Tag: Naira

  • Police nab official of fake recruitment agency in Edo

    The Edo State Government says the persons behind the fake recruitment agency that defrauded over 500 job seekers in Benin City, of millions of naira, for nonexistent jobs, have been arrested by the police.

    According to the Special Adviser to the Governor on Media and Communication Strategy, Crusoe Osagie, an official of KAI Consulting, the fake recruitment agency has been arrested by the police.

    Read Also:Edo, security agencies to go after fake recruitment firm

    “The suspect, Benjamin Amachi Chukura, is a graduate of Public Administration, from Ambrose Alli University (AAU) Ekpoma.

    “He claimed that his organisation wrote a letter to Edo State Government in November 2017 seeking recognition and partnership with the state on environmental issues.

    “Chukura told security agents that KAI Environmental is a voluntary organisation operating in Delta State with about 60 workers,” Osagie said.

    The governor’s aide further said that Chukura is being interrogated by the police to explain the roles of his colleagues in the employment scam.

    The news of the employment scam broke few days ago that over 500 job seekers in Edo State were made to pay over N10 million for jobs, by KAI Consulting, which claimed that it was recruiting workers for the Edo State Ministry of Environment and Sustainability.

    But the Commissioner for Environment and Sustainability in the state, Omoua Alonge Oni-Okpaku, debunked the claim and said that all state government jobs are handled by EdoJobs, a government jobs portal.

    Media reports quoted Chukura as saying that KIA Consulting received 113 applications from applicants who paid them for training them in preparation for their recruitment into the government agency.

    He admitted that the Chief Executive officer of the agency collected about N180, 000.

    Some of the money collected from the unsuspecting job seekers include: N5,000 for Uniform; N2,000 for handout; N1,000 for Identity Card; N500 for examination fee; and another N2,000 for rank.

     

  • Naira stable at N360/$ at parallel market

    The Naira maintained N360 to the dollar at the parallel market on Monday in Lagos.

    The Nigerian currency had been trading at N360 to the dollar for four days running, while the Pound Sterling and the Euro closed at N486 and N420, respectively.

    Read Also: Naira hedges against dollar at parallel market

    Trading at the investors’ window saw the naira close at N361.40 with a turnover of N198.3 million, while it closed at N305.75 to the dollar at the CBN official window.

    The naira closed at N360 to the dollar at the Bureau De Change (BDC) window, while the Pound Sterling and the Euro closed at N486 and N420, respectively.

    Meanwhile, the naira traded at N359 across the markets in Kano, Abuja and Port Harcourt.

     

    NAN

  • Naira weakens marginally against dollar

    The Naira on Tuesday weakened marginally against the dollar at the parallel market in Lagos, the News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) reports.

    The Nigerian currency lost 50 kobo to exchange at N360 to the dollar, weaker than N359.5 traded on Monday, while the Pound Sterling and the Euro closed at N480 and N420, respectively.

    At the Bureau De Change (BDC) window, the naira was sold at N360 to the dollar, while the Pound Sterling and the Euro closed at N480 and N420, respectively.

    Trading at the investor’ window saw the naira close at N361. 13, with a transaction of N252.92 million, while the naira traded at N305.80 at the CBN window.

    Traders at the market said though the Naira lost 50 kobo to the dollar, it was still trading within the N360 band approved officially for banks and BDCs.

  • Currency swap: Naira will gain strength against dollar, says economist

    An economist, Dr Chijioke Ekechukwu, says the naira will gain strength against the dollar when the Nigeria -China currency swap takes effect.

    Ekechukwu, a former Director-General, Abuja Chamber of Commerce and Industry,  expressed the view in an interview with the News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) in Abuja.

    According to him, the exercise is expected to reduce pressure on the dollar as letters of credit and other valid payments for  imports from China will be in the Chinese currency.

    ”Foreign currency availability will no longer delay or impede importation of goods and services, especially from China,”: he said.

    Ekechukwu explained that currency swap by its nature is an agreement to exchange currency between two foreign countries or parties.

    He added that the agreement involved swapping principal and interest payments of equal value in another currency.

    ”When there is principal and interest involved, there is a borrowing.

    ”What it means to Nigeria and Nigerians is that at the agreed repayment date, we have the option to repay in the Chinese currency of renminbi (RMB) as against the U.S. dollar.

