By Ubong Sampson
Central Bank Governor, Godwin Emefele has stated that the bank would seek to flush out illegal dealers in the foreign exchange market in a bid to stabilise the Naira against foreign currencies.
The central bank reportedly kept its benchmark interest rate unchanged at 11.5% on Friday.
According to Emefiele, the investigation part of the bank’s bid to crack down on illegal currency trading had revealed that online currency quote platform – AbokiFx was being used to manipulate forex rates.
The governor stressed that the bank maintains its resolve to continue to restructure the foreign exchange rate market and will pursue all recent policies aimed at sanitising the market to improve transparency and proper functioning and eliminate illegal forex dealers.
Meanwhile, AbokiFx said on Friday it has suspended the publication of black market rates of foreign currencies against the naira, after the central bank accused it of forex manipulation. It added that Friday’s record-low black-market rate of 570 per dollar is its last quoted rate.
Nigeria has several exchange rates operating in parallel, a system put in place during a 2016 oil price crash because the government was seeking to avoid a large official devaluation of the naira as a matter of national pride.
The central bank has adjusted the currency three times since March 2020, but it has continued to weaken due dollar shortages. The naira traded at 410.50 per dollar on the official spot market on Friday, within a range it has been since June.
Africa’s biggest economy, Nigeria is under pressure from foreign lenders, including the World Bank, to reform its foreign exchange management system and bring together its multiple exchange rates.
Emefiele said decelerating inflation and the continued recovery of the economy had convinced the central bank to keep rates on hold, a position supported by all members of the monetary policy committee.