The naira may depreciate marginally on the black market in the days ahead on an expected increase in dollar demand by small businesses and people planning for summer holidays, according to analysts.
The local currency was quoted at 368 to the United States dollar on the black market on Thursday, compared with 365 a dollar it traded last Thursday, Reuters reported.
It was learnt that commercial banks were yet to put up a quote on the interbank market.
"We are expecting a slight depreciation in the value of the naira as we approach the summer holiday period for many Nigerians unless the central bank increases dollar supply to the market to cater for the likely surge in demand," one currency trader told Reuters.
The naira recorded a marginal gain on Wednesday, closing at 367 per United States dollar up from 368 on Tuesday.
The local currency has been hovering between 363/dollar and 370/dollar as the Central Bank of Nigeria continues to supply foreign exchange into the market.
The CBN had sold $195m in various segments of the inter-bank market on Wednesday, the first day of transaction after the Eid-el-Fitr celebration.
A breakdown of the intervention indicates that authorised dealers in the wholesale window segment received a $100m offer from the bank, while the Small and Medium-scale Enterprises and invisibles windows were allocated the sums of $50m and $45m, respectively.
Meanwhile, Ghana's cedi is expected to gain ground against the dollar next week, while Kenya's shilling is forecast to weaken, according to traders.
The Kenyan shilling is forecast to weaken due to retail merchants and oil importers buying dollars amid weak supply from foreign investors buying government securities, traders said.
Commercial banks quoted the shilling at 103.75/85 per dollar, compared with 103.75/55 at last Thursday's close.
"Dollar supply side has become weaker, jittery demand from importers buying dollars to meet short-term liquidity needs," a trader from a commercial bank said.
The kwacha is expected to remain steady with a bias to appreciating slightly towards the end of next week as companies convert hard currency to the local unit to pay taxes.
Copyright FORUM NEWSPAPERS.
All rights reserved. This material, and other digital content on this website, may not be reproduced, published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed in whole or in part without prior express written permission from FORUM NEWSPAPERS.
Contact: forumpapers@gmail.com
LATEST FORUM NEWS
Popular Posts
-
Customs Arrest Man With $375,000 (N135m) At Kaduna International Airport (Picture) The Nigeria Customs Service on Tuesday, March 6...
-
Eight out of Eleven Governors of were, on Sunday present at the maiden meeting of South East/South South Governors taking place in Enu...
-
An Igbosere Magistrates' Court in Lagos on Wednesday remanded two people including a teenage boy in prison over an alleged defilement o...
-
Fear has gripped the residents of Bayelsa State as a new deadly viral epidemic known as "monkeypox" has broken out in the st...
-
The Federal High Court in Lagos on Thursday ordered the Department of State Services to file a criminal charge against the Managing Director...
-
Britain's anti-EU UK Independence Party will unveil its policy pledges on Thursday, restarting an election campaign which was suspende...
-
The Kaduna State Government has signed a pact with a Chinese firm to build a new 50,000 barrels per day refinery in the state. The represen...
-
Same sex or homosexual relationships is highly considered illegal in Nigeria. The Same Sex Marriage Prohibition Act criminalizes homos...
-
The National Bureau of Statistics on Thursday released the Consumer Price Index, which measures inflation rate, with the index dropping year...
-
Benue State Government has said it will organise another mass burial on Friday for the latest victims of suspected herdsmen attacks in th...
Categories
- ARTICLES (12)
- DIOCESAN NEWS (21)
- FORUM EVENTS (3)
- GENERAL NEWS (109)
- INTERNATIONAL NEWS (40)
- LATEST PUBLICATION (5)
- PHOTO NEWS (1)
- POLITICAL NEWS (47)
- SPORTS NEWS (34)


