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Naira falls at black market, exchange rate hits N415.95 at NAFEX during trading

Dollar, Exchange rate, FOREX, NAFEX market turnover drop by 59%, Naira crashes to N470/$1 as currency uncertainty worsens 

On January 29, 2021, the exchange rate at the black market where forex is traded unofficially depreciated at N480/$1. The exchange rate at the parallel market closed at N478/$1 on the previous trading day of January 27, 2021.

On the flip side, the exchange rate between the naira and the dollar appreciated closing at N394.13/$1 at the NAFEX (I&E Window) where forex is traded officially.

However, during the intraday trading, the exchange rate traded for as high as N415.95/$1, the highest intraday trading tracked by Nairametrics.

READ: Naira falls at NAFEX window, report suggests CBN is expected to devalue naira by 10%

Why Naira is depreciating

READ: CBN to prevent exporters with unrepatriated export proceeds from banking services

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The exchange rate disparity between the parallel market and the official market is about N85.87, representing a 21.8% devaluation differential.

To streamline forex supply and ensure there is enough to meet rising demand, the CBN moved to ensure strict monetary control of the forex market threatening to expel exporters who refuse to remit foreign exchange proceeds in the NAFEX market. It also warned against paying diaspora remittances in naira. 

The CBN may have also confirmed the forex pressures businesses are facing in its monetary policy communique of January 26, 2020, when it cited it as a reason for the weak purchasing managers index.

“This weak performance was attributed to the resurgence of the pandemic, foreign exchange pressures, increased costs of production, a general increase in prices and decline in economic activities.”

READ: Nigeria’s Qua Iboe crude exports resume as ExxonMobil lifts force majeure

Trading at the official NAFEX window

The Naira appreciated marginally against the dollar at the Investors and Exporters (I&E) window on Friday, closing at N394.13/$1. This represents a 20 kobo gain when compared to the N394.33/$1 that it closed on the previous trading day.

READ: FG posts 27% revenue shortfall in 2020 as budget deficit hit N6.1 trillion

Oil price steady rise

Brent crude oil price hit about $55.07 on Monday morning as US crude stockpiles decrease by about 5.2 million barrels last week. A higher crude oil draw (a decrease in crude oil inventory) is attributed to higher refining activities in the world’s largest economy.

Higher oil prices drive up Nigeria’s external reserves

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