Tag: Naira

  • Why naira   is on a free fall, by aviation practitioners

    Why naira is on a free fall, by aviation practitioners

    The Patriotic Assembly of Aviation Practitioners (PAVP) has described as amusing the last-minute interest of the Senate in naira depreciation.

    According to the (Non-Goverrnmental Organisation (NGO), the naira lost its value because of the disdain for made-in Nigeria products.

    In a statement by its Secretary, Ibrahim Marafa, the group said the sudden interest of the Senate in the declining value of the naira informed the invitation of the Central Bank Governor, Mr. Godwin Emefiele, to appear at the National Assembly today.

    Admitting that the Senate has a right to do its job, the statement said: “The PAVP, however, wishes to remind the public not to be deceived, or confused, about how the value of the naira got to its present state.”

    It  reminded members of the public that the proposed acquisition of  N4.7 billion worth of cars including Mercedes Benz and Toyota Sport Utility Vehicles (SUVs), would involve foreign exchange, saying such importations contrubuted to the naira’s  declining value.

    The statement reads: “It’s sad to note that the National Assembly wants to buy these cars for its members at a time when Innoson, a local vehicle assembly plant, is laying off 50 per cent of its workforce because of low demand. Does the misery of the thousands of families that will be affected by this layoff not mean anything to our lawmakers? No pain, no regret, nothing?

    “We note, however, that while the distinguished Senators are determined to have their exotic cars, President Muhammadu Buhari has refused to accept the N400 million allocated for the Presidency to buy cars this year. That is leadership.

    “The value of the naira is declining because Nigerians, a significant number of them including the distinguished and honourable members of the National Assembly, spend $2 billion every year to pay for their children in schools abroad, with Ghana accounting for 50 per cent of the foreign exchange.

    “The value of the naira is declining because distinguished senators and honourable members of the National Assembly like to have milk from Holland on their breakfast table. That costs this country $200 million annually.

    “The value of the naira is declining because food imports into the country between 2014 and 2015 cost $7.4 billion. And that includes the cost of toothpicks, fish, rice, textile and furniture, among others. The price of the ostentatious and conspicuous consumption of our political elite is not paid in big grammar. The countries from where we import these goods and services collect their money in dollars. That is why the value of the naira is falling.

    “Distinguished and honourable members of the National Assembly know this – or should know better than most.

    “We do not know the last time any of the distinguished and honourable members of the National Assembly, civil servants or other members of the political class visited the National Hospital in Abuja – or any public hospital anywhere in the country for that matter.

    “We know, however, that as at 2012, the cost of medical tourism – that is the cost to Nigerians of big men flying abroad to treat their toothache or cut out belly fat – was $406 million. Why is anyone suddenly waking up to ask what is happening to the naira?

    “That is not all. As we said in a recent publication, Nigerians love to travel, which is good. But, it may interest the Senate and indeed the entire public to know that in the third quarter of 2016 alone, European airlines operating in the country made over $470 million from jet-set Nigerians and they want that money back in their home countries fast.

    “They have been locked in high-powered negotiations, which partly informed the coming of the IMF (International Monetary Fund) Managing Director, Christine Lagarde, to repatriate the money. Your guess is as good as ours the impact such a transfer will have on our foreign reserve and on the naira.

    “Yet, we have two Nigerian airlines travelling to Europe and other parts of the world and employing over 5,000 Nigerians and our lawmakers and civil servants don’t think they should patronise these airlines!

    “We condemn what is ours – from our local airlines to Erisco tomato pastes and from Innoson vehicles to groundnuts and even toothpicks – and think that doing so is a mark of sophistication and high taste! Have we thought of what this country would be today without Dangote Cement? It would have been impossible to continue various housing programmes as the cost of cement would have gone through the roof in view of the shortage of foreign exchange.

    “What is wrong with us? Why are we in panic because a few foreign airlines are threatening to reduce their services, when nationals of these same countries will never think of our own airlines – or any other airline in fact – as their first port of call?

    “As the CBN appears before the Senate tomorrow (today), Nigerians should know that the value of the naira is not the making of any devil or evil spirits. It is the result of the collective decisions that Nigerians, especially the political elite, have made over the years and continue to make”

    The PAVP urged the leadership of the National Assembly and other stakeholders to show example by patronising locally-made goods.

