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Naira will not be devalued – Bank of Nigeria Governor

Thursday, September 17, 2015

Bank of Nigeria Governor Godwin Emefiele has ruled out a devaluation of the country’s currency – the naira, and has advised businesses not to panic about the federal government shifting its bank accounts to the central bank – a move that drains billions of dollars from the financial system.

In an interview with reporters, Emefiele said he was ready to inject liquidity if needed into the interbank market, which dried up this week following a directive to federal government departments to move their accounts into a “Treasury Single Account” at the central bank – the Bank of Nigeria.

The policy is part of new President Muhammadu Buhari’s drive to fight corruption, but analysts say it could suck up as much as 10 percent of banking sector deposits in Africa’s biggest economy – thus causing a disruption of the banks’ liquidity ratios.

Amid confusion over implementation of the policy, overnight interbank lending rates spiked to 200 percent this week, but Emefiele denied the policy had provoked a liquidity crisis.

“There is no shortage of liquidity,” he said, pointing to an oversubscribed sale of treasury bills on Wednesday. “A spike is a momentary action. It is sentiment,” he said. Emefiele said less than one trillion naira (US$5 billion) would be moved into the single account but did not give details.

Emefiele was also emphatic about maintaining the naira currency – which has take a nose dive in the past year due to a global collapse in oil revenues – at its current level of 197 to the dollar. “There will not be a devaluation because right now the currency is appropriately priced,” he said.

In a series of unconventional interventions to protect the naira, the Bank of Nigeria has blocked access to foreign currency to import items ranging from soap and toothpicks to cement and private jets. Emefiele said the list of restricted items could be expanded to encourage local production.

He rejected claims by Nigerian firms about the difficulties of getting hold of dollars and ruled out the possibility of a default by any company with dollar-denominated debt.

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