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Naira falls to intra-day high N1,515/$1 in official market, worst in 6 weeks

The exchange rate between the naira and the dollar reached an intra-day high of N1,515 on Monday, according to data from FMDQ, where currencies are traded officially.

This represents the worst intra-day high in nearly two months as Nigeria continues to grapple with demand pressures and a globally stronger dollar.

The last time the intra-day high surpassed the N1,500 mark was on March 21, 2024, when it closed at N1,598/$1. Since then, it has traded below N1,500.

The intra-day high represents the highest price at which the dollar traded against the naira on the official market during a single day of trading. The exchange rate typically fluctuates throughout the day

Recommended reading: Naira at 7th week low with U.S inflation data insight

What the data is saying

At the official NAFEM, the naira closed trading at an exchange rate of N1,478.11/$1, compared to N1,466.31 recorded a day earlier.

The intra-day low, which is the lowest rate quoted during the day, was N1,301/$1, stronger than the N1,322/$1 recorded a day earlier. As stated, the intra-day high reached N1,515, compared to N1,490/$1 recorded a day earlier.

Meanwhile, as the exchange rate weakened, daily turnover surged to $217.6 million—the highest since May 2, when the market recorded $232.8 million in turnover.

The daily average turnover has been around $157 million in May, significantly lower than the $189 million achieved in the corresponding period in April.

Parallel market show demand pressures

Nairametrics also obtained quotes from parallel market operators who quoted an exchange rate of between N1,480 and N1,500, depending on whether it is a wire transfer or a cash exchange.

Nigeria continues to face rising inflation and spiraling weaker purchasing power. The recent removal of electricity subsidies has also led to higher tariffs for Band A customers, which could further exacerbate exchange rate pressures.

Recommended reading: FG’s plan to issue domestic dollar bond may pressure naira – IMF

 

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