Nigeria’s central bank on Monday announced it was stopping the direct
sale of US dollars to bureaux de change to protect the under-pressure
naira and conserve depleted foreign reserves.
The Central Bank
of Nigeria will now “discontinue its sales of foreign exchange to BDCs
(bureaux de change)”, governor Godwin Emefiele said in a speech in
Abuja.
The CBN has been under pressure to devalue the naira, which is
officially pegged at 197 to the dollar, although on the tolerated black
market, exchange rates can be as high as 250 naira. Restrictions on the
forex market have been introduced to conserve reserves, including
reducing the amount the CBN sells to each bureau de change operators
each week from $60,000 to $10,000.
But Emefiele said the bank
noted with “grave concern” that some operators were flouting limits on
them providing $5,000 or less to clients.
Instead, some had become “wholesale dealers” illegally handling millions of dollars per transaction. “Operators in this segment have not reciprocated the Bank’s gesture to help maintain stability in the market,” he added, accusing them of being “greedy” for selling at higher rates.
Vanguard

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