    ‘More foreign exchange in RMB will be available to the Central Bank of Nigeria to fund our importation and foreign settlement needs, especially from China,”” Ekechukwu  said.

    He, however, cautioned that the swap agreement would lead to unfavourable balance of payment for Nigeria against China.

    Ekechukwu noted that local production capacities gained recently in manufacturing, agriculture and the non-oil export might be eroded.

    According to him, the agreement is not likely to optimise  export promotion and manufacturing as local manufacturers will not be able to compete favourably with imported goods in respect of pricing.

    Nigeria and China sealed a currency- swap deal worth 2.4 billion dollars on May 4.

    The agreement was secured when President Muhammadu Buhari visited China as part of efforts to grow the country’s economy in 2016.

    According to the CBN, the deal will provide local currency liquidity between Nigerian businessmen and their Chinese counterparts. (NAN)

  • Naira closes at N362 to dollar at parallel market

    The Naira on Wednesday closed at N362 to the dollar, stronger than N363 posted on Monday at the parallel market, the News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) reports.

    The Pound Sterling and the Euro closed at N505 and N442, respectively.

    At the Bureau De Change (BDC) window, the Naira exchanged at N362 to the dollar, while the Pound Sterling and the Euro closed N504 and N436, respectively.

    Trading at the investors’ window saw the Naira close at N360.67, while it closed at the CBN window N305.7.

    Meanwhile, the foreign exchange market witnessed another milestone with the unveiling of BDCs live engine room, www.naijabdcs.com.

    Alhaji Aminu Gwadabe, President, Association of Bureaux De Change Operators of Nigeria (ABCON), said that the engine room would ensure price discovery in the FX market.

    Gwadabe noted that the site would also serve as a rallying point for investors’ and journalists who needed to know the exchange rates across the nation.

  • Naira dips marginally against dollar at parallel market

    The Naira on Tuesday depreciated marginally against the dollar at the parallel market, exchanging at N361.20 to the dollar.

    The Nigerian currency lost 20 kobo from N361 earlier traded before the Easter break.

    The naira also closed at N508 and N444 respectively against the Pound Sterling and the Euro.

    At the Bureau De Change (BDC) window, the naira traded at N362 to the dollar, Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) controlled rate, while the Pound Sterling and the Euro closed at N508 and N444 respectively.

    The Nigerian currency closed at N361.35 to the dollar at the investors’ window, while it traded at N305.65 at the interbank window.
    Traders at the currency market expressed anxiety over the likelihood of a slight change in policy as the CBN Monetary Policy Committee (MPC) holds at the nation’ capital, Abuja.

    NAN reports that the first MPC meeting in 2018, which began on Tuesday, would be concluded by Wednesday.

    Meanwhile, the naira had remained very stable at the foreign exchange market as the apex bank had remained committed in boosting liquidity at the FOREX market.

    Read Also: Naira remains stable against Dollar, Euro

    NAN

     

     

  • Mutilated naira notes: e-payment channels as panacea

    Mutilated naira notes: e-payment channels as panacea

    Economic managers are worried over the prevalence of mutilated naira notes The Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) is urging currency handlers not only to keep the naira notes in circulation sparkling by adopting global best practices, but also embrace alternative payment channels as being promoted under the cash-less policy initiative. COLLINS NWEZE writes that the use of alternative banking channels like Point of Sale (PoS), Automated Teller Machines (ATMs), web payments and other electronic banking channels will help cut the N2.15 trillion cash in circulation and promote better cash handling by consumers. 

    There are rules set by the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) to guide the printing, circulation and storage of the local currency – the naira.

    After the notes and coins have been printed/minted by the Nigerian Security Printing and Minting (NSPM) Plc and other overseas printing/minting companies, the apex banks takes charge as the sole issuing authority to other commercial banks.

    The currency-in-circulation rose to N2.15 trillion in the fourth quarter of last year. The figure was 21.1 per cent when compared to the figure in the third quarter of 2017. The development, the CBN’s economic report said, reflected the growth in currency outside banks.

    But, as the naira notes in circulation continue to rise, so is the damage done to them by those that transact with them. It is a regular sight to see people spraying mint notes at parties, writing on the notes, soling the notes, exposing them to liquids, and even squeezing them into inappropriate parts of their clothes.

    The CBN has never shied away from warning against abusing the naira notes. It says that anyone caught in the act would be prosecuted and if convicted the person risked six months in jail, or a fine of N50, 000.

