CBN sets limits on oil firms' forex transfers to parent companies
Nigeria's central bank
has set a limit on foreign currency transfers from crude export proceeds by
international oil companies to their parent firms, in its latest measure to
improve dollar supply in the local currency market.
In a circular dated Feb.
14, the Central Bank of Nigeria said banks could in the first instance transfer
a maximum of 50 per cent of crude export proceeds to oil companies abroad.
They could then transfer
the balance after 90 days of the deposit of the proceeds.
However, because
international companies lend and borrow between themselves in a process known
as "cash pooling", analysts expect the impact of the new rule to be
marginal.
Africa's largest economy
has been experiencing crippling dollar shortages that has pushed its currency
to record lows, although central bank governor Olayemi Cardoso has said that
dollar liquidity was improving.
The latest move is part
of a series of central bank reforms aimed at boosting dollar liquidity which
dried up in the aftermath of a previously low oil price in 2016 and then
disruptions associated with the COVID-19 pandemic.
On Thursday, the naira
fell to a record low of N1,606 to the dollar after the circular was made
public. It later recovered to close at N1,476, around the level on the
unofficial parallel market.
The central bank said it
wanted to ensure that foreign transfers are done with minimal impact on
liquidity in the currency market while supporting oil firms to have easy access
to their crude proceeds.
Cardoso has said the
currency will adjust once rules for market participants are made clear.
Last week, the
central bank hiked open market rates to draw investors to bills as inflation
climbed to a nearly three-decade high and lagged behind the benchmark
policy rate.
The bank has also
scrapped caps on forex spreads on the interbank market.

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