Nairametrics
The Central Bank Governor, Godwin Emefiele surprised journalists at the monetary policy committee briefing on Tuesday when he announced a ban of Bureau De Change Operators in the country. Since the ban was announced, we have received several inquiries from our readers who as expected, what to know what the implication of this could be on the exchange rate.
Apparently, this is not the first time the central bank is banning Bureau De Change operators in Nigeria. In January 2016, the Godwin Emefiele led central bank also banned the BDCs for similar acts, providing us with a useful guide to what might happen (see link).
Here is what happened as this Nairametrics article serves as a reminder.
On the 11th of January 2016, when the CBN banned BDCs, the exchange rate was N268/$1.
By 31st December 2016, the exchange rate had depreciated to N495/$1. See this Nairametrics article at the time for reference.
Devaluation was effectively 46% while the dollar had gained a whopping 85% against the naira.
Meaning if you held $100 in January 2016 when the CBN banned BDCs it was worth N26,800. But by December 31st 2016, that same dollar was worth N49,500.
What if the same was to reoccur?
On July 27th 2021, CBN banned BDCs when the exchange rate was N500/$1.
If it depreciates by 46% as it did in 2016 then we could be looking at a whopping exchange rate of N925/$1 by December 2021.
This will be unprecedented in the history of Nigeria and will surely increase the prices of goods and services across the country.
Interesting to note that the exchange rate has now depreciated by 16.3% from N360/$1 to N430/$1. Or the dollar has gained 19% against the naira.
Why did exchange rate fall so badly in 2016?
Firstly, after the ban of BDCs, dollar scarcity remained at the retail and wholesale end of the forex market.
This created both artificial and real scarcity for forex driving more people to the black market to get forex.
Those who were able to get forex from the official market simply just round tripped by going to the black market to sell their hoard.
This created a spiral effect that worsened the situation, depreciating the exchange rate to record proportions.
In fact, by early 2017 the exchange rate had hit N505/$1.
Fortunately, in 2017 the central bank introduced a costly policy of selling OMO bills to foreign and local institutional investors at very high interest rates, thus attracting dollars from overseas. These foreign portfolio investments helped crash the exchange rate positively from N505/$1 to about N363/$1. But we had gone from N165/$1 in 2014 to N363/$1 which is 54.5% devaluation.
Bottom Line
Banning the BDCs for nefarious activities might be a move in the right direction however, if history is to serve as a guide, the CBN will need to ensure there is availability of forex at all markets especially the I&E window.
This story first appeared in Nairametrics