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Here are the major points from the recently released Central Bank of Nigeria’s April 2010 Economic Report.:
You can read an excerpt from the summary section below:
Growth in major monetary aggregates moderated in April 2010 relative to the level in the preceding month. Broad money (M 2) contracted by 0.5 per cent, relative to the preceding month. The decline in M 2 was due wholly, to the 3.3 per cent decline in foreign asset (net) of the banking system. Narrow money (M1), however, increased, by 1.6 per cent, over the level in the preceding month. Reserve money (RM) contracted by 16.3 per cent from the level at the end of March 2010.Available data indicated a general decline in banks’ deposit and lending rates. The spread between the weighted average term deposit and maximum lending rates narrowed marginally, from 15.94 percentage points in the preceding month to 15.77 percentage points. The margin between the average savings deposit and maximum lending rates also narrowed from 19.68 percentage points in March 2010 to 19.54 percentage points during the review period. The weighted average inter-bank call rate fell to 1.27 per cent from 1.50 per cent in the preceding month, reflecting the liquidity conditions in the interbank funds market.
The value of money market assets outstanding rose by 2.5 per cent over the level in March 2010 to N3,397.1 billion. The development was attributed to the increase in FGN Bonds. Activities on the Nigerian Stock Exchange (NSE) were bullish as all the major market indicators trended upward during the review month. Total federally-collected revenue in April of 2010 was estimated at N537.74 billion, representing a shortfall of 19.9 per cent from the proportionate monthly budget estimate, but an increase of 12.3 per cent over the receipts in the preceding month. At N396.89 billion, oil receipts, which constituted 73.8 per cent of the total, fell short of the proportionate monthly budget estimate by 18.6 per cent, but rose by 11.4 per cent over the receipts in the preceding month.The underperformance in oil receipts relative to the proportionate monthly budget estimate resulted from the fall in petroleum profit tax, royalties and crude oil and gas export receipts during the month. Similarly, non-oil receipts, at N140.85 billion or 26.2 per cent of the total was 23.2 per cent lower than the proportionate budget estimate, but higher than the receipts in the preceding month and the level in the corresponding period of 2009, by 14.8 and 38.8 per cent, respectively. The improved performance relative to the preceding month reflected largely the rise in all the components namely, customs and excise duties, value-added tax, and company income tax and other taxes as well as “others”. Federal Government estimated retained revenue for April 2010 was N135.65billion, while total estimated expenditure was N289.99 billion. Thus, the fiscal operations of the Federal Government resulted in an estimated deficit of N153.29 billion, compared with the budgeted deficit of N126.83 billion for the review month.
The major agricultural activities during the month of April 2010 were clearing and planting operations. Nigeria’s crude oil production, including condensates and natural gas liquids, was estimated at 2.10 million barrels per day (mad) or 63.0 million barrels for the month. Crude oil export was estimated at 1.65 mbd or 49.5 million barrels for the month, while deliveries to the refineries for domestic consumption remained at 0.45 mbd or13.5 million barrels. The average price of Nigeria’s reference crude, the Bonny Light (370 API), estimated at US$85.51 per barrel, rose by 0.6 per cent over the level in the preceding month.
The end-period headline inflation rate (year-on-year), for the month of April of 2010, was 12.5 per cent, compared with 11.8 per cent recorded at the end of the preceding month. Inflation rate on a twelve-month moving average basis for April 2010 was 11.8 per cent, compared with 11.9 per cent recorded in the preceding month. Foreign exchange inflow and outflow through the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) amounted to US$2.02 billion and US$2.98 billion, respectively, resulting in a net outflow of US$0.96 billion during the review month. Foreign exchange sales by the CBN to the authorized dealers amounted to US$2.15 billion in April 2010.
The average Naira exchange rate vis-à-vis the US dollar, depreciated by 0.04 per cent to N149.89 per dollar at the WDAS. In the bureaux-de-change segment of the market, the naira also depreciated by 0.1 per cent to N152.00 per dollar, while at the interbank segment it depreciated from N150.08 per US dollar in March 2010 to N150.38 per dollar. Non-oil export earnings by Nigerian exporters declined sharply, by 66.2 per cent, from the level in the preceding month to US$112.4 million. The development was attributed largely to the fall in the prices of all the commodities traded at the international commodities market during the period. World crude oil output in April 2010 was estimated at 85.87 million barrels per day (mbd), while demand was estimated at 85.16 mbd, compared with the respective levels of 85.65and 85.13 mbd supplied and demanded in the preceding month.
You can download the report in full below:
CBN – April 2010 Economic Report
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2 Responses to Central Bank of Nigeria April 2010 Economic Report
ogechi anaeto
March 22nd, 2011 at 12:09 pm
please i want to know the exchange rate and level of money supply in nigeria
ogechi anaeto
March 22nd, 2011 at 12:14 pm
please i want to know the level of money supply in nigeria and the exchange rate from 2005 to 2010