The naira at the close of the day went stronger than the N454 it traded to the United States dollar at some parallel market points in Lagos the previous day.
The CBN sold a total of $150 million to authorised forex dealers in the interbank at the highest bid rate of N335/$1 and a marginal rate of N320/$1.
Confirming details of the sale to the dealers, the CBN acting Director, Corporate Communications, Mr Isaac Okorafor, said the highest rate of N335 was the same as the last auction rate of March 8, 2017.
He however added that there was a change in the marginal rate from N315/$1 during the last auction to last Wednesday’s marginal rate of N320.
Speaking further, Okorafor expressed confidence that the pressure which had been faced by both small and big-end users would soon be totally overcome.
The CBN, in the past few weeks, has been making offers and releases to the inter-bank foreign exchange market in its bid to sustain forex supply to different categories of users.
The latest forex offer by the CBN took the total intervention since the changes to its foreign exchange policy was announced last month to $1.715 billion.
ThisDay also reports that with the approval of the CBN on Thursday, Travelex sold a total of $25 million to 3,124 Bureau De Change, BDC, operators. The development also helped to improve the volume available to sell to retail customers.
The President of the Association of Bureau De Change of Nigeria, ABCON, Alhaji Aminu Gwadabe, said Travelex sold the dollars to his members at N381 per dollar.
Also on Thursday, the apex bank said it had offered and received bids for $100 million from authorised dealers in the interbank market to meet the requests of genuine customers.
The CBN spokesman who disclosed this added that the sales would be settled on Friday.
He, however, disclosed that no intervention was made by the bank to meet requests for invisibles on Thursday.
Okorafor reiterated that the CBN would continue to make necessary interventions in the interbank market to meet all legitimate transaction-based foreign exchange demands by customers