This year CBN spent 11 billion dollars on forex
The Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) has spent $11.3 billion in
foreign exchange interventions in the various segments of the interbank
market in from January to December 2018.
The interventions, as released by the CBN from time to time and
computed by a Daily Trust correspondent, showed that the apex bank spent
$1.197bn in January, $951.4 million in February and $1.180bn in March
2018.
The second quarter had $3.7bn: in April CBN injected $1bn; $1.2bn in May and $1.5bn in June.
In the third quarter, CBN injected $2.2bn. There were $550m in
July, $1.2bn in August and $420m in September. The fourth quarter, still
running has seen $2bn intervention. The apex bank intervened with $210m
in October, $1.3bn in November, and so far $500m this month.
On January 12, when the CBN commenced the forex interventions for
2018 in the inter-bank Foreign Exchange Market with $262.5m, the naira
exchanged at N359/$1 at the street market and N305/$1 at the CBN rate.
As at this week, it exchanged at 366/$1 at the street market and
306.8/$1 as the CBN rate.
The CBN interventions were in favour of the agricultural, airlines,
petroleum products and raw materials and machinery sectors. Also,
invisibles such as tuition fees, medical payments and Basic Travel
Allowance (BTA), among others got CBN interventions.
The bank has injected a total of $24.4bn into the interbank segment
of the forex market since it commenced its intervention in February
2017, the figures showed.
From the forex intervention breakdown, CBN has largely helped in
eliminating the pressure on the FX market, ensured exchange rate
stability and eliminated currency speculators.
According to the weekly forex sales from CBN between February 21,
2017, and August 8 this year, the bank has sold the greenback to
authorised dealers in 109 sessions.
The analysis of the dollar sales further showed that in 2017 alone, the bank intervened with a total of $15.043 billion.
However, Nigeria’s external reserves continued its decline as
figures released by the CBN recently showed that it has fallen to
$42.6bn from a peak of $48bn.
Reacting to this, the Head of Research at FSDH, Ayodele Akinyunmi,
said the decline was due to “foreign investors’ pull-back from the
Nigerian market and the increase in demand at the foreign exchange
market.”
“The favourable crude oil price offers support to the accretion
to the external reserves in the short-term, despite the slowdown in
foreign capital inflows,” Akinyunmi noted.
He further stated that if global oil price dropped significantly
below $60 per barrel, the Federal Government will be forced to
reconsider its oil price benchmark for the 2019 budget estimates.
With the current benchmark pegged at $61, FSDH said, “Saudi Arabia
needs prices to be at $80/barrel, while Russia needs prices to stay
above $60 to have an advanced budget.”
FSDH Research notes that the crude oil market developments in 2018 and 2019 appear better than in 2017.
“Despite these fairly positive developments, we are aware that
the crude oil market is very volatile, therefore it is crucial to learn
from the events that happened in 2014 through to 2017 in order to take
proactive measures against unwarranted economic crisis in Nigeria,” it warned.
FSDH added: “Government at all levels must intensify efforts to implement policies that will grow the non-oil sectors of the economy.”
Falling oil price risky for economy – LCCI
Meanwhile, the Director General, Lagos Chamber of Commerce and
Industry (LCCI), Muda Yusuf has said that declining global oil price
poses a major risk to the Federal Government’s economic projections for
the 2019 fiscal year and could impact adversely on its Medium-Term
Expenditure Framework (MTEF).
The Federal Government had predicated its 2019-2021 MTEF on $60 per
barrel. This is against data from the Organisation of Petroleum
Exporting Countries (OPEC) which showed that oil prices were trending
down at $59.96 per barrel on November 29 from $88 per barrel, one month
ago.
According to him, “There are fears that the sharp fall in oil
prices if sustained could lead to a shortage of the US dollars as
capital flow reversals intensify, as oil price weakens.
“As foreign reserves come under pressure, there are worries
that the capacity of the CBN to sustain the current levels of
intervention in the foreign exchange market will be tested. Reserves
currently stand at $42bn, down from $48bn five months ago,” Yusuf stated.
He noted that the improvement in liquidity and relative stability
in foreign exchange market witnessed by businesses in 2018 will come
under threats due to declining receipts from oil.
Yusuf also noted that despite sustained efforts by government to
improve the business environment, Foreign Direct Investment inflows
remain stagnated.
“Given the challenging economic conditions, key policy reforms
would be imperative to support and sustain the stability of the
macroeconomic environment,” he said.
He listed the actions to include foreign exchange management
framework that reflects the market fundamentals, the acceleration of the
economic diversification agenda, normalisation of Lagos ports
environment, and the oil and gas sector reform, especially the Petroleum
Industry Bill.
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