The Nigerian naira weakened against the U.S dollar at the parallel market on Wednesday to trade at N560 per dollar on Wednesday.
The figure is N15 or 2.8 percent lower than the N545 it traded last week at the parallel market.
Meanwhile, the currency which opened trading at an indicative price of N413.82/$1, depreciated by 0.3 percent at the official market to close at N415.07 on Wednesday.
This is according to details on FMDQ OTC Securities Exchange, a platform that oversees official foreign-exchange trading in Nigeria.
An exchange rate of N450.50 to a dollar on the spot was the highest rate recorded during intra-day trading while it sold for as low as N404/$1.
The Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) has often maintained that the parallel market is not the true reflection of the naira.
On Tuesday, the CBN monetary policy committee (MPC) meeting voted to keep all monetary policy rates constant.
Godwin Emefiele, governor of the apex bank, who addressed press at the end of the meeting, shelved discussion about the exchange rates as persistent calls by the Association of Bureaux De Change (BDC) operators to lift ban.
In July, the apex bank had announced a ban on dollar sales to BDC operators.
The CBN governor said BDC operators have become agents of money laundering in Nigeria.
The ban remains in effect.