The financial sector appears to have entered a heightened pressure,
yesterday, as both the foreign exchange and stock market sustained major
negative trends.
The Naira depreciated further to a 43-year low at N305 per dollar as scarcity of dollars intensified in the unofficial market.
From an average of N287 per dollar on Tuesday, the parallel market
exchange rate rose to an average of N305 per dollar across the country.
Similarly, the new year stock market haemorrhage entered the eighth day
yesterday, with a total N1.22 trillion losses to investors, giving a
year-to-date decline of 12.36 per cent in market capitalisation.
The market key index, the Nigerian Stock Exchange All Share Index, NSE ASI, declined year-to-date by same margin.
The stock exchange, which opened this year at market capitalisation
of N9.851 trillion began a free fall till yesterday, closing at N8.63
trillion while the NSE ASI which opened the year at 28,642.25 points
closed yesterday at 25,103.05 points.
The losses were heightened in the last 48 hours with a cumulative
two-day loss of N430 billion following the escalated foreign exchange
management crises which came with CBN’s announcement of its decision to
cease sale of foreign exchange to BDCs on account of the precarious
state the operators had forced the entire economy.
Since Monday when the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) stopped weekly
dollar sales to Bureaux De Change (BDCs), the Naira has been
depreciating against the dollar.
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