Off the wire
China-Russia humanities cooperation enhances mutual understanding: Chinese vice premier  • Iran airs footage revealing IS behind foiled bombing plot  • 1st LD: Rocket barrage hits area near Baghdad airport  • Nigeria's restive NE state says no restriction of movement  • Nigeria's ex-president calls for single currency for West Africa  • Nigeria state oil corporation gets new head  • Volvo Cars reports double-digit sales growth for first half of 2016  • S. Africa economy sheds 15,000 jobs in Q1  • Nigeria's apex bank sacks Skye bank management  • Police deploys special strike force to Nigerian state  
You are here:   Home

Nigeria's apex bank denies forex price interference

Xinhua, July 5, 2016 Adjust font size:

Nigeria's apex bank said on Monday that it was not interfering in the newly introduced flexible exchange rate regime aimed at ensuring foreign exchange stability.

The flexible exchange rate regime pricing was based on market forces of demand and supply contrary to speculations, Godwin Emefiele, the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) governor told reporters in Lagos, the nation's economic hub.

According to him, the CBN has not been involved in interfering in the exchange rate regime, because it is a flexible exchange rate regime and prices are determined based on market forces of demand and supply.

He emphasized that the apex bank remained a player in the market but did not interfere in the pricing.

The governor added that CBN was a major player in the market and it desired to see that other players were beginning to return to the market.

He said the apex bank remained a stakeholder and a major player in the market presently.

The CBN governor on June 15 released modalities for the long-awaited implementation of the flexible foreign exchange policy.

Emefiele announced the introduction of a two way quote, which means that buyers and sellers would state prices and quantities they are willing to buy and sell.

He also maintained that the 41 items banned in 2015 for access to forex for imports would remain banned.

Emefiele said the exchange rate would be market determined, adding that the CBN would also participate in the market occasionally.

The bank also on June 27 launched the first Naira-Settled OTC FX Futures Market on the FMDQ OTC Securities Exchange platform. Endit