Saturday 1 August 2015

Why Banks Reject Dollar Deposits In Nigeria


To discourage speculation on the naira, Nigeria’s commercial lenders (banks) have stopped accepting cash deposits in dollars.
Two banks disclosed this on Friday, July 31, 2015.
“Banks no longer accept dollar cash due to large speculation on the currency,” the chief executive of First City Monument Bank, Ladi Balogun, told a conference call. Lenders will continue to receive dollar transfers from other banks, he said.
His comments were confirmed by another Nigerian lender, which asked not to be identified.
 
“We are constrained due to the current influx of foreign exchange cash deposits we have been receiving in recent times, and the lack of available FX cash outlets, to stop receiving FX cash deposits,” that bank told Reuters.
Central Bank Governor, Godwin Emefiele, last week said that the naira, which has lost around 15 per cent against the dollar over the past year, with an official devaluation in November and a de facto one in February, was “appropriately priced” at its current level of 197 to the dollar on the interbank market.
The naira has weakened on the parallel market, falling as low as 242 on persistent dollar shortages after the Central Bank last month limited importers’ access to dollars, to save its reserves.
Early last month, the CBN fixed the spread at which bureaux de change operators can sell dollars to individuals, and has also limited the amount bank customers can spend using their debits cards abroad.
 
Although the restrictions have angered investors and frustrated companies that need dollars for imports, Emefiele has rejected the idea of loosening the curbs, saying the apex bank could not adopt an “indeterminate policy” of currency depreciation.

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