    According to the bank, the abuse of the naira is contrary to its policy, adding that offenders would henceforth be arrested and prosecuted.

    The apex bank describes as unacceptable a situation in which Nigerians accord more respect to the United States (U.S). dollar above the naira, saying Nigerians ought to appreciate and value the local currency because it serves as a symbol of national identity.

    The regulator warns: “The naira has suffered abuse from majority of Nigerians. Today, we find some people spraying the naira at occasions, soiling it, writing on it, squeezing it while some are hawking it.

    “The CBN spent a lot of money in the printing of these naira notes. We urge Nigerians to respect the naira and value it. Anyone caught abusing the naira will risk a jail term of six months or pay a fine of N50, 000.”

    Besides, at the currency printing works of the NSPM Plc, quality is meticulously controlled throughout every process of currency production.

    This guarantees that every note issued meets the required standard. The CBN maintains an office called Mint Inspectorate in the premises of the NSPM Plc to maintain security and quality of the notes and coins.

    As a rule, the CBN issues currency to Deposit Money Banks (DMBs) through its branches and withdraws from circulation through the same channel. The notes deposited in the CBN by the commercial banks are processed and sorted to fit and unfit notes in line with the clean note policy. The clean notes are re-issued while the dirty notes are destroyed.

    As seamless as the processes look, many Nigerians have been speaking on why the notes are not properly handled based on the rules set by the apex bank.

    A former President of the Chartered Institute of Bankers of Nigeria (CIBN), Mazi Okechukwu Unegbu, said technology and electronic payment remain the greatest steps to address the prevalence of old notes in the economy.

    He regretted that many Nigerians are still not conversant with e-payment, hence the need to adopt standard best practices in handling the notes.

    Unegbu said the financial inclusion gap in the country meant that more cash are still being kept at home, thus increasing the chances that such cash will be badly handled.

    He said banking penetration has continued to rise in urban towns, while the rural areas are left totally and the majority of the inhabitants adding to the unbanked population.

    “There has been greater focus on getting financial services to urban dwellers forgetting that rural dwellers are the ones that handle bank notes most and they need to be properly educated on the gains of keeping the notes clean”, Unegbu said.

    He suggested that the Microfinance Banks (MfBs) should be encouraged and supported because they remain the closest financial services to the grassroots.

    “We have to revive the MfBs because the banking technologies cannot help much in the villages. Even in the towns, when Automated Teller Machines (ATMs) dispense old and dirty notes. This has to be addressed if we must achieve better naira notes,” he said.

    He urged the CBN to put expiry dates on the notes, and continue to motivate banks to return old and dirty notes to the apex bank for new ones to be issued.

    Unegbu said: “I want to suggest to the banks to ensure that old and dirty notes that come to them do not return to circulation. And the people have to also develop a better culture in handling bank notes. They must learn to put naira notes in wallets and envelops when presenting them as gifts at parties or other ceremonies.

    “All of us are guilty. We need to discipline ourselves in handling the naira notes. We have to see the naira notes as very important and handle them properly. Those in the rural areas are disciplined and can even follow instructions on handling the naira if they are well educated through radio jingles and television”.

    He also disclosed that new notes are not regularly printed, or properly circulated, as they are given only to the high-net worth individuals, hence, by the time the notes get to the villagers, they are already defaced.

    He identified the costs of absorbing old notes and the fear of losing float for the waiting period to get new notes as reasons the banks are unwilling returning to the CBN.

    “I urge the CBN to do more to ensure that new notes get to the grassroots by empowering MfBs and also supplying them with new notes. They also need to educate the people on how to handle he notes,” he said.

    Richard Obire, a one-time Executive Director of Keystone Bank, blamed the rise in the rate of mutilated notes in circulation on the people’s social behavior as most of business transactions are still cash-based and through the informal market.

    He said many of the cash in circulation are not properly kept, hence the depreciation in their lifespan.

    Obire said: “Even when you put new notes in circulation, the behavioural patterns of Nigerians ensure that the notes have very short life span.

    Here, education is going to play major role in getting the people change such bad behaviors towards the naira. The radio and television messages must come in local languages to make room for better understanding of the sent and received messages.”

    He admitted the high cost of sorting, storing and moving old notes. Hence, all hands must be on deck to ensure that the notes handlers keep them in good conditions.

    Obire urged the CBN to give commercial banks targets based on their balance sheet sizes on the volume and value of notes to be returned every quarter and also monitor compliance while defaulters are sanctioned.

