it is to open domiciliary account and they go on to deposit cash into their accounts.”
http://businessdayonline.com/2015/08/banks-sit-on-over-1bn-they-cant-use/#.Vb82szNw1it


God bless you and the CBN governor for this news.

1 Like

Re: Naira Appreciating Against The Dollar by PassingShot(m): 4:10pm On Aug 03, 2015
Just about 2 to 3 hours ago, NL pushed a negative news about the exchange rate to the FP. I understand that the source, Daily Times is credible but it's obvious that the newspaper goofed big time because that report definitely blonged in early last week. Even the paper was bashed on Twitter for that false news.

As at today, the dollar exchanges for betwen 200 and 210 naira at the parallel market.

Lalasticlala Ishilove Seun, it will be good if you will confirm this particular news and push this thread to the FP.

1 Like

Re: Naira Appreciating Against The Dollar by adeyemik: 4:19pm On Aug 03, 2015
Dailytimes tried fooling Nigerians. We need to know the people behind the resuscitation of the news paper. When I saw the news on Daily times, I was alarmed, not knowing the news was fake.

1 Like

Re: Naira Appreciating Against The Dollar by RockMaxi: 4:22pm On Aug 03, 2015
eleven:
While you are busy celebrating this short term effect on the Naira, please take some time to also reflect on the long term implications on the economy. For me this move is cosmetics with short term positive effects on the Naira, main question is is this policy sustainable in the long run? Will our economy be better for it in the long run? I honestly don't think so but time again will tell.



We are so used to illegalities that seeing things done legally make us to cringe. If you want to do business with forex, go through the legal means and fill the right forms. Simple.

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