    “That is the only way to save the naira and create jobs for our teeming youths. Anything else is shadow chasing ”, it said

     

     

  • Senate summons CBN governor over fall of Naira      

    Senate summons CBN governor over fall of Naira      

    The Senate Thursday summoned the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) Governor, Mr. Godwin Emefiele, over the continuous depreciation of the naira.

    The upper chamber said that Emefiele should appear before it by 11:00 a.m. on Tuesday January 19, 2016 to explain the continuous weakening of Naira against the Dollar.

    The invitation followed a Point of Order raised by the Senate Leader, Senator Mohammed Ali Ndume, over the matter.

    Senate President, Abubakar Bukola Saraki, asked Senator Ndume to convey Senate’s resolution inviting him to the CBN governor.

    Saraki said, “The leader in line with our rules, 42:1 did mention this and in line with our rules also we must get the views of the Senators that we should stand this down till Tuesday next week.

    “Leader, you convey and invite the Central Bank Governor to come on Tuesday by 11 to present this before the Senate.’’

    Ndume had said it was expedient for the Senate to invite the CBN governor to brief it on the free fall of the naira.

    He said, “As a today, naira is exchanged for N305 to one dollar.  In view of this worrisome situation and the fact that we all know that this country depends so much on imported materials and even food, there is a need for this Senate to as a matter of urgency call, invite or summon the governor of CBN to explain this situation and to provide the necessary solution to this situation.’’

  • Naira exchanges N300 to dollar

    Naira exchanges N300 to dollar

    Naira volatility worsened yesterday, after the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) stopped the sale of foreign exchange (forex) to Bureaux De Change (BDCs). The local currency exchanged in the parallel market for N300 to a dollar in Kano; N295 in Abuja and N290  in Lagos.

    President, Bureaux De Change Association of Nigeria (ABCON) Aminu Gwadabe, who confirmed the development, expects the situation to get worse in the coming days. He said his group will continue to engage the CBN on the need to reverse the policy, which “will continue to hurt the economy”.

    But CBN spokesman, Ibrahim Mu’azu said the market reaction was expected becauses greedy dealers are taking advantage of the policy shift. He said the naira strenght should not be assessed through the parallel market.

    CBN Governor Godwin Emefiele had announced a new forex policy that includes the stoppage of weekly dollar sale to BDCs.

    He flayed the BDCs for abandoning the original objective for their establishment, which was to serve retail-end-users, who need $5,000 or less. The operators, he noted, have become wholesale dealers in forex to the tune of millions of dollars per transaction, only to come up with fake documentations such as passport numbers, Bank Verification Numbers (BVN), boarding passes and flight tickets to render weekly returns to the CBN.

     

    “The bank (CBN) would henceforth discontinue its sale of foreign exchange to BDCs. Operators in this segment of the market would now need to source their foreign exchange from autonomous source. They must however note that the CBN would deploy more resources to monitoring these sources to ensure that no operator is in violation of our anti-money laundering laws,” Emefiele said at news conference on the review of the forex policy at CBN’s Abuja head office.

     

    The apex bank took some measures on forex following a drop in oil prices from a peak of $114 barrel in July 2014 to as low as $33/barrel this month. The reserves have also suffered great pressure from speculative attacks, round-tripping and front loading activities by actors in the forex market.

    Before the hammer fell, the CBN was selling $60,000 to each BDC weekly, translating to $167 million per weekly and about $8.6 billion yearly.

    The amount was reduced to $10,000 per BDC, translating into $28.4 million depletion of the foreign reserve per week and $1.476 billion per annum.

     

  • ‘Unstable naira hurting real estate funding’

    The ongoing volatility facing the naira and related regulations, remain the biggest challenge facing real estate funding, Head of Real Estate Finance for West Africa at Stanbic IBTC, Adeniyi Adeleye, has said.

    For him, most property development projects are financed in dollars for the creation of sustainable and predictable funding environment for the assets.

    He suggested that dual currency funding structures can bring stability to real estate deals in sub-Saharan Africa, as developers and retailers seek solutions to the volatility currently faced in domestic economies.

    Dual currency structure refers to utilising a combination of hard and local currencies, while hedging the interest rate risk.

    “These facilities would provide a natural hedge and create a win-win between developers and retailers. For example, a local currency facility can be accessed to hedge leases that are unlikely to be sustainable or easily adjusted in shock currency devaluation scenario, for defined periods. This way the exchange rate risk can be more effectively shared between retailers and developers by keeping lease exchange conversion rates constant for periods of volatility,” he said.

    “This has exposed tenants to rental increases because their rents are indexed to dollars. The devaluation of currencies in countries like Nigeria and Ghana has been quite significant,” he said.

