The Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) has settled all N1.5 billion outstanding foreign exchange (FX) transactions.
The CBN’s Acting Director, Corporate Communications, Hakama Sidi disclosed this in a statement issued on Wednesday night, March 20, 2024.
According to her, the CBN recently completed the payment of $1.5 billion, effectively settling the remaining balance of the FX backlog owed to bank customers.
She said the process underwent meticulous scrutiny by independent auditors from Deloitte Consulting, ensuring that only legitimate claims were honoured. Any questionable transactions were promptly referred for further investigation.
She also disclosed that independent auditors from Deloitte Consulting meticulously assessed these transactions, ensuring that only legitimate claims were honoured.
“Any invalid transactions were promptly referred to the relevant authorities for further scrutiny,” The CBN spokesperson added.
At a recent meeting, the CBN governor Cardoso declared; “We made clearing the FX backlog a priority to restore credibility and confidence in the Nigerian economy.
“It was important that we go through an independent and credible process that would determine the authenticity of those obligations, and, at this point, I can tell you that we have now cleared all genuine, verifiable transactions. This encumbrance to market confidence in the country’s ability to meet its obligations is now totally behind us.”
Clearance of the foreign exchange transactions backlog is part of the overall strategy detailed in last month’s Monetary Policy Committee meeting to stabilise the exchange rate and thereby curb imported inflation, spurring confidence in the banking system and the economy.
Cardoso used the MPC meeting and a subsequent conference call with foreign portfolio investors to set expectations for sustained increases in Nigeria’s foreign currency reserves and improved liquidity in the foreign exchange market.
The CBN followed this by reporting a significant increase in external reserves, rising by $993 million to $34.11 billion as of March 7, 2024, the highest level in eight months.
The month-on-month increase was driven by a marked advance in remittance payments by Nigerians overseas, as well as higher purchases of local assets, including government debt securities, by foreign investors.
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