The Central Bank of Nigeria’s (CBN), latest policy shift — permitting licensed Bureau De Change (BDC), operators to access the official Nigerian Foreign Exchange Market (NFEM), with a weekly cap of US$150,000 per operator — marks a significant recalibration of FX management strategy.
This move seeks to address one of the most persistent challenges plaguing Nigeria’s economy: chronic FX scarcity at the official window and the resulting disconnect between official and parallel market rates.
Putting Liquidity Back into Retail FX Channels
For years, the CBN’s approach to forex liquidity — including tight controls on dollar sales and restricted access to official FX — has left many consumers, small businesses, and service providers stranded. Travel allowances, school fees, medical payments abroad, and other legitimate needs often drive individuals to the parallel market, where the naira trades sharply weaker than the official rate.
By reopening access for BDCs to source foreign exchange from authorised dealer banks at prevailing market rates, up to US$150,000 weekly, the CBN is intentionally injecting liquidity into the retail segment. The expectation is that BDCs, closer to end users and retail demand, can act as conduits for foreign exchange to those who genuinely need it, reducing the reliance on offshore or informal channels and narrowing the rate gap.

Balancing Openness with Regulatory Discipline
Critically, this isn’t an unbridled reopening. The policy is grounded in strict regulatory guardrails:
-
Unutilised FX must be returned to the market within 24 hours — signaling that these allocations are for genuine usage, not hoarding or speculative play.
-
Full Know-Your-Customer (KYC) checks, electronic reporting, and settlement through licensed financial institutions are required, aiming to stamp out opacity and money-laundering vulnerabilities.
-
Cash settlement is limited to 25% per transaction, pushing the market toward more traceable, account-based FX dealings.
Such conditions underscore the CBN’s intent to integrate BDC activity into formal financial oversight rather than return to a free-for-all that contributed to previous FX distortions.
A Challenge to Speculation and Market Fragmentation
Nigeria’s FX market has long been characterised by a wide spread between official and black-market rates — a symptom of thin official liquidity and pent-up retail demand. Analysts have repeatedly pointed out that this disconnect not only erodes confidence in the naira but also stifles economic activity for everyday Nigerians.
By empowering BDCs to tap official FX liquidity, the CBN is sending a confidence signal: that the apex bank recognises the retail market’s role in overall FX dynamics and is willing to bring it into the tent rather than push it outside. If implemented efficiently, this move could weaken the rationale for premium street-rate trading and promote greater price discovery.
However, there’s a delicate balance. Too much restriction risks choking the very liquidity the policy is meant to unleash; too much laxity could reignite speculative activities that have historically distorted the market.
The $150,000 cap, while modest relative to total market size, represents a controlled pilot of sorts — enough to matter for smaller operators and end users, but small enough to limit systemic risk.
Policy Continuity Amid Structural Change
It’s also important to situate this move within the broader arc of CBN’s FX reforms. The bank has gradually shifted toward frameworks that prioritise transparency, market rates, and broader participation — as evidenced by past adjustments to interbank windows and trading guidelines.
This latest decision can be seen as a continuation of that strategic direction, blending liberalisation with disciplined oversight.
What Lies Ahead
The real test will come in execution. For now, the $150,000 weekly cap offers BDCs a lifeline — and Nigerian consumers a potentially more accessible avenue to legitimate foreign exchange. But success hinges on robust compliance, vigilant oversight, and a willingness by all market participants to embrace the transparency and accountability that the CBN’s conditions demand.
In an economy where FX scarcity has sapped investor confidence and complicated everyday transactions, this policy is not just a tweak — it’s a statement of intent: that the official FX market can be both more inclusive and more disciplined.
Whether it translates into a narrower rate spread, deeper liquidity, and restored confidence in the naira remains to be seen. But in an era of persistent volatility, it is a step toward bridging the divides that have long fragmented Nigeria’s forex landscape.