    “Over time, these cost increases will inevitably be passed on to consumers, which will in turn create additional affordability challenges. The level of interest from property developers has not waned in spite of the strained environment. In fact, most developers are positive about the long-term prospects of the economy and options available to them, largely because of the supply gaps in these markets. They are now challenged with trying to create robustness in their operating models to ensure they can continue to execute projects in the short-term,” Adeleye said.

    Continuing, he added: “It is now more about new solutions that are needed to improve the structuring of these deals, so developers can manage the challenges caused by policies aimed at shoring up dollars, the high local interest rates relative to dollar-based interest rates and weakening currencies,” he said.

    He explained that should the market stabilise, it would also be simple to refinance local currency exposure back into foreign currency and then original lease assumptions and plans can then be achieved, unless macroeconomic indicators show that local currency funding has now become appropriate for these deals. “The robustness of the structure is that it adjusts in periods of shock to provide stability,” Adeleye said.

    It provides sound financial structuring, inbuilt buffers and flexibility into project funding structures, to accommodate for unexpected changes in the economic environments.

  • Naira weakens against dollar at parallel market

    Naira weakens against dollar at parallel market

    The Naira on Monday depreciated by 0.8 per cent to exchange at N265 to the dollar at the parallel market.

    The News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) reports that the greenback lost N2 to the dollar from its weekend value of N263.

    However, at the official interbank window, the Naira exchanged at N197 to the dollar.

    Traders at the market were hopeful that the Naira would rebound in 2016 if the apex bank continued to enforce its policies at the foreign exchange market.

    Besides, the price of crude oil at the international market hedged up to 38.9 dollars per barrel from about 35.7 dollars per barrel at the weekend.

    Oil prices rose on Monday after a breakdown in diplomatic ties between Saudi Arabia and Iran that some speculated could result in supply restrictions.

    Saudi Arabia, the world’s biggest oil exporter, cut diplomatic ties with Iran on Sunday in response to the storming of its embassy in Tehran following Riyadh’s execution of a prominent Shi’ite cleric on Saturday.

  • Naira loses 10% value

    Naira loses 10% value

    The naira volatility continued almost throughout last year in both the parallel and interbank markets. At the last trading day for the year last Thursday, the naira crashed  further against the dollar while the stock index rose.

    Naira closed on the interbank market at 199.50 to the dollar on Thursday, compared with 181.50 to the dollar a year ago, down 9.91 per cent at the official window. On the parallel market, the naira traded at 266 to the dollar, weaker by 39.26 per cent from 191 to the dollar at the close of last year.

    The naira has continued to come under pressure against the dollar, as Brent crude price continues to decline. The oil price declined to $35 per barrel on December 11, its lowest price since February 2009, before increasing to $38.45pb on December 15 and closed the year around $37pb. This has adversely affected almost all indicators in the economy including the naira.

    The stock market rose 3.11 per cent for the day. But it ended down 17.35 per cent for last year. For the naira, it has been a tough road to survival. At the parallel market, the local currency depreciated by 8.44 per cent to N270/ dollar on the 16th of December, touching a new all time low.

    At the interbank market, the naira remained relatively stable and appreciated marginally by 0.53 per cent to N197.49/ dollar. The external reserves level declined during the review period by 2.25 per cent ($680 million) to $29.48 billion as at December 15.

    Managing Director, Financial Derivatives Limited, Bismarck Rewane, said for the sake of the naira, the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) has continued to checkmate liquidity needs in the economy through various monetary measures like the weekly sale of dollars to BDCs, Open Market Operation (OMO), the Monetary Policy rate (MPR), Net Open Position (NOP) and most recently the Cash Reserve Ratio (CRR).

    Rewane said despite these measures to reduce pressure on the currency, it has continued to come under severe pressure from internal and external factors.

    Other economists believe the incorporation of a long-term diversified strategy in fiscal policy is required to deliver the cushioning support for shocks in various segments of the economy.

    For them, the persistent pressure on the naira could have been minimized if a counter cyclical fiscal policy is developed, as the CBN cannot continue to defend the naira with foreign reserves. To reduce this pressure, an inward looking policy (tax incentives, infrastructure development and production subsidy) should be emphasized to reduce the dependence on imported goods.

    Asides from oil receipts, the development of the Agricultural sector will in the short term reduce the foreign exchange burden of food imports and over the long term enhance foreign receipts if its comparative advantage in the sector is efficiently deployed.

