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Nigeria NGN rate hits N755/$

Nigeria has officially floated its naira currency after years of sticking with a hard peg that spooked investors and drained dollars from the economy.

The development means buyers and sellers of foreign currency in the official FX market are now allowed to quote rates they find comfortable in the FX market, as against previous practice where rates were dictated by the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN).

The Investors & Exporters (I&E) window is now quoting a range of between N750 and N755/$, according to customers who cited emails received from their banks.

That implies a 21 percent decline in the naira compared to the previous rate of N463/$ which the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) is still quoting as the I&E rate on its website. However, the last time the CBN updated the rate was June 9.

 

The latest move by the CBN follows President Bola Tinubu’s suspension of CBN governor Godwin Emefiele whose unorthodox monetary policies had become a stumbling block to investors and the economy.

The exchange rate could go as high as N800 by the end of today, according to some bankers, who say an initial knee-jerk reaction could cause the naira to weaken sharply before recovering some lost ground.

“Given that this new rate in the official market is the same as the parallel market, there is no incentive for people and businesses with genuine transactions to patronize the parallel market, hence FX trading activity in the parallel market will slow down significantly,” Abiola Rasaq, an economist and former head of investor relations at United Bank for Africa.

“Subsequently, the official market should attract more FX supply and rate should gradually ease in the I&E window, and such would cause rates in the parallel market to also ease,” Rasaq said.

The CBN’s next move should be to prioritise supply of dollars to support the naira float.

“The convergence of the rates is only the first step, the next step is the most crucial and that is to boost supply into the market,” a source told BusinessDay.

“No foreign investor will come without a hedge and that can only come when there is assurance of supply. That’s the hard work,” the source said.

Another knowledgeable source is of the view that allowing the market to determine the FX rate is only the first of six steps to fixing Nigeria’s broken FX market.

The second step must be to provide a hedge mechanism that is priced in line with the market while the third step is to ensure market yields are attractive to Foreign Portfolio Investors (FPI).

The next steps are to ensure transparency and remove all controls around domiciliary accounts. Finally, there is also a need to clear the dollar backlog in the market in order to attract FPIs.

“The focus is on supply,” the source said.

Expectations are high after the initial move to fix Nigeria’s broken FX market.

Chidi Uzo, a fund manager at Stanbic IBTC Pension Managers Ltd, said the move was “a bold step in the right direction.”

“However this should go in tandem with the lifting of capital restrictions for investors waiting on the sidelines to repatriate their funds. We expect foreign investor participation to be swayed by the extent to which capital is allowed to flow freely,” Uzo said.

“Overall, the effective harmonisation of Nigeria’s multiple exchange rates by allowing market forces to determine the fair value of the naira should immediately reverse the multi-year widening spreads between the official exchange rate and the parallel market exchange rates,” he said.

THE BIOGRAPHY OF A LIVING LEGEND BISHOP DR PAUL CHUKWURAH NWACHUKWU MP (UN)

THE BIOGRAPHY OF A LIVING LEGEND

Some people has erroneously tagged their fate to be unfortunate and so have claimed that life being so unfair is the reason for the unproductive life they are living. in contrast, the life of a living legend Bishop Dr. Paul Nwachukwu the founding father and presiding Bishop of Grace of God int church, southeast Nigeria has cleared the air. it has shown that life being so unfair has been so fair and it’s all about you.
His pretty pickle was just all about him year 1947. July 22nd as his mother did not live to nurse her new born. it was a great misfortune for him being deprived of mother’s milk and care. the walls of his hospital of birth Iyienu General hospital ogidi, in Anambra state felt the unfriendliness of life to the new born as the news spread across its nooks and crannies. her name was SUZANNA daughter of Igweze family of ifite village Awkuzu, in Anambra state.
Another stroke of misfortune was fast-forward to 1956 when his father left him too. He was just 9yrs old and had much need of the father’s care at that time. His father was a veteran during the world war II and worked auxiliary as a nurse at same hospital were his new boy was born. although people identified him as “that auxiliary nurse that lost his wife” that was after Suzanna had passed. little Paul knowing nothing of the mother and little of the father was a good sign that life was not fair.
As though nature was fair, he was left to grow amongst his two siblings who came before him, masculine Authur and feminine Jemima. although they were little too at that time but it felt like having smaller version of Parenthood fashioned in their character. they taught him his Early learnings of how to use few words, identify numbers and Scrabble on the floor. however during one of their plays down in the Anambra River those days, he almost drawn in the river but his brother Arthur was near and some friends too. how would they have told their story and how much would have the world lost had hel drawn in that river. hence his love for them and theirs for him could not be replaceable. families are to learn from that. no man is an island of himself. the little love shared and shown could be the bond that keeps people stronger. like broom he was bonded to his two siblings and they to himself. like many others Paul was a religious young man who grew up as a lover of God in the Anglican Church and through Archbishop C.J Patterson received the sacrament of baptism of infancy at St. Andrew odoakpu Onitsha. However he was business minded and had thought nothing more than his business of fish selling. meeting at Medugri were he buys stock fishes and mangala fish from some foreign sellers of other Republic like Niger and Chad then sells down to other people in the state. he was good in business and made his first wealth those Early years through his fishing business while his great encounter with God took place.

it was Evangelist Billy Graham’s book “peace with God” which he got at a book store on the 11th of sept. 1965 that called him out to encounter God and the need for salvation and on the 24th of sept. 1967 he was opportune to give his first sermon which he titled AT THE END OF THE DAY, HOW IS IT GOING TO BE WITH YOUR SOUL IF YOU DIE? this was following a mandate given to him in a dream by a small boy he saw in that dream mandating him to read the book of Ezekiel 33:7,8 &9 that God has made him a watchman over His people. that was the beginning of his mandate which he has been on. The mandate was on the 19th of sept. 1967. Precisely many years ago.

 

More data coming soon ……..