After trading on Thursday the dollar was quoted at N469.50
compared to N464.67 quoted since May 31, 2023, I&E window, data from the
FMDQ indicated.
The local currency further weakened against the dollar on
Thursday, losing 0.39 percent (N3) at the parallel market, also known as black
market.
During the trading session on Thursday the dollar was quoted
at the rate of N763 as against N760 on Wednesday.
The naira depreciation followed strong demand for dollars by
individuals for travel allowances and school fees.
Naira has since last week steadied at N464.67 per dollar at
the Investors and Exporters forex window despite a decline in the market
liquidity on Wednesday.
Most currency traders who participated at the foreign
exchange auction on Wednesday maintained bids between N460/$1, lower and
N467/$1, higher bid.
The daily foreign exchange market liquidity declined by
24.57 percent to $140.31 million on Wednesday from $186.02 million recorded on
Tuesday, data from the FMDQ indicated.
President Bola Ahmed Tinubu had in his inaugural speech on
May 29, 2023 signalled plans for a single exchange rate. He said monetary
policy needs thorough house cleaning and that the Central Bank must work
towards a unified exchange rate.
This will direct funds away from arbitrage into meaningful
investment in the plant, equipment and jobs that power the real economy.
“The naira volatility has underpinned our slow economic
growth and fuelled an inefficient informal market,” Aminu Gwadabe, national
president, Association of Bureau De Change Operators of Nigeria (ABCON).
Multiple exchange rates he said are ground and encourage
illegal economic behaviour for rent seeking, currency substitution and
hoarding, adding that the lack of unified exchange rates has acute shortages in
the retail end sector of the market where the spikes and volatility is most
pervasive.
“We as licensed retail exchange Business believe the
unification will lead to a true market price discovery and enhance liquidity in
our sub sector.
“To this end we advise the new president to embrace
securitization of diaspora remittances by leveraging on the BDCs sub-sector as
the most potent and effective transmission mechanisms of monetary policies in
the retail end sector of the market,” Gwadabe said.