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External reserves to drop below $37.5bn in February

Dollars traded in I&E rise 7% to $5.6bn in January CBN supports naira with $34bn in 2019 By Babajide Komolafe & Elizabeth Adegbesa...

Dollars traded in I&E rise 7% to $5.6bn in January
CBN supports naira with $34bn in 2019

By Babajide Komolafe & Elizabeth Adegbesan

Nigeria is losing a whole generation to unemployment

THE nation’s external reserves are expected to continue the seven months downward trend to drop below $37.5 billion by the end of this month.

Last month, the reserves dropped to the lowest level since October 2017 (24-months), falling further by 1.4 percent or $539 million to $38.056 billion as at January 30 from $38.595 billion at the end of December 2019.

Recall that the reserves, after falling persistently for seven months, from peak of $47.989 billion on July 5, 2018, to $42.296 billion February 28, 2019, commenced steady upward trend which peaked at $45.175 billion on June 10,  2019.

READ ALSO:Naira up to N360.19/$ in I&E window

But, after four weeks fluctuation which ended on July 5 at $45.149 billion, the reserves commenced a six months downward trend which resulted to $6.83 billion or 8.4 percent decline as at January 9, 2020.

The sharp decline in reserves was due to decline in dollar inflows from Foreign Portfolio Investors, FPIs, and increased dollar sales by the CBN in order to defend the naira.

CBN supports naira with $34bn in 2019

Financial Vanguard analysis shows that the CBN supported the naira with $34.3 billion injection into the foreign exchange market in 2019. This however represents 14 percent, year-on-year (y/y) decline when compared with the $39.9 billion injected in 2018.

Further analysis showed that dollar sales to bureaux de change, BDCs, dominated CBN invention in 2019 accounting for $12.65 billion or 36.8 billion. Dollar sales in the I&E window came second with $5.55 billion or 16 percent.

Quarterly analysis showed that the CBN injected $6.9 billion in the first quarter (Q1’19), up by 25 percent from $9.18 billion in Q4’18. Dollar injection by the apex bank, however, dropped marginally by 6.2 percent to $7.33 billion in Q2’19, but rose by 37 percent in Q3’19 before falling by 1.2 percent to $9.98 billion in Q4’19.

Naira appreciates as CBN sustains forex intervention

Financial Vanguard analysis showed that the $539 decline recorded in January was about half    the average monthly decline of $1.11 billion in the second half of 2019 (H1’19). This was due to the $53 million week-on-week increase recorded in the third week of January, the first in six months, a development prompted      the upsurge in oil revenue triggered by 6.3 percent rise in crude oil price, in the first seven days of the month, courtesy of the tension generated by the US killing of Iran’s General Qasem Soleimani, and the latter’s retaliation with missile strikes on two US military bases in Iraq.

Weak dollar inflow

However, the reserves resumed downward trend last week, resulting to w/w decline of $197 million between Thursday, January 23 and Thursday, January 30, as oil prices receded amidst weak dollar inflow from foreign portfolio investors, while the Central Bank of Nigeria, CBN, resumed intervention in the foreign exchange market to curtail the seven weeks depreciation of the naira in the parallel market and in the Investors and Exporters, I&E, window.

As a result of the apex bank’s intervention, the naira appreciated by N2 in the parallel market in January as the exchange rate of the market dropped to N358 per dollar on January 31, from N360 per dollar on December 31, 2019.

The naira similarly gained 54 kobo in the I&E window in January, as the indicative exchange rate of the window dropped to N363.9 per dollar on January 31 from N364.51 per dollar on December 31, 2019.

Analysts’ projections

In their various projections, analysts opined that the decline in reserves will continue though the naira is expected to remain stable as the CBN sustain its dollar injection into the foreign exchange market.

According to analysts at Financial Derivatives Company Limited, “The depletion in the external reserves is expected to continue, due to the full resumption of business activities and the CBN’s interventions in the foreign exchange market

“As the CBN resumes its intervention activities in the foreign exchange market, we expect the naira to remain stable in the near term. However, this would be at the expense of the depleting external reserves.

“Nigeria is an import-dependent nation, thus a stable exchange rate would foster economic activities. This would also encourage foreign trade and import of goods with little or no local substitutes.”

Analysts at United Capital Plc similarly stated: “Overall, we expect pressure on the foreign reserves to continue in the near term as apex bank sustains it’s intervene in a bid to stabilize the naira”

On their part, analysts at Cordros Securities stated: “Despite the rate of decline in foreign exchange reserves, which has heightened fears regarding the possibility of currency devaluation, we estimate that the CBN will be able to sustain its naira defence through H1-20, at least.”

I&E turnover rises seven per cent to $5.6bn

Meanwhile, the volume of dollars traded (turnover) in the I&E window rose by 7.0  per cent, month-on-month, to $5.6 billion last month from $5.3 billion in December, 2019.

This represents the second consecutive monthly rise in the volume of dollars traded (turnover) in the window since August 2019.

Turnover in the window rose by 75 percent to $7 billion in August 2019, courtesy of increased inflow from FPIs. The monthly turnover dropped by 44 percent to $4.4 billion in September from where it nosedived to $4.2 billion in October. In November, the turnover rose by 26 percent to $5.3 billion while it was stable at $5.3 in December.

Financial Vanguard analysis of weekly turnover in January showed that $354.19 million was traded in the  first week of January. Turnover rose by 352 percent to $1.6 billion in the second week and up by 38 percent to $2.2  billion in the third week.

Turnover fell in the fourth week  by 76 percent to $519.5  million and  up by 70  percent to $882.5  million in the fifth week of January.

The post External reserves to drop below $37.5bn in February appeared first on Vanguard News.



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