    Besides, he recommended the strengthening of the operators of mobile money to ensure more acceptance of their services as that would improve the quality of notes in circulation.

    He said there should be more investments in the mobile money business, as seen in Kenya where M-Pesa has turned around the fortunes of the grassroots economy.

     

    CBN’s position

    On its part, the CBN assured that it would work aggressively towards increasing financial inclusion rate to 80 per cent, by cutting down on the number of people excluded from the financial system to 20 per cent in 2020.

    The CBN Governor, Godwin Emefiele, who described the target as ambitious, disclosed that the bank had identified key strategies to cutting down the financial exclusion rate to 20 per cent by in the next two years.

    Specifically, he said that the bank would work with the Nigerian Communications Commission (NCC) on how best to take advantage of mobile communication to reach those that were financially excluded.

    The CBN chief said the country has moved from 46.3 per cent exclusion rate in 2010, to 41.6 per cent in 2016.

    According to him, specific areas of focus identified which would be pursued aggressively include “prioritising intervention and creating awareness to ensure patronage, incorporating non-interest financial services into CBN intervention programmes.”

    Others are “mobilising banks that offer such products for greater outreach and impact; massive rolling out of agents networks and creating awareness to increase adoption, and adoption of digital financial services as simple, flexible and easy alternative channels for reaching remote areas and rural hinterlands.”

    Emefiele added that the National Financial Inclusion Strategy was being reviewed for greater effectiveness and impact, adding that stakeholders would be sufficiently mobilised to participate.

     

    Road to financial inclusion

    Enhancing  Financial  Innovation  and  Access  (EFInA),  a leading financial sector development organisation working  to  improve  financial  inclusion in Nigeria  held  a  stakeholders’ workshop in Lagos. The workshop tagged: “The  role  of  government in driving financial inclusion in Nigeria” was  one of  many  similar  events  organised  by  EFInA to bring stakeholders to the table and promote discussions centered on driving policies to improve financial inclusion in the country.

    At the workshop, the EFInA board chair, Ms.  Modupe  Ladipo provided participants with  insights  into the recurring challenges and barriers to  inclusion.

    She  stated that  income  levels  remained  low while observing that the Northern part of the country remained particularly  disadvantaged  in  terms  of  access  to  financial  products  and  services.

    The  workshop  attracted  high  level  participation  including  the  United Nations  (UN) Secretary- General’s  Special  Advocate  for  Inclusive  Finance, Her Majesty Queen Máxima of The Netherlands,  applauded Nigeria  for  revising  the  National  Financial Inclusion  Strategy  after  five  years  of  implementation.

    She urged stakeholders  to  recognise  the  importance  of  leveraging  technology  and  expanding  mobile  money  to address the financial inclusion gap.

     

    E-payment

    The use of electronic payment systems offer a lot of benefits to its users but despite these, the Nigeria economy is still larged cash-based as many people prefer to carryout daily transactions with cash despite the implementation of the cash-less policy.

    Cashless policy is a policy established in 2012 by the CBN to curb excesses in the handling of cash.

    The policy was initiated not to eliminate the use of cash but to reduce the volume of cash in circulation.

    CBN Deputy Governor (Operations) Adebayo Adekola has said e-payment has continued to boost commerce through the use of ATMs, web payments, Point of Sale (PoS) Machines and other alternative payment channels.

    He said the e-payment should be supported in the interest of the economy.

    Adekola said the country was emerging from an era of magnetic stripe challenges which was effectively truncated with the migration to Personal Identification Number (PIN) and chip technology for card issuance.

    This, he said, has ensured a reduction in ATM fraud to zero with the aid of this technology.

    He said: “Since this feat, the industry has consistently been inundated with other types of fraud, from card not present fraud, to insider abuses and phishing scams. In all these, the forum has responded not only proactively but also effectively in fashioning strategies to combat these threats to our payments system.”

  • Analysts rule out forex regime change as naira stabilises

    Analysts rule out forex regime change as naira stabilises

    The monetary policy authorities have executed exchangerate policies that are successful in many ways, and have grown greatly in confidence, analysts at FBN Capital, an investment and research arm of FBN Holdings have said.

    According to them, the economic managers are not under pressure to change tack, especially as it concerns official rate for priority transactions.

