Business
Naira Weakens On Increased Dollar Demand
The naira depreciated on higher demand for the U.S. currency after the Central Bank of Nigeria sold the lowest amount of dollars in more than two months at last week’s auctions.
The currency of Africa’s largest oil producer weakened 0.5 percent to 162.08 per dollar as of 11:56 a.m. on the interbank market in Lagos, according to data compiled by Bloomberg.
The central bank sold $180 million at a foreign-currency auction on July 11, bringing its sales last week to $343.5 million, the least since the five days to May 11. The Abuja- based bank said on July 6 it set a limit of two business days for the use of foreign currency bought at its twice-weekly auctions “to enhance transparency and efficiency.”
Despite the central bank’s measures, “corporate demand is still prevalent, which suggests that the naira will continue to fluctuate in a broad range,” Celeste Fauconnier and Nema Ramkhelawan-Bhana, strategists at Rand Merchant Bank, wrote in a report today.
Nigeria approved a tender on June 27 to import 3.135 million metric tons of gasoline in the third quarter, the Petroleum Products Pricing and Regulatory Agency said. The country relies on imports to meet 70 percent of its fuel needs because of inadequate refining capacity, Petroleum Minister Diezani Alison-Madueke said in November.
The country’s foreign-currency reserves have fallen by $1.2 billion since the end of May to $36.45 billion, according to July 12 data compiled by the Abuja-based central bank.
The yield on Nigeria’s domestic 15.1 percent bonds due 2017 rose four basis points to 16.11 percent, according to July 13 data on the Financial Markets Dealers Association website. Yields on the nation’s $500 million of Eurobonds due 2021 dropped seven basis points to 5.45 percent.