The country’s external reserves have hit an 11-year low of $24.21bn,
according to the latest data from the Central Bank of Nigeria.
The
development means a limited amount of dollars will be available at the
official interbank spot market, fuelling concerns over another round of
depreciation of the naira.
The country’s external reserves had depleted to a then record-low of $24.8bn about two weeks ago.
The foreign exchange reserves fell by $600m in two weeks before shedding $1bn in four weeks, the CBN statistics showed.
Specifically,
the reserves fell from $25.8bn on August 16 to $24.8bn on September 16.
It decreased by $600m from the $25.4bn recorded on August 31 to $24.8bn
on September 16, the current CBN data revealed.
The spate of
decline in the external reserves follows the CBN’s almost daily
interventions at the interbank/official foreign exchange market in
recent weeks, as chronic dollar shortage continues to weigh on the
economy.
In its efforts to defend the naira and prevent it from falling
further at the official interbank market, the central bank has been
selling dollars there more frequently.
The naira had fallen to an
all-time low of 365.25 to the dollar at the interbank market on August
18 before making a gradual recovery.
On Friday, the local currency
closed at 305 against the greenback at the official market, while
closing at 460 to the dollar at the parallel market on the same day.
The
CBN had on June 20 lifted its 16-month-old currency controls and
auctioned about $4bn on the spot and futures markets to clear a backlog
of dollar demand and help boost interbank market trading.
The
global plunge in oil prices caused the reserves to be depleting very
fast. The development had forced the CBN to introduce foreign exchange
controls, which were abandoned in June.

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