Nigeria's central bank has told Bureau de Change operators it does not intend to devalue the naira and will support it at current levels, especially with a recent rise in oil prices, the head of their association said on Thursday.
Aminu Gwadabe, president of Bureau de Change operators, said central bank governor Godwin Emefiele told the group in a meeting it was looking at ways to boost dollar liquidity on the official market to eliminate the spread to the parallel market.
The government has been pressing retail operators to narrow what it says is a damaging gulf between the naira's official rate - currently 305 to the dollar - and the parallel rate, which has been as weak as 490 in recent days.
On Tuesday the operators set their first ever reference exchange rate for the naira at 399 per dollar ahead of the central bank meeting.
"With the recovery of oil prices, CBN (Central Bank of Nigeria) has no intention of devaluing the currency and intends to support the naira at the present level," Gwadabe said, quoting the central bank governor.
Central bank data showed foreign exchange reserves rose 6.68 percent to $26.65 billion at Jan. 10 from a month before, the highest level since May, driven by a rise in crude prices.
The bank appealed to operators to follow the rules in order to avoid sanctions and curb speculation on the currency.
Thursday, 12 January 2017
Nigerian central bank tells FX traders it won't devalue naira
(C) Reuters News
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