    “Forex has has become widely available. Manufacturers have it, as do middle class Nigerians with bills to pay outside the country and offshore portfolio investors. Further, its price is stable, and the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) even thinks it should fall,” the analysts said in an emailed report released on Monday.

    They believe that with the ongoing drop in inflation figures, the monetary authorities may try rate cut, which will be the first since July 2016.

    “On the monetary easing on falling inflation, we expect the first rate cuts since July 2016 in response to slowing inflation in first half of 2018. Positive base effects are coming into play, and we see easing of 150basis points over the full year,” they said.

    Also, the naira at the weekend, closed flat at N363 to dollar in the parallel market. It has remained at that position for nearly three weeks, market data on exchange rate position have shown.

    This raises hope that the era of forex volatility may have given way to long-term stability as the CBN continues to meet demands at the retail end of the market.

    At the official rate, the naira has also remained at about N306.05 to the dollar for nearly six months, although only few sectors can access funds at this rate.

    Traders insist that the naira will remain stable this year as the CBN continues its regular dollar injections into the forex market.

    Series of dollar injections into the economy totalling about $8 billion since February have helped the CBN to achieve long-term naira stability and curb volatility in the forex market.

    The CBN has in the last nine months sustained its weekly dollar interventions in the forex market, a large part of it go into the interbank market, bureau de change (BDCs), Retail Secondary Market Intervention Sales (SMIS), wholesale spot and forwards auction segments, agricultural, airlines, petroleum products and raw materials and machinery sectors, among others.

    The dollar injections were made to enable stakeholders in these segments secure enough forex for their operations, and in the process boost naira’s stability.

    Noteworthy, the gap between official and black market rates started to shrink since last February 20, when the CBN resumed dollar interventions in key segments of the economy. Industry sources said the CBN has injected over $8 billion in the last nine months into key segments of the market.

  • Our girls; murder; naira

    Our girls; murder; naira

    Our Girls are still missing since April 15, 2014. Pray for their return.

    Mixed messages of incompetence and indifference from government.

    The figure ‘70+’ is a ‘murdered Benue farmer citizens’ number with 73+ millstones around the government’s neck as it fails miserably to deal with the plot that unleashed the reign of terror imposed by Fulani herdsmen’s unlimited, nationwide unprovoked and premeditated attacks amounting to the Fulani herdsmen’s war- my subject over 30 years. Are they singing to an international agenda as the effect is cross-continent reaching even East Africa. The deaths of soldiers and policeman added to more than a total of 100,000 ‘bloodied civilians’ amounts to a war as I have said for many years, and confirmed by Prof Wole Soyinka. The Vietnam War claimed 54,000 US soldiers. Our ECOMOG War claimed between 3,000 (government figures) and 12,000 (non-government) estimates. Some journalist or researcher should go back and total the almost daily reports of five, 10, 20, 300 deaths in the news reports of the Fulani herdsmen War for 10, 20yrs. What will be the final death count and what is our total cost for unity? Are the perpetrators ghosts and the killing fake or phantom to always automatically escape arrest? Whither Nigeria. Only when a defence to the senseless murders is planned, it is torn down as being terrorist. Our words are the wrong way around. The attacker is the terrorist; the defence strategist is the counter-terrorist. In Nigeria we specialise in turning victims into accused and terrorists into tribal heroes. Stop the killing!!

    Congratulations, Nigeria made the targeted $40b by beginning 2018 during economic hardship. The first aid care, under the ‘save the naira’ policy of Buhari and CBN support for the naira. Phase one has paid off. Phase two will be easier with the hike in oil price to nearly $70/barrel which will boost our reserves to a targeted $80-100b by April 2019 if not Dec 2018. Phase three must go hand in hand and that is to get the naira to ‘crash back’ to N150:$1 or lower to destabilize the forex hoarders. We should recommend a CBN-led forced fall of N1 naira per day to return to the golden age of N1:$1.5 by Dec 31, 2018. Ibrahim Babangida crippled Nigeria when he halved the naira value overnight and skyrocketed interest rates –a presidential knife in Nigeria’s back. Can we reverse that blow also overnight? Or perhaps improve at N1 per 1-2days to achieve N130: $1 by Dec 31? No other government has dedicated such efforts to reversing losses inflicted on the naira.

    The unpredicted fall and now spectacular rise in oil price towards $70+ confounds ‘doom and nay-sayers’. However that $70barrel cost should not make our oil imports more expensive if our own oil is exported to be refined. The real problem is our tragic incompetence as a nation, to in four years, get its refineries up to 150% production locally to combat manmade paralytic Christmas and New Year shortages.

