Naira fell against the U.S. dollar at the official market on Monday,
Data posted by FMDQ, where forex is officially traded, showed that the currency closed at N420.25 per $1 at the official market.
This implies a N0.50 or 0.12 per cent devaluation from N419.75 it exchanged in the previous session on Friday last week.
The currency, which opened trading at N420.10 to a dollar, hit an intraday high of N413.00 and a low of N444.00 before closing at N420.25 per $1 on Monday, the first business day of the week.
Foreign exchange fell by 73.50 per cent with $49.24 million recorded at the close of business on Monday against the $185.85 million posted in the previous session Friday last week.
In Uyo, black market traders exchanged a dollar at N600.00 and sold at N603.00 on Monday evening.
READ ALSO: Naira gains at official market
“We exchanged the dollar at N603.00 and sold at N607.00 in the morning, but it dropped to N600.00 by afternoon and that is how it is this evening,” a currency dealer who identified himself as Shuaibu told PREMIUM TIMES.
In the Zone 4 black market in Abuja, currency dealers said naira was exchanged at N595.00 and sold N597.00 per $1 on Monday.
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Naira fell against the U.S. dollar at the official market on Monday,
Data posted by FMDQ, where forex is officially traded, showed that the currency closed at N420.25 per $1 at the official market.
This implies a N0.50 or 0.12 per cent devaluation from N419.75 it exchanged in the previous session on Friday last week.
The currency, which opened trading at N420.10 to a dollar, hit an intraday high of N413.00 and a low of N444.00 before closing at N420.25 per $1 on Monday, the first business day of the week.
Foreign exchange fell by 73.50 per cent with $49.24 million recorded at the close of business on Monday against the $185.85 million posted in the previous session Friday last week.
In Uyo, black market traders exchanged a dollar at N600.00 and sold at N603.00 on Monday evening.
READ ALSO: Naira gains at official market
“We exchanged the dollar at N603.00 and sold at N607.00 in the morning, but it dropped to N600.00 by afternoon and that is how it is this evening,” a currency dealer who identified himself as Shuaibu told PREMIUM TIMES.
In the Zone 4 black market in Abuja, currency dealers said naira was exchanged at N595.00 and sold N597.00 per $1 on Monday.
WATCH: Governor Yahaya Bello’s Roadmap to Hope 2023
Support PREMIUM TIMES’ journalism of integrity and credibility
Good journalism costs a lot of money. Yet only good journalism can ensure the possibility of a good society, an accountable democracy, and a transparent government.
For continued free access to the best investigative journalism in the country we ask you to consider making a modest support to this noble endeavour.
By contributing to PREMIUM TIMES, you are helping to sustain a journalism of relevance and ensuring it remains free and available to all.
Donate
TEXT AD: Why women cheat: what every Nigerian man should know