As the Central Bank of Nigeria, CBN, sustained its efforts to support naira exchange rate by N71.6 billion mop-up exercise, the money market observed the weekend with less liquidity in circulation.
The action, executed through the treasury bills auction of 195-day instrument, also gave the holders an 18 per cent interest. Meanwhile, the interbank lending instruments- Open Buy Back (OBB) and Overnight RATES remained high, at 18.17 per cent and 20 per cent respectively, but lower than last week’s record.
Optimism among traders has however rebounded over tapered interbank rates this week, as signal for the disbursement of July’s budgetary allocation to agencies of government is strong.
A forex trader said:“Hopefully, the financial system will get the July allocations as the weekly activity resumes. That will help to moderate the interbank lending rates, which has been high. This will only last if there is no big intervention from the regulators again.”
At the money market, the Naira on Friday continued its crash reaching N412 per dollar at the parallel market.However, exchange rate firmed up at N314.95 per dollar at the interbank market at the close of trading, a more than N1 gain when compared with N316.57/$ it closed on Thursday.
The three-day pressure, which some money changers have attributed to difficulty in accessing forex from the banned banks, tightened dollar supply.
On Thursday, the naira closed at 409 per dollar on the parallel market. On the interbank market it traded at 315 compared with 305 the previous day.
Findings showed that sentiments are now driving the exchange rates over the ongoing impasse between banks and the regulator as increased demand for the dollar that are not matched with supply and few lenders in the market aggravate price bargain.
“The suspension of some banks from transaction in the forex market has really increased pressure on the market,” the President of bureau de change operators, Aminu Gwadabe, said.
But another trader said that the market will get over the initial sentiment, even if the suspension lasts more than expected, because the regulator will find a way of funding the market.
The naira had earlier in the month touched N400 per dollar at the roadside market and strengthened to between N393 and N397.