    The president’s dismissal of the entire efforts to restructure is an insult, painful, but predictable given the benefits he and his groupings, ethnic and otherwise, gain from the power accrued under the status quo since 1956. It is deeply saddening to millions of victims of political and military fiat which lopsidedly created states and hundreds of LGAs to favour certain parts of Nigeria, arrogated huge swaths of the budget to itself and giving power to few. It speaks volumes of the paralyzing and blinding nature of the office of the president to any modern and citizen targeted progressive agenda. Is it the seat or the occupant at fault?? Probably the combination. It is legitimate in a democracy, even one as fragile as ours, to ask ‘Do you trust your president to make merit and objective decisions and appointments?’ The answer is chillingly negative. The president can change this perception in 2018, but has misjudged the mood by appointing Ahmed Rufai Abubakar as Director General, National Intelligence Agency, NIA, demonstrating his presidential and personal rigidity to his agenda? Trust demands more than ‘Our Unity is Non-negotiable’.

    But what is the current true presidential vision and mission for Nigeria? Yes, he wants to restore value and pride to the naira, if possible to N150 and lower which will automatically by definition lift millions out of poverty and ‘re-dignify’ Nigeria while making deserving fools of naira speculators and dollar hoarders -a sound and praiseworthy achievement. However this ‘grand naira recovery scheme’ will be no virtue if the Fulani herdsmen-murdered farmers’ body count skyrockets due to presidential insensitivity, collusion or indifference to the victims of the Fulani herdsmen’s rampage. He has also the self-inflicted burden of an additional hurricane of sectional mainly Fulani ‘Oga at de top’ appointments, difficult to defend in a cosmopolitan country populated with some of the best brains in the world and some of the worst.

    Away from the presidential responsibilities and government failures it behoves us to know that the work of our hands, brain, family, community will make the nation great or small in 2018. It is well-known that just one evil-minded corrupt president and evil cohorts [which Nigeria has had an abundance unfortunately], a single corrupt political or business policy or decision in your official capacity, in and out of uniform, can raise or ruin your neighbour, your community or your country. Be vigilant!

    NB: Uncover ‘I LOVE NIGERIA’ KNOWLEDGEABLE CANDIDATES for 2019 -SDG 16.

  • Experts project stronger naira in 2018

    There are blessed assurances that the hitherto weak naira may get stronger this year if the projections of experts is anything to go by.

    Speaking with a cross-section of financial and economic experts, they told our correspondent that the economic fundamentals definitely favour the emergence of a stronger naira.

    On what could be the fate of the naira this year, Aminu Gwadabe, President of Association of Bureaux De Change Operators of Nigeria (ABCON) said there is no cause for anxiety.

    “I don’t see the naira getting weaker this year with the present control that the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) has put in place in terms of liquidity in the market except if the parameters that are favouring the trends we’re witnessing now considerably change which I don’t think is going to be soon.”

    He added: “Presently, even the buffer of the CBN is far above what they’re expecting for the year, in their 2018 forecast. They’re forecasting $14billion as at the end of 2018, and they’re already on that line. They have enough buffers to fight the abuse if the naira.”

    Pressed further, he said: “Even the President in his new year address said there will be no importation, especially rice, which is one of the things that weakened our naira in terms of food import bill. Apart from the reduction of food import bill, there is also the issue of improve export corridor. You can see how that faired very well in 2017 and I’m sure it’s going to continue in 2018 and also other windows that we didn’t have.

    Already we have the diaspora and foreign windows and we’ve intervention with the interbank foreign exchange market. So I don’t see any reason for panic.”

    While commenting on the outlook for the naira, Victor Ndukauba, an economic and financial analyst said despite the air of uncertainty around the economy, the naira’s value may strengthen significantly.

    He was however quick to admit that this assurance is hinged a number of factors which border on improved policy initiatives, among others.

    Ndukauba who also doubles as Deputy Managing Director of Afrinvest Limited while pleading for cautious optimism in the area of  interest rate reduction, said he is hardly convinced that the apex bank may not be able to achieve single digit interest rate for the simple fact that a lot is still wrong with the fundamentals.”It’s an election year no doubt, there will be a lot of liquidity in the system to try to do a few things just to sway votes but other than that, nothing much will give.”