The naira will rise further against the
dollar on the parallel market this week, analysts and foreign exchange
dealers have predicted.
They argued that the peaceful outcome of
the presidential election and the hard stance of the President-elect,
Muhammadu Buhari, against corruption and economic leakages had boosted
investor confidence in the economy.
The naira, which fell to a record high of 228 against the greenback before the election, rose to 210 on Friday.
However, the local currency traded within
the 199-199.50 band on the official interbank market, where it has been
stuck since February, after the Central Bank of Nigeria pegged the
rate.
The Acting President, Association of
Bureau de Change Operators of Nigeria, Alhaji Aminu Gwadabe, told our
correspondent he expected the local currency to rise further this week
and beyond.
Gwadabe, who said the naira had firmed to
204 against the dollar on Thursday, believe the trend would continue
this week, adding that “the naira may appreciate to something below 197
currently at the interbank market.”
Foreign exchange dealers said the demand for dollar had reduced compared to what happened before the presidential election.
A currency analyst at Ecobank Nigeria,
Mr. Kunle Ezun, had said the market was trading around the general
elections and Buhari’s person.
He had said, “The market has been trading
around sentiments and emotions, this is why the naira is appreciating;
nothing has really changed in the fundamentals. There was high demand
for the dollar before the election because some people predicted
post-election violence. Now, the game is over and there is no violence.
So, the demand for the greenback is abating.
“The market is also trading around the
sentiment that Buhari will fight corruption, strengthen institutions and
eliminate wastages. But after his inauguration, the market will trade
around the fundamentals like the oil price, external reserves and
others.”
In a sign of relief, individuals who had
stockpiled dollars to hedge against political risk fearing the election
could be marred by violence, were exchanging their funds for the naira, Reuters reported.
“We are not going to see much of movement
in the pricing of the naira at the interbank market until the central
bank reviews the present measure which has stagnated the rate,” a dealer
said.
The naira-dollar exchange rate has yet to witness any change at the interbank market.
According to Reuters, the Kenyan
shilling is expected to weaken, hurt by negative sentiment after a
deadly attack by al Shaabab near the frontier with Somalia threatened
its tourism fortunes.
The shilling has lost ground steadily
since last year, partly due to a downturn in tourism following attacks
by al Shabaab militants. Tourists are a leading source of hard
currencies for East Africa’s biggest economy.
The shilling could trade between
92.50-93.20 to the dollar, with a move beyond 93 likely triggering
intervention from the central bank, National Bank of Kenya trader, Chris
Muiga, said.
Traders said a government bond could lend
support to the shilling. Kenya’s central bank has invited bids for a
12-year infrastructure bond worth 25 billion shillings ($270m).
Ghana’s cedi could be buoyed by demand from businesses looking to settle domestic quarterly bills.
The West African currency has weakened by
about 11 per cent since January, but looks set to reverse some of those
losses, partly helped by a $940m International Monetary Fund aid deal
this month that is expected to unlock additional offshore inflows.
“Liquidity has been weak on the local
market … and this is likely to hold the dollar/cedi at current levels
next week,” Barclays Bank analyst, Michael Akpakli, said.
The outlook points to a firmer Zambian
kwacha this week, after the central bank hiked the amount of money
commercial banks should deposit with the regulator and as the government
plans to resolve a mining tax row with foreign investors.
The Bank of Zambia will raise the statutory reserve ratio to 18 per cent from 14 per cent on Wednesday.
“The increase will reduce liquidity and that should render support to the kwacha,” analyst Maambo Hamaundu told Reuters.
President Edgar Lungu last month directed
the finance and mining ministers to adjust royalties on mining firms by
April 8, saying the copper-producer could consider temporarily
reverting to the less punitive tax regime which was in place in 2014.
Traders predicted a stable shilling on
tightening liquidity but some investors were concerned about the impact
of a planned increase in government spending.
The Ugandan government is planning to
increase spending before the 2016 elections, although the central Bank
of Uganda has vowed to use its key interest rate to keep inflation in
check.
The shilling traded at 3,000/3,016, weaker than 2,975/2,985 a week ago.
“Liquidity is getting tighter in the
market, we see this tightening slowing any weakening of the unit
(shilling),” a trader at Bank of Africa, Ahmed Kalule, said.
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