Purchases by dealers of foreign currencies on Monday, resulted in the Jamaican currency selling rate making gains against the US dollar and the Canadian but slipping against the Pound sterling. The market closed with dealers buying the equivalent of US$50,144,764 in contrast to US$35,151,325 on Friday, while they sold the equivalent of US$46,892,333, previously US$38,752,539.
In US dollar trading , dealers bought US$45,236,465 compared to US$33,010,598 on Friday. The buying rate for the US dollar fell 20 cents to $117.18 and US$44,880,379 was sold versus US$36,624,907 on Friday, the selling rate eased by 1 cent to $117.86. The Canadian dollar buying rate rose 17 cents to $86.60 with dealers buying C$1,894,894 and selling C$1,171,602, at an average rate that fell 33 cents to $88.66. The rate for buying the British Pound climbed 88 cents to $179.30 for the purchase of £1,865,493, while £600,621 was sold, at an average rate that added 25 cents to end at $181.24. At the end of trading, it took J$132.27 to purchase the Euro, with a rise of 17 cents on Friday’s rate, according to data from Bank of Jamaica, while dealers purchased the European common currency at J$129.74, an increase of 46 cents on Friday’s rate. Other currencies bought, amounted to the equivalent of US$653,426, while the equivalent of US$206,879 was sold.
Highs & Lows| The highest buying rate for the US dollar, rose 5 cents to $118.30, the lowest buying rate remained at $96.23, the highest selling rate rose 5 cents to $123.37 and the lowest selling rate dropped $18.55 to $96.15. The highest buying rate for the Canadian dollar rose 65 cents to $89.80, the lowest buying rate fell 8 cents to $70.84 and highest selling rate rose 50 cents to $92. The lowest selling rate eased $1 to end at $84. The highest buying rate for the British Pound, climbed $1.70 to $183, the lowest buying rate declined by 49 cents to $145.71, the highest selling rate declined $2.78 to $187.84 and the lowest selling rate rose 55 cents to $175.55.
J$ make slight gains on Monday
August 31, 2015 by