Business
CBN Injects $304.4m Into Forex Market
The Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) has intervened in the Retail Secondary Market Intervention Sales (SMIS) of the inter-bank Foreign Exchange Market to the tune of 304.4 million dollars.
The Bank’s Acting Director, Corporate Communications Department, Mr Isaac Okorafor in a statement in Abuja, last Friday reiterated that the objective of the CBN remained to boost liquidity, production and trade.
He said that the recent interventions were in favour of interests in the agriculture, airlines, petroleum products, raw materials and machinery sectors.
According to him, the CBN will continue to ensure liquidity in the interbank sector of the market as well as sustain its interventions in order to drive economic growth and guarantee market stability.
Okorafor expressed optimism that the Nigerian economy stood to gain massively from the bank’s foreign exchange management strategy.
According to him, it can be seen in the accretion to the foreign reserves, which now stands at more than 40 billion dollars.
Meanwhile, the naira exchanged for N361 to a dollar in the Bureau de Change segment of the market last Friday.
Business
MWUN Backs Nigeria’s Bid For IMO’s Category C Seat
Business
Food Security: FG To Review Nigerian Agric laws
Business
Okpebholo Charges Committee To End Herders, Farmers Clash In Edo … Inaugurates Boundary Committee
-
Rivers3 days ago
Foundation Tasks Parents, Families In Moral Rectitude
-
Rivers3 days ago
Emohua Gears For Food Production, Employment Opportunities
-
Politics3 days ago
EFCC Arrest Ex-Plateau Speaker, 14 Lawmakers Over Alleged Money Laundering
-
Politics3 days ago
Eno’s Defection: Collaborate With PDP Defectors, Akpabio Urges APC Members
-
News3 days ago
TCN Reports 86 Towers Vandalism In 2024, 26 Completely Destroyed
-
Rivers3 days ago
LG Administrator Seeks FG’s Support For Security, Infrastructure Challenges
-
Niger Delta3 days ago
FG Lauds Oborevwori’s Bold Initiatives In Delta
-
Politics3 days ago
Again Gunmen Attack Sen. Natasha’s Home In Kogi