The naira strengthened
against the United States dollar in the new interbank market on Wednesday as
the Central Bank of Nigeria sought to stabilise the market by selling dollars.
The naira closed at 282.80
per dollar, after earlier dropping as much as 0.5 per cent, down from 284.5 on
Tuesday.
The CBN has intervened in
the market by selling foreign exchange since it ended the currency’s 16-month
fix of 197-199 per dollar on Monday. It sold $4bn in the spot and forwards
markets that day to clear a backlog of demand for hard currency, and followed
that with about $100m of sales on the spot market on Tuesday.
“The market expects the
central bank to continue to intervene on a daily basis for now as it is easily
the only source of dollar supplies,” Bloomberg quoted the Head of Research at
SCM Capital Limited, Mr. Sewa Wusu, to have said.
“Foreign direct investment
and portfolio flows are yet to start flowing in as investors wait on the
sidelines to watch for liquidity, price discovery and stability,” he said.
Forward contracts dropped as
traders reduced their bets on how much further the naira will weaken, although
they still see it dropping 6.5 per cent by late September.
Three-month naira
non-deliverable forward contracts fell 4.7 per cent, the most on a closing
basis since May 17, to 302.25 per dollar. Contracts maturing in a year declined
3.7 per cent to 340 per dollar.
“The monetary authority will
be a regular participant in the interbank market, at least in the short term,
to ensure that sufficient liquidity is available to facilitate two-way trade,”
analysts at Johannesburg-based Rand Merchant Bank, including Celeste Fauconnier
and Nema Ramkhelawan-Bhana, said in a note to clients.
The nation’s benchmark
equity index rose for a second day, advancing by 2.4 per cent to 30,127.82, its
highest close since October 21. It has soared 34 per cent since falling to a
more than three-year low on January 19, as local investors buy stocks
anticipating a return by foreigners, who fled when the central bank imposed
capital controls to defend the naira’s peg.
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