This comes after the southern African nation’s central bank introduced weekly foreign-currency auctions and cracked down on mobile-money transactions, blamed by authorities for undermining the currency.
The Zimbabwe dollar slumped to 83.39 per U.S. dollar on August 26 after being re-introduced at around Z$3 in March last year. It strengthened 2.3% in September and has edged another 0.1% higher to Z$81.35 on Tuesday, according to central-bank data.
The currency has also strengthened on the black market, where the premium for US dollars, once more than 100%, has narrowed to between 15% and 20% as companies turn to official channels for foreign exchange.
A local website which tracks black-market rates, marketwatch.co.zw, put the street rate at Z$100 per US dollar yesterday, down from a peak of Z$120.
In an October 12 statement, the central bank’s monetary policy committee said stability was achieved after it allotted a combined US$291 million at 16 foreign currency auctions since their introduction on June 23.
By Tuesday, Zimbabwe had allotted US$349.1 million in 18 auctions.-Bloomberg/Own
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