For the first time in seven months, the dollar fell below
the psychological N400 barrier, when the greenback traded at N399 to the dollar
in Lagos and exchanged at N395 in Abuja, lower than N410 at which it traded on
Tuesday.
With the gains made by the local currency in the last five
weeks, the naira inched closer to one of the Central Bank of Nigeria's (CBN)
key foreign exchange policy objectives of an exchange rate convergence.
The naira trades for N375 to the greenback for invisibles
and at N307 to the dollar on the FX interbank market, the official window for
manufacturers and importers of raw materials eligible to buy FX from this
segment of the market.
The last time the naira traded at between N395 and N400 to
the dollar on the parallel market was in August 2016.
The significant gains made by the naira on the parallel
market, according to market analysts, was a reflection of the improved
confidence in the FX market, following the sustained dollar interventions by
the CBN since last month.
One analyst also attributed the gains made by naira to the
Bureau de Change (BDC) operators that are awash with dollars and with little or
no customers to patronize them.
By Obinna Chima with Agency Report
