Naira falls at official window despite slight improvement in FX liquidity
GoldenNewsNg gathered that as at 12th November 2021 , The exchange rate between the naira and the US dollar closed at N415.1/$1, at the Investors and Exporters window, where forex is traded officially.
Naira closed lower against the US dollar at N415.1/$1 on Friday 12th November 2021, representing a 0.09% depreciation compared to N414.73/$1 recorded on the previous day.
In the same vein, naira depreciated at the parallel market to close at N545/$1 on Friday, representing a 1.87% fall compared to N535/$1 recorded on the previous day. The exchange rate had gained massively earlier in the week to N535 to a dollar from N570/$1.
This is according to information obtained from Nairametrics.
Nigeria’s foreign reserve declined by 0.05% on Thursday, 11th November 2021 to close at $41.53 billion, representing a $22.37 million drop compared to $41.58 billion recorded as of the previous day.
LAGOS PARALLEL MARKET RATES November 15, 2021 (BLACK MARKET): dollar to naira exchange rate today black market
November 15 dollar to naira black market exchange rate: $1 dollar to naira = ₦541
Lagos parallel market (black market dollar exchange rate today)
The local currency opened at N541.00 per $1 at the parallel market otherwise known as the black market, today, Monday, 15 November 2021, in Lagos Nigeria after it closed N540.00 per $1 on Friday, 12 November 2021.
Even though the dollar to naira opened in the parallel market at ₦541 per $1 today, GoldenNewsNg reports that the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) does not recognise the parallel market, otherwise known as the black market. The apex bank has therefore directed anyone who requires forex to approach their bank, insisting that the I&E window is the only known exchange.
GoldenNewsNg reports that the black market, the players buy a dollar for N537 and sell for N541 on Monday morning, November 15, 2021 after they bought N535 and sell for N540 on Friday, 12 November 2021.
Trading at the official NAFEX window
The exchange rate fell against the US dollar on Friday, 12th November 2021 to close at N415.1/$1, representing a 0.09% depreciation compared to N414.73 recorded on the previous day. In the same vein, when compared to N414.3/$1 recorded as of the previous week, the exchange rate depreciated by 0.19%.
- The opening indicative rate closed at N414.39/$1 on Friday, indicating a 11 kobo depreciation compared to N414.28/$1 recorded in the previous trading session.
- An exchange rate of N444 to a dollar was the highest rate recorded during intra-day trading before it settled at N415.1/$1, while it sold for as low as N404.57/$1 during intra-day trading.
- Forex turnover at the official window increased marginally by 10.6% to $90.7 million on Friday. A sum of $743.58 million was transacted in the week ended, 12th November 2021.
- According to data tracked by Nairametrics from FMDQ, forex turnover at the I&E window improved slightly from $82.01 million recorded on Thursday 11th November 2021 to $90.7 million on Friday 12th November 2021.
Cryptocurrency watch
The global crypto market suffered a marginal downturn on Sunday as the market capitalisation dipped by 0.51% to close at $2.799 trillion, representing a $14.48 billion loss. The downturn was due to a negative movement in the unit price of the two most capitalised crypto assets in the world.
The flagship crypto asset, bitcoin dipped by marginally by 0.07% on Sunday to close at $64,374.25, while Ethereum closed at $4,582.18, representing a 1.37% dip.
It is worth noting that the figures used were obtained as of 10:55pm on Sunday.
Crude oil price
Crude oil prices extended their bearish trades on Sunday falling further away from $85 per barrel as Brent Crude closed on the reds with 0.84% decline to $82.17 per barrel, while West Texas Intermediate dipped by 0.98% to close at $80.79 per barrel.
Similarly, Natural Gas recorded a significant downturn as it dipped by 6.95% to close at $4.791, while heating oil closed at $2.404, representing 1.77% decline compared to the previous day.
Nigerian crude, Bonny Light dipped 0.32% to close at $81.76 per barrel while Brass River and Que Iboe both declined by 0.5% to close at $82.02 per barrel.
The decline was attributed to pressure from the expectation of higher supplies and weakening demand. Also, the market was also affected by the strengthening dollar and speculation that President Joe Biden’s administration might release oil from the U.S. Strategic Petroleum Reserve to cool prices.
External reserve
Nigeria’s foreign reserve declined by 0.05% to close at $41.53 billion as of Thursday, 11th November 2021 compared to $41.56 billion recorded as of the previous day.
However, the nation’s foreign reserve gained $5.04 billion in the month of October, as a result of the $4 billion raised by the federal government from the issuance of Eurobond in the international debt market. The gains recorded in the previous month is higher than the $2.76 billion gain recorded in the month of September 2021, while the recent decrease puts the year-to-date gain at $6.16 billion.
So far in the month of November, Nigeria’s reserve has lost $285.5 million.