Nigeria’s naira falls to record low

A man walks past a promotional banner showing a photograph of a pile of Nigerian naira along a road in Lagos in this file picture.

A man walks past a promotional banner showing a photograph of a pile of Nigerian naira along a road in Lagos in this file picture.

Published Nov 20, 2014

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Cape Town - The naira slumped to a record low against the dollar as oil prices fell and before Nigeria’s central bank meeting to review interest rates.

The currency fell 1.9 percent to 177.17 per dollar by 10:16 am in Lagos, the capital, a fourth day of declines.

The naira has weakened 7.4 percent this quarter, the third worst out of 24 African currencies monitored by Bloomberg.

Crude oil, exports of which account for 70 percent of Nigeria’s income, traded below $75 (R832) a barrel for West Texas Intermediate as US inventories increased and investors weighed the likelihood of the Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries reducing its production.

The Central Bank of Nigeria may lift borrowing costs next week to support the naira, according to ETM Analytics.

“Expectations are rising that the bank will throw in the towel and hike policy rates given the seeming futility of trying to keep the naira from depreciating,” Gareth Brickman, a Johannesburg-based Africa analyst at ETM, said in a note to clients.

The central bank will give its rate decision on November 25.

Policy makers left the benchmark rate unchanged at 12 percent on September 19 even as consumer prices accelerated for a sixth month in August.

The inflation rate slowed to 8.1 percent in October, from 8.3 percent the previous month. - Bloomberg News

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