Nigeria’s foreign exchange reserves were $31.43 billion on August 27, up 1.12 percent from $31.08 billion a month earlier, data from the central bank showed on Monday.
The forex reserves of Africa’s top crude exporter were down 20.65 percent year-on-year from $39.61 billion a year ago.
The decline from $31.63 billion on August 14 reflects consistent dollar sales by the central bank to bureau de change operators to narrow the margin between the naira currency’s official and black market rates.
Meanwhile, the naira weakened against the dollar on Monday on the parallel market after a boost in liquidity and a surge in demand for dollars, traders said.
The naira traded at N218 to the dollar in the bureau de change market, 2.34 per cent weaker than the N213 it closed at on Friday.
“There is an upsurge in demand for the dollar due to increase in liquidity in the system, with some buyers wiling to pick up dollars at any available rate,” the president of the Association of Bureau de Change of Nigeria (ABCON), Aminu Gwadabe said.
The naira hovered between N208-N210 to the dollar last week after the central bank increased dollar sales to bureau de change operators in a bid to narrow the margin between parallel and interbank market rates.