    The CBN had pegged the naira exchange rate at 198 to the dollar in February and scrapped a two-way interbank quote as global oil prices fell, to conserve foreign exchange reserves.

    Also in June, the regulator introduced more foreign exchange limits, excluding about 41 items from access to foreign exchange at the official window to further reduce pressure on available dollars.

  • No respite yet for troubled Naira

    No respite yet for troubled Naira

    The desperation of the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) to defend the naira at all costs comes with heavy burden on the economy and bank customers. Despite spending over $33.5 billion in seven years to stabilise the local currency, restricting debit card use overseas and planning to stop weekly dollar allocations to Bureaux de Change (BDCs), the CBN is yet to stop naira’s woes. COLLINS NWEZE examines naira’s slide and those benefiting from the trend.

    Aminu Abudulkadir, a currency speculator, was preparing for the Suri (2’oclock) prayer when he got a text message that made him richer. His business partner, Abubakar Idirs, had on December 18, informed him that the naira was exchanging for N280 against the dollar in the parallel market.

    Abudulkadir hurriedly said his prayer, moved to the vault where he kept $50,000 to confirm it was intact.  He then called five of his most trusted aides and gave them $10,000 each to exchange to naira. “I made N82 extra on every dollar sold because I bought at N198 to a dollar,” he said, adding that the transactions concluded within three hours fetched him N4.1 million profit.

    The naira has been exchanging at N199 to a dollar in the official market, but in the parallel market, the local currency is facing the highest level of volatility in its over 50 years’ history.

    It was not only devalued by 35 per cent in the last 14 years, but in 2001 alone, its value was slashed 27 per cent, followed by an eight per cent cut last November. The local currency first hit double digits in 1991, moving from N9.9 to N17.2 to a dollar the following year. That constituted a significant 73.7 per cent change. Thereafter, a continuous slide ensued, attaining triple digits in 2000. Although it was considerably stable between 2000 and 2003 (below N120 to a dollar), the recent adverse global capital flows and drop in oil price, among other factors, have culminated in the current all-time low.

    An economist, Bismark Rewane, explains why the naira is on the downside. “As oil prices dipped, the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) has prioritised stability of exchange rate in the official market. It has drawn an exclusion list of avoidable imports from being funded in the official market. With the foreign exchange demand for the items transferred to the parallel market, rates in that market have soared”.

    Besides, other factors like terms of trade, inflation differential, public debt, current-account deficits, interest rates, political stability and the overall economic health determine the exchange rate of a currency.

    The fall in crude oil prices has reduced Nigeria’s dollar earnings, making it difficult for the apex bank to fund imports. Record oil prices had helped Nigeria to build the largest currency reserves in sub-Saharan Africa. The price peaked at $63 billion in September 2008. But, after attaining a record-high of $147 in July of that year, Nigeria’s crude oil prices – bonny light, have plummeted.

    As at December 29, oil was trading below $38 per barrel and the foreign reserves level has declined to $29.48 billion, $33.5 billion lower than the September 2008 figure.

    A large chunk of the reserves went to Bureaux De Change (BDCs) operators as weekly allocations to help close the rising gap between the official and parallel market rates. The BDCs got between $75, 000 and $30, 000 weekly from the CBN. There are, however, a grand plan to stop funding the BDCs in the New Year.

    Today, oil sits at $37 a barrel. Goldman Sachs recently agreed it could tumble as low as $20 a barrel, a level that would decimate the already heavily damaged economies of Nigeria, Saudi Arabia and Russia. The Organisation of Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC) predicts the price won’t go back above $100 until 2040.

    These weak economic indicators and forecasts have continued to put the local currency under severe pressure from internal and external factors but the CBN is not giving up, except that its measures seem overboard, with varied implications for bank customers and the economy.

    Battling to save the naira

    The CBN had imposed some currency control measures to save the naira. In June, it curbed access to the interbank currency market for importers bringing in a variety of goods. In an effort to conserve its dollar reserves, the bank said importers could no longer get hard currency to buy 41 items, ranging from toothpicks and rice to steel products and private jets.

    One of such measures – total ban on the use of debit cards abroad – has caused panic in both local and international markets with customers feeling the pangs of the policy, which was meant to conserve foreign reserves and protect the local currency.

    Michael Osinachi was in Dubai shopping when he got news of CBN’s ban on the use of debit cards abroad on Twitter. She quickly called her account officer in GTBank to confirm the authenticity of the information, and his fears were confirmed.

