fbpx

Nigeria Tighten Noose On Money-Changers To Boost FX Reserves

Nigeria Tighten Noose On Money-Changers To Boost FX Reserves

From Bloomberg

Tighter rules for Nigerian money changers that take effect this week will help the central bank shore up reserves and bolster the naira before next year’s elections, according to Vetiva Capital Management.

Money-changers have until tomorrow to meet raised minimum capital requirements, according to revised directives published July 8 on the Abuja-based Central Bank of Nigeria’s website. License fees will also increase, it said. The number of traders seeking dollars from the regulator has depleted foreign-currency reserves of Africa’s biggest oil producer, which are down 17 percent from a year earlier, according to the institution.

The moves are “aimed at reducing the speculative demand for foreign exchange over the election cycle,” Pabina Yinkere, head of research at Lagos-based Vetiva Capital Management Ltd., a stock broker and money manager, said in an e-mailed response to questions yesterday. “We view this as positive for the currency if properly implemented, and if successful, could prevent any aggressive tightening of monetary conditions.”

The naira gained 0.1 percent to 161.90 per dollar as of 9:05 a.m. in Lagos for a 0.6 percent rise this month. The currency is advancing for the third straight month as foreign-currency reserves climb to the highest since March following an increase in oil output. Crude is the nation’s biggest source of foreign currency. The central bank sells dollars to lenders and money-changers twice-a-week at auctions where it keeps the naira at 3 percent above or below 155 per dollar.

Read more from Bloomberg