Dollar supply in the official foreign exchange market reached a substantial sum of $7.3bn in the months of March and April, findings shows.
This is as the naira rebounded against the United States
dollar to N1,390 per dollar at the official market and steadied at 1,340/$ at
the parallel market, popularly called the black market on Monday.
According to data sourced from the FMDQ Security Exchange,
forex sales data showed that there was improved liquidity in the market as
$4.7bn transaction was sold in March.
However, FX sales reduced by 51 per cent month-on-month to
$2.5bn coinciding with the observed naira depreciation in April.
Bureau De Change operators at Wuse Zone 4 said they bought
at N1,310 and sold at N1,340 leaving a profit margin of N30.
This means the rate remained at the amount quoted on Monday.
Malam Yahu, a trader said, “The naira remained as it was on
Monday, trading at N1,340. We buy at N1, 310 and our profit is just N30.
Nothing really caused the stagnant rate. That’s just how the market went today.
We wait to see what tomorrow and next.”
At the official market known as the Nigerian Autonomous
Foreign Exchange Market, the naira appreciated by N29 or 2.1 per cent to N1,390
per dollar, from N1,419 per dollar recorded on Monday, the lowest since March
13, 2024.
The naira had depreciated following slowing inflows
occasioned by the withdrawal of funds by Foreign Portfolio Investment.
The intraday high closed at N1,450 on Tuesday from N1,451
per dollar on Monday. The intraday low also depreciated to N1,200 on Tuesday as
against N1,060 on Monday and closed on Friday at NAFEM, data from the FMDQ
Securities Exchange indicated.
Dollars supplied by willing buyers and willing sellers
appreciated by 34.4 per cent or $77.53m to $225.36m from $147.83m recorded on
Monday.
Governor of the Central Bank of Nigeria, Olayemi Cardoso, at
various fora had emphasised the critical need to attract inflows to maintain
liquidity in the foreign exchange market and stabilise the exchange rate.
He emphasised the importance of managing exchange rates to
address inflationary pressures and ensure both price stability and sustained
long-term economic growth.
“Failure to tame inflationary pressure using the exchange
rate channel may jeopardize not only price stability but also long-term
growth.”