    It was after her debit card was rejected at the point of paying for the goods in shopping mall that the intensity of the policy dawned on her. Left with only $500 cash, she boarded the next flight to Lagos to save herself from embarrassment.

    “Nigerians always go on holidays to Dubai, Las Vegas, shop in London, and take their kids to Disney World in Florida now and again. Over the years, we have come to rely on our debit cards anytime we are outside the country. But, that opportunity is now gone,” she lamented.

    Thousands of bank customers share Osinachi’s experience outside the country. Also affected were web-based businesses that require to regularly pay for server space and web hosting in Europe or America using their debit cards.

    The Chief Executive Officer (CEO) of  InvestAdvocate, Peter Obiora, said the policy shift has made it difficult for him to pay for server space for his online web business. He said unlike previously when he could use his debit card to pay for such transactions to be approved,  now, the card must be linked to a dollar-denominated domiciliary account that must be funded locally.

    Former executive director, Keystone Bank, Richard Obire, said that just like a coin, the debit card restriction has two sides because Nigeria is integrated into the global economy, and her citizens should get intangible services that promote businesses. The use of naira-denominated debit cards abroad, he said, is one of such benefits.

    He said that instead of making a blanket restriction on card use abroad, the CBN and other commercial banks should look at the countries where the biggest volume of forex is spent, and what it is being used for. Obire said Nigeria still gets over $20.8 billion annually from Diaspora remittances, and other forex inflows from other sources.

    For instance, the World Bank Migration and Remittances Factbook 2016 showed that Nigerians living abroad sent home $20.8 billion in 2015. The figure, it said, is by far the largest volume of remittances to any country in Africa and the sixth largest in the world.

    “The United States is the biggest remittance sending nation to Nigeria, followed by the United Kingdom. Nigerians received $5.7 billion in remittances sent from friends and family members in the US and $3.7 billion from the UK in 2015 and the rest across the world. Nigeria is also the third largest destination country for migrants from other African nations,” Obire said, adding that the card ban could hurt and halt such remittances.

    The former bank chief said the restriction could also stall CBN’s plan to promote Small and Medium Enterprises (SMEs) and the over N220 billion allocated to the sector.

    He said: “We have been talking about promoting SMEs, but this policy will reverse all the gains made over the years. Recall that the SMEs always have to pay for one service or training or the other from abroad, and this will the limit the extent of such exposures,” he said.

    Obire lamented that when he tried to renew a website fee with an international company, although his bank, First City Monument Bank (FCMB), grudgingly approved the transaction, but it collected twice the amount paid previously.

    “In the past, the fee was N15,000 but the last time I did it, the bank collected N38,000 after dollar conversion. How many SMEs can withstand such hike in the name of remitting funds to foreign partners,” he said.

    The former bank chief said that before the card restriction, SMEs operators can easily use their cards and make simple transfers to foreign partners. He said that while the CBN and banks have the right to protect the foreign reserves and the naira, they must also consider the interest of customers and their businesses.

    Standard Chartered Bank had in an e-mail message to customers, stressed that their naira debit cards will no longer be used for international transactions.  It attributed the decision to limited forex supply in the market. It said the action, remains a temporary measure that will be reversed when the forex supply improves.

    Equally, Diamond Bank e-mailed its customers, urging them to spend from their domiciliary accounts. The bank also promised its customers unlimited all-year-round spending from their dollar and pounds sterling accounts across all channels like web, Point of Sale (POS) terminals and Automated Teller Machines (ATMs) among others.

    The CBN position

    The CBN says forex scarcity forced commercial banks’ to place a restriction on the use of ATM cards abroad by their customers. The apex bank which admits it has no powers to reverse the banks’ decision on the use of the ATMs abroad, has thrown its weight behind the commercial bank’s position. According to it, it would assist in reducing the pressure on the naira.

    CBN’s Director, Monetary Policy Department, Moses Tule, explained that the restriction might continue until the country’s forex earnings improved. He hinted that if banks had not taken the decision to restrict the use of ATM cards abroad, some of them would have been experiencing challenges meeting the demand of their overseas’ customers.

    Such occurrence, he said, would have caused huge liabilities in the balance sheet of the banks, thus affecting their operations.

    Tule said much as the CBN sympathised with Nigerians for inconveniences they experience in carrying out transactions abroad, there was little the bank could do to reverse the decision of the banks.

