The Naira recovery against dollar to begin February 2021
The Central
Bank of Nigeria (CBN) has said the Nigerian naira is expected to begin recovery
against the dollar and other global currencies from February 2021 according to
the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) .
This was
contained in the latest CBN Business Expectation Survey released by its
Statistics Department.
The survey
respondent firms, however, envisage higher interest rates from January, March
till June 2021.
According to
the report, the respondent firms said although the naira has for several months
depreciated against the dollar, the local currency appreciation against the
greenback will start from February 2021 till July same year.
The naira
was a month ago exchanging at N500/$ at the parallel market before it
appreciated to N465/$ at the weekend. The local currency has, however, remained
stable at N379/$ on the CBN’s official rate, a check at the apex bank’s website
showed.
The December
2020 Business Expectations Survey was conducted online from December 7 to 11,
2020, with a sample size of 1,050 businesses nationwide.
A response
rate of 91.3 per cent was achieved and the sample covered agriculture/services,
manufacturing, wholesale/retail trade, and construction sectors. The
respondents were made up of small, medium, and large corporations covering both
import-oriented and export-oriented businesses.
On the state
of the naira, Managing Director, Financial Derivatives Company Limited,
Bismarck Rewane, said the local currency has lost over 26.72 per cent of its
value so far in 2020.
He
attributed naira’s continued decline to a heightened forex supply shortage,
demand pressure, and rationing.
Rewane noted
that for the naira rates to converge would require the adoption of a fully
floating exchange rate system determined by the forces of demand and supply.
Also, the
International Monetary Fund (IMF) had called for unified exchange rate for the
naira to promote growth and attractive foreign capital.
The CBN had
last month devalued the naira by N6 to a dollar. The naira devaluation brought
the local currency closer to the exchange rate unification agenda of the apex
bank as recommended by the International Monetary Fund (IMF) and World Bank.
In a weekly
exchange rate for disbursement of proceeds of International Money Transfer
Service Operators (IMTOs) for November 30, 2020, all authorised dealers,
Bureaux De Change and Service Providers were advised to add N6 across all
rates.
No comments