the Central Bank of Nigeria’s decision to stop foreign
exchange sales to importers of 40 items on Tuesday is a good move but it will make the naira
to fall further against the dollar, especially at the parallel market, economists and
analysts have said. The CBN had banned the importers of rice, private jets,
textiles, poultry products, vegetable oil and 35 other items from accessing foreign
exchange at the nation’s forex markets.
The regulator said the move would help preserve the external
reserves, facilitate the resuscitation of domestic industries and generate employment
opportunities. But economists and analysts, who reacted to the announcement
on Wednesday, said the naira had already come under severe pressure and would
fall further as the central bank pushed forex demand from the interbank market to the
parallel market.
The CBN had said that those desirous of importing the listed
items could do so using their own funds without recourse to the Nigerian forex
markets. They predicted that the naira could fall to 230 against the
dollar at the parallel market in coming days or weeks.
An analyst and currency strategist at Ecobank Nigeria, Mr.
Kunle Ezun, said, “The immediate effect of the circular is on the parallel market
(black market), where dollar-naira currently stands at 220. By this circular, the CBN has
surreptitiously transferred the funding of the excluded items to the parallel market. This
is expected to increase the naira volatility to about 230.
“This will lead to an interbank exchange rate of around N217
to one dollar (the CBN indicative rate is currently set at one dollar to N196.90).” An Associate Professor of Economics at the Ekiti State
University, Abel Awe, commended the CBN for the move but said it might fuel
further pressure on the naira, making it to go for about 230 against the dollar at the
parallel market.
He recommended an outright ban on the importation of the
listed items and other similar items by the Ministry of Finance. The Head, Investment Research, Sterling Capital, Mr. Sewa
Wusu, noted that the naira had been under pressure because the market was waiting in
anticipation of a further devaluation.
“What the economy needs now is to become a producer economy.
If our industries are allowed to produce these items, our dependence on oil and
other imported items will be reduced. Most of these items can be produced locally. The
ban is a good move,” he said.
The Acting President, Association of Bureau De Change
Operators, Alhaji Aminu Gwadabe, said the naira was likely to fall to 230 against
the dollar at the parallel market in the next one week. “The restriction will reduce the demand in the forex market
in the short run; in the long run, there is still a need for exchange rate adjustment
(naira devaluation) to bring the demand and supply in the forex market to equilibrium,” an
economist and Chief Executive Officer, Financial Derivatives Limited, Mr.
Bismarck Rewane, said.
Meanwhile, the new policy has started creating artificial scarcity
of forex at the black market. It was learnt on Wednesday that black market operators were
hoarding their stock of dollars, euros and pounds in anticipation of major
appreciation in the value of the foreign currencies against the naira at the parallel market.
According to a report by Ecobank Nigeria Economics Research,
the 40 items banned from the forex market constitute 63.6 per cent of the $9bn
total foreign exchange utilisation on visible imports in the fourth quarter of
2014. This means that the banned items will cause approximately
$5.7bn quarterly forex demand to move from the official forex market to the
parallel market.
The Managing Director, DLM Asset Management Limited, Mr.
Tola Odukoya, said to make Nigeria a productive base, there was a need for the CBN
to compliment the forex ban with a monetary policy by reducing the Monetary Policy
Rate in order to boost lending to the real sector and ultimately grow the economy The Chairman, Ikeja Shop Owners Association, Mr. John
Okonkwo, observed that any policy that would cause the prices of local items to rise
was not a good one.
He added that the prices of food items were already getting
too high for the ordinary man to afford. The Director-General, Lagos Chamber of Commerce and
Industry, Mr. Muda Yusuf, said the group was still studying the policy and would come up
with a comprehensive response, adding that it was doubtful if the parallel market
and Bureaux de Change had the capacity to absorb the demand for foreign exchange from
the importers.
Source
Punch
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