Business
Naira Gains As CBN Sells $ 300m At Auction
The naira rose for the first time in four days, reversing an earlier drop, as the Central Bank of Nigeria was said to sell dollars to lenders outside its scheduled currency auction yesterday.
The currency of Africa’s biggest oil producer jumped 0.7 percent to 161.14 per dollar as of 3:38 p.m. yesterday in Lagos, the commercial capital, having earlier declined toward the lowest since Dec. 27.
“The CBN intervened aggressively before today’s session closed and sold dollars to market players,” Samir Gadio, a London-based emerging markets strategist at Standard Bank Group Ltd., said in an e-mailed reply to questions. “Because the CBN had been out of the market for the past two days, it is possible that banks had not positioned for the size of the intervention.”
Nigeria sold $300 million at a currency auction today, taking the total sold at the official window this week to $600 million, the most since February, the central bank said in an e- mailed statement yesterday.
Ugochukwu Okoroafor, a spokesman for the bank, based in the capital, Abuja, didn’t immediately answer a text message sent to his mobile phone after four phone calls were either not answered or engaged.
Nigeria’s economic growth slowed to 6.17 percent in the first quarter, from 7.13 percent a year earlier, the nation’s statistics agency said May 22. Inflation accelerated to 12.9 percent in April after the government partly removed fuel subsidies in January, boosting gasoline costs. The inflation rate is still below the peak of 14.5 percent the central bank forecasts for the third quarter.
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NAFDAC Decries Circulation Of Prohibited Food Items In markets …….Orders Vendors’ Immediate Cessation Of Dealings With Products
Importers, market traders, and supermarket operators have therefore, been directed to immediately cease all dealings in these items and to notify their supply chain partners to halt transactions involving prohibited products.
The agency emphasized that failure to comply will attract strict enforcement measures, including seizure and destruction of goods, suspension or revocation of operational licences, and prosecution under relevant laws.
The statement said “The National Agency for Food and Drug Administration and Control (NAFDAC) has raised an alarm over the growing incidence of smuggling, sale, and distribution of regulated food products such as pasta, noodles, sugar, and tomato paste currently found in markets across the country.
“These products are expressly listed on the Federal Government’s Customs Prohibition List and are not permitted for importation”.
NAFDAC also called on other government bodies, including the Nigeria Customs Service, Nigeria Immigration Service(NIS) Standards Organisation of Nigeria (SON), Nigerian Ports Authority (NPA), Nigerian Maritime Administration and Safety Agency (NIMASA), Nigeria Shippers Council, and the Nigeria Agricultural Quarantine Service (NAQS), to collaborate in enforcing the ban on these unsafe products.
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