     “The limitation on the use of debit or credit cards outside the country was not a limitation that was placed by the CBN. They were restrictions that banks placed because they have to settle whatever transactions you make with your debit cards with their corresponding banks in foreign currency. And if the banks do not have the foreign currency to do that, then you create a liability problem for them,” Tule explained.

    The priority of the CBN, he said, would be to use the forex to settle matured Letters of Credit for the importation of petroleum products and other raw materials.

    Stakeholders speak

    The Managing Director, Afrinvest West Africa Plc, Ike Chioke, believes the incorporation of a long-term diversified strategy in fiscal policy is required to cushion shocks in various segments of the economy.

    For him, the persistent pressure on the naira could have been minimised if a counter fiscal policy had been developed, as the CBN cannot continue to defend the naira with foreign reserves.

    “To reduce this pressure, an inward looking policy (tax incentives, infrastructure development and production subsidy) should be emphasised to reduce the dependence on imported goods”, he said.

    He explained that asides from oil receipts, the development of the Agricultural sector will in the short term reduce the forex burden of food imports and on the long run, enhance foreign receipts if its comparative advantage in the sector is efficiently deployed.

    But, an executive of the Nigerian Export-Import Bank, Chinedu Moghalu, said the sharp rises in the dollar exchange rate have been in the parallel market as the volatility has not been allowed to extend to the official market where the most economically important transactions are funded. “Although the dollar exchanged for N280 at the BDC in the week before Christmas, and even retreated immediately, by the way – at the official market, the dollar has continued to exchange at N199 to dollar since March,” he said.

    For him, the CBN has taken a position – backed by the administration of President Muhammadu Buhari – which is to protect the official market from speculation and damaging devaluation.

     “But the reality is that, as a people, we have to make adjustment in our tastes. Not only should we be ready to replace foreign products with local substitutes; we must be prepared to let go of some exotic products, even where there is no direct alternative. It is part of the demand of building a virile country and a sustainable economy,” he said.

    Consumers, exporters react

    With 9.4 per cent inflation rate in November, the fate of the naira is already impacting on the cost of goods and services. Investigations showed that the prices of some food items like chilli pepper, tomato and onion has soared by over 100 per cent in Lagos markets in ahead of the  the Christmas celebration, same period the naira exchanged at N280 to a dollar. An independent survey on cost of farm produce showed that a basket of chilli pepper is now N25, 000 against N12, 000 it sold a month ago.

    A big basket of tomato, which previously ranged between N8, 000 and N11, 000, now sells for between N13, 000 and N17, 000. A medium-size basket of fresh pepper now sells for N12, 000, from N8, 000. A jute bag of onions cost N35, 000 from its initial price of N25, 000.

    However, for exporters, naira’s slide against the dollar means increased cash flow and higher profit margins.

    The Managing Director, Sunyprofit International Limited, Sunday Anjorin, who exports Nigeria timer to China and Vietnam, captured the excitement that came with the decision. “The fall in naira value is creating more millionaire-exporters than ever before. We now have more naira after exchanging our dollar inflows,” he said.

    Anjorin said although exporters’ cash flow will rise, “the celebration may be cut short given that their cost of production will equally increase, because the cost of raw materials will become exorbitant, making nonsense of the higher profit margins.” Still, he said timber operators would take advantage of the naira slide and increase their profit margins.

    Also to benefit are multinational oil companies and their expatriate workers, whose salaries are in dollars. People who receive forex through Western Union and MoneyGram are also to benefiting from the naira woes.

    CBN measures take tolls

    But the National Bureau of Statistics (NBS) says Nigeria exports plunged in the third quarter from a year ago and imports also fell, as currency controls introduced by the CBN start to bite.

    The balance of trade in the third quarter was N645 billion, down from N2.87 trillion in the third quarter a year ago. Exports fell by 50.3 per cent in the third quarter from a year ago and imports declined 7.3 per cent, the NBS said. The fall in crude oil exports, which accounted for 69.1 per cent of total domestic exports this year, hit the economy the most.

    “The sharp decline in exports and slight decrease in imports contributed to a continued fall in the country’s trade balance, by 32 per cent,” the NBS said.

    Global payment

    companies groan

    Global payment companies like Visa, MasterCard, InterSwitch (owners of Verve cards), are also losing businesses because of the policy shift. The companies, he said, have made massive investments in Nigeria and always get fees, when the cards are used abroad.

