The naira fell against the dollar at the
interbank foreign exchange market to an all-time low of 334.50 on
Wednesday, a day after the Central Bank of Nigeria’s Monetary Policy
Committee hiked interest rates to lure foreign investors back into local
assets.
The naira had closed at 310 against the interbank market on Tuesday.
About $10m was traded at the new record low, Reuters reported.
Foreign exchange traders said investors
were pushing the currency lower to test the limit of how far it could
fall, given a spread of almost 12 per cent between the official and
black market naira rates.
“If we have more people trying to buy
the naira then it should strengthen. I think we will keep seeing the
trickles … I don’t think we will see large inflows until the
fundamentals of the economy improves,” one trader told Reuters.
Economic analysts said the fall in the
value of the naira against the dollar at the interbank market had
nothing to do with the increase in the Monetary Policy Rate.
A currency analyst at Ecobank Nigeria,
Mr. Kunle Ezun, said the exchange rate was reacting to the interplay of
demand and supply at the interbank market.
He said, “This is what the interbank
forex market really wants, that is, a situation where only the forces of
demand and supply will determine price. So far, the CBN has not
intervened this week. The rate at the interbank market today has nothing
to do with the increase in the MPR.
Ezun said a depreciating naira might
attract some foreign portfolio investors into the economy but would
cause higher inflation in coming months.
“There is no shortcut. Rising inflation will affect consumer demand and the value of the naira,” he added,
An expert and Partner, Transaction
Advisory Services, Ernst and Young Nigeria, Mr. Bisi Sanda, said the
CBN’s Monetary Policy Committee should have reduced the interest rate in
order to stimulate economic growth, instead of increasing the MPR.
He said, “The inflation we are
experiencing is not caused by a shift in demand curve, but a shift in
the supply curve. Instead of hiking the interest rate, we should have
reduced it in order to stimulate growth through increased spending.
The voting pattern at the MPC shows that not all the members are actually in support of the increase in the interest rate.”
According to the Chief Executive
Officer, Cowry Assets Management Limited, Mr. Johnson Chuwkwu, the CBN
needs to act fast and restore confidence back to the market.
This, he said, could be done by ensuring that the exchange rate stability is achieved as soon as possible.
Chukwu said, “As it is, there is no
amount of depreciation or devaluation that happens that will give
foreign portfolio investors confidence. They want to see stability. They
want to be able to predict the naira.
Once there is stability, confidence will
return. The CBN may do this by accessing a lifeline from the
International Monetary Policy Committee.”



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