The
Naira at the weekend appreciated against major currencies, especially
the dollar, which exchanged for between N206 and N210 at the parallel
market on Sunday.
The currency, which had lost up to 20 per
cent of its value recently when a dollar exchanged for N245, responded
to series of policies churned out by the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN).
As
part of efforts to further strengthen the naira, the apex bank, at the
weekend, vowed to move against illicit financial flows.
The CBN
policies which have seen Naira firm up have, however, brought untold
hardship on Nigerians on vacation abroad as they find it difficult to
make withdrawals from their domiciliary accounts from outside the
country.
In its plan to properly price the Naira, the apex bank had been tweaking its foreign exchange policies.
The
tweaking saw the CBN excluding 41 items from having access to the forex
window. The bank, also last week, compelled bureau de change operators
to get the BVN of their customers.
The most recent of the
policies is the resolve by commercial banks not to accept dollar deposit
from domiciliary account holders, while also stopping them from making
withdrawals from their accounts outside the bank premises.
This, in effect, means the cancellation of electronic transfer and ATM withdrawals for domiciliary account holders.
According
to Mr Ladi Balogun, MD/CEO, First City Monument Bank, banks opted to
reject dollar deposit “due to large speculation on the currency,” adding
that it was part of efforts to save the Naira.
Credit: Nigerian Tribune
No comments:
Post a Comment