    The General Manager, IBM Africa, Taiwo Otiti, said Visa International and other global payment firms, have made huge investments in Nigeria, including increase in sophistication of technology deployed in the country. He said: “The standard for Visa in Nigeria is the strictest in the whole payment system worldwide. The Visa stipulated a very, very high standard for Nigeria and this costs a lot of money,” he said.

    Visa Country Manager in West Africa, Ade Ashaye, said the firm invests heavily in advanced fraud, fighting technologies and continues to develop and deploy new and innovative programmes to mitigate fraud and protect cardholders in Nigeria.

    He said the global payment firm’s efforts have helped in scaling down fraud rates, enabling account holders to use Visa with confidence across the world. “In fact, with technological innovations and advances in risk management, global fraud rates have declined by more than two-thirds in the past two decades. VisaNet has an enhanced ability to identify fraud on individual accounts and coordinated attacks on multiple accounts across the system, enabling issuers to stop potential fraud at checkout, before it occurs,” he said. Also, Visa and MasterCard are already working on introducing “digital tokens” instead of account numbers for processing purchases made online and with mobile devices in Nigeria. Tokens provide an additional layer of security and eliminate the need for merchants, digital wallet operators or others to store account numbers.

    Interswitch, owners of Verve card, explained that as a second layer of defence, it haD also introduced Scorebridge, a fraud management system that enables Electronic Financial Transaction (EFT) messages to be processed through predefined Artificial Intelligence. This helps in determining the transaction’s risk and probability of a fraud.

    These investments, analysts said, were targeted at getting increased use of card transactions, locally and internationally.  Obire insist the ban on card use abroad, is, therefore, a disincentive for further research and investment by the global technology firms in the economy.

    Why crisis persists

     Rewane believes that besides the dwindling crude oil prices and reduced forex earnings, the decision by the CBN to peg the naira in the official market, resist further devaluation, lower interest rates and increase credit to the real sector, has heightened the exchange rate crisis.

    Although pundits’ debate whether the naira is overvalued or undervalued, the real issue is that the CBN’s control of the local currency prevents it from being responsive to economic fundamentals.

    “While every economy is controlled in some way, the CBN’s refusal to allow the exchange rate and other relative prices adjust to terms of trade shocks, seems to be disrupting the country’s fundamental economic structure,” Rewane said.

    To him, the sharp decline in oil prices has created trade shocks experienced by many oil producing countries and this has led to the readjustment of most emerging market currencies. “The naira is overvalued at its current official exchange rate of N199 by about 12 per cent. The CBN insists on pegging the naira at this rate despite slowing economic growth, reduced forex earnings, dwindling oil prices, depleting external reserves and increasing inflationary pressures,” he said.

    But, this is not the first time Nigeria has suffered from an overly controlled currency. From 1981 to 1985, during a similar period of control and oil shocks, relative prices did not adjust to restore internal and external balances. This led to low production, economic distortions, massive retrenchment and poverty.

    In contrast, from 1986 to 1991, when the Structural adjustment Programme (SAP) was introduced, the exchange rate was flexible. Economic data showed that there was increased output, better employment figures and less poverty. Both periods had negative oil price shocks.

    Other economists insist that Nigeria’s current managed floating exchange rate regime combines features of both the fixed and flexible exchange rate. They explain that a lightly managed floating exchange rate regime is advocated given that the exchange rate becomes determined essentially by demand and supply forces, while allowing the CBN to intervene occasionally to moderate excessive fluctuations, which are prone in developing countries, including Nigeria.

    Analysts insist that with the exchange rate at the parallel market depreciating to as low as N280 to a dollar, it may be time for the CBN to take another look at its stance on the exchange rate management.

    Pundits forecast that should oil prices fall below $30 per barrel, an exchange rate adjustment would be inevitable and given the current macroeconomic headwinds, a lightly managed floating exchange rate policy may be more suitable for the naira to regain its lost glory.

  • Naira strengthens against dollar at parallel market

    Naira strengthens against dollar at parallel market

    The naira on Wednesday strengthened against the dollar as currency speculators feared that the apex bank might come up with policies that might be unfavourable to them in 2016.

    The News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) reports that the naira gained N1, an appreciation of 0.4 per cent, to exchange at N226 to the dollar as against its previous value of N227.

    However, at the official inter-bank window, the naira continued to exchange at N197 to the dollar just as available apex bank’s record puts the price of crude oil at 36.09 dollars.

    Traders at the parallel market told NAN that the appreciation was fuelled by currency speculators.

    They envisaged that the apex bank might come up with policies that would affect them negatively in the New Year.

  • Emefiele promises stable Naira in 2016

    Emefiele promises stable Naira in 2016

    Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) Governor Godwin Emefiele said at the weekend that the apex bank is evolving additional measures to boost the economy and stabilise the naira.

    Emefiele spoke during an Interactive Session with some editors in Abuja. He declined to give details of the measures and modalities for their implementation.

    “Don’t ask me because I will not disclose our strategy for now’’, adding that doing so would be counter-productive and pre-emptive.

    The CBN boss explained that the Nigerian economy was not as bad as being portrayed when compared with other economies in Africa.

    ‘’If we are able to reduce importation, the demand for the dollar will fall automatically.’’

    Emefiele said the country should go back to the farm to produce what was needed.

    “Public servants should also engage in farming because the only business public servants are allowed to engage in is farming.

    ‘’And you don’t need power to farm tomato, vegetables or fish’’, Emefeile said.

    He blamed unscrupulous businessmen who engaged in illicit activities for exerting intense pressure on the dollar and other currencies.

    According to him, the apex bank has ensured reasonable stability in the value of the naira by keeping official exchange to the dollar between N196 and N197 to the dollar.

    Emefeile advised Nigerians to always approach their banks for their request for foreign exchange at the official rate as against patronising the black market operators.

    ‘’CBN does not have plenty dollars to sustain the bureau de change’’, he stressed.

    The CBN boss, however, insisted that the 22 per cent depreciation of the naira was reasonable when compared with other emerging economies adversely affected by global economic recession.

    ‘’Zambia, for example, has depreciated its currency by about 48 per cent, Angola by 25 per cent while Brazil depreciated its currency by about 48 per cent from October last year till now.

    ‘’Our situation is not as bad as people think. When you devalue, there must be a structural adjustment. We have never followed up with structural adjustment.

    ‘’So, the approach we are adopting at the moment is that, having done a 22-per cent adjustment in the currency, let us structurally adjust our position.

    ‘’Let us say, look, stop importing rice; stop importing toothpick; stop importing tomato from South Africa; stop importing 20 million eggs daily from Africa.

    ‘’That’s the gist of what we are saying. We are saying Nigeria can do without these items. And the truth is that the reserves are no longer there.’’

    Emefeile said CBN had created the enabling environment to encourage the growth of small scale businesses through the grant of soft loans to small business operators.

    He said only N60 billion of the more than N200 billion soft loans meant for SMEs had been accessed so far.

    He urged Nigerians to be patient with the Buhari administration in its efforts at easing the sufferings of Nigerians.

    ‘’Savings from the Treasury Single Account has also hit over N2 trillion,’’ Emefeile added.

  • CBN blames naira slide on speculators

    CBN blames naira slide on speculators

    The Director, Monetary Policy Department of the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN), Mr. Moses Tule has said the naira was under pressure because of  currency speculators.

    According to him, the speculators mounted pressure on the naira with a view to making excess gain from currency trading.

    The naira had on Wednesday, exchanged N270 to a dollar, and may continue to fall as government’s dollar earning decline.

    In a statement from the apex bank, Tule said the currency speculators were determined to put severe pressure on the monetary authorities expecting the CBN to buckle and further devalue the naira.

    The CBN, he said,  had a responsibility for the economy and would not fold its arms and allow economic predators feast on the nation’s commonwealth through arbitrage.

    While maintaining that the only rate in the currency market was N196.47 to a dollar, he wondered why indigenous operators in the Bureau de Change (BDC)chose to make huge profit at the expense of customers in genuine need of the currency.

    He lamented that while international operators such as Travelex traded at not more than N7 above the rate, indigenous operators preferred to make profits as high as N50.

    “We know what the fundamentals of the economy are and we will continue to take the right economic decisions on what to do and not when people sitting out there speculating on the currency think the naira should be devalued so that they could make profit out of it,” he said.

    He added: “No country quotes its exchange rate with reference to the BDCs rates. The currency has a reference rate and that is the interbank exchange rate.”

    Mr. Tule, therefore, urged Nigerians to be more patriotic in their dealings rather than engage in activities capable of undermining the integrity and value of the naira. The media, he added, has a role to play in assisting the CBN to curb speculation on the naira.

    Also speaking, a former Deputy Governor of the CBN, Mr. Tunde Lemo urged Nigerians to change their lifestyles and support the drive towards conserving the nation’s foreign reserve, stressing that no developing economy leaves the exchange rate determination free to market forces.