Foreign investors not yet convinced of safe investment in Nigeria
President Tinubu
By Abimbola Tooki
Foreign investors around
the world in particular will need more convincing that Africa's biggest economy,
Nigeria, is finally ditching the controls that have for long distorted its
currency market, making the country of 200 million people less attractive to
foreign capital.
President Bola Tinubu had
made frantic efforts to convince investors at many international fora since his
inauguration in May last year. The efforts are yet to yield dividends as the
investing world would need more than talking to be convinced that Nigeria is safe
for investment.
Worse still, many
international companies are folding up their operations in the country due to
lack of conducive environment.
Nigeria's second currency
devaluation in less than a year and new forex rules suggest the central bank is
gearing up to let the naira float freely, but a huge backlog of orders for
dollars and low liquidity may stall reform momentum, investors and analysts
said.
The official naira
exchange rate last week plunged to as low as N1,531 per dollar from N900,
well below black market levels, after the market regulator changed its closing
rate calculation methodology, in a de facto devaluation. The official rate had
been drifting towards parallel market levels as forex shortages funnelled
demand to unofficial sources.
Also last week, the
Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) announced limits on how much banks can hold
in foreign currencies and eased rules on international money transfer
operators, allowing them to quote the naira at prevailing market rates.
"You could call this
a turning point," said Kyle Chapman, foreign exchange markets analyst at
London-based Ballinger & Co.
"Now that there is
no longer a more favourable (exchange) rate, the lack of incentives to take part
in the official markets may turn into a tipping point that sees a true free
float emerge if the central bank does not intervene," Chapman added.
Nigeria is struggling
with a record amount of government debt, high unemployment and power shortages
that have contributed to years of anaemic economic growth. Oil output is
shrinking, and rampant insecurity means swathes of the countryside are outside
government control.
In his first days in office last
year, President Bola Tinubu scrapped a costly fuel subsidy and lifted some
forex controls.
But the reform drive appeared to
lose steam as the naira continued to weaken without central bank
intervention.
Andrew Matheny, senior economist
with Goldman Sachs, said the latest devaluation made the naira look
"cheap."
"This makes foreign
portfolio inflows potentially appear attractive, however only in the
circumstance that other aspects of monetary policy come together," said
Matheny.
These include ending financing
the budget deficit through central bank overdrafts, which increases the money
supply and helped propel inflation to 28.92 per cent in December, the
highest level in nearly three decades.
Years of forex controls by the
last administration have created pent-up demand for dollars while the country
struggles to raise its production of oil, its single largest export earner.
Foreign currency shortages have
created a large backlog of unpaid dollar transactions, which the CBN last year
put at nearly $7 billion.
Goldman put the backlog at $12
billion, which has kept foreign investors away due to worries they will not be
able to take their money out.
"The economy is severely
starved of dollars. The (forex) injections so far appear to have not made a
dent," said David Omojomolo, Africa economic at Capital Economics.
"The foreign exchange
backlog to my knowledge is still large, and the pronouncements that it will be
cleared 'soon' made for months now appear to encourage speculation rather than
stabilisation."
The CBN will later this month
hold its first monetary policy meeting since last July and it is under pressure
to deliver a big hike in its benchmark interest rate from the current 18.75 per
cent
"For us to take a
more active position in the local currency market we would still need greater
clarity on the direction... and exactly how they're going to support the
operations on the forex side with ... the monetary policy side," said
Yvette Babb, a hard and local currency debt portfolio manager at William Blair.
The central bank's
one-year treasury bill, for example, was selling at 17 per cent while
the government's bill sold at 11 per cent as the
government seeks to keep its borrowing costs low.
As long as big downside
risks to local bond prices remain due to the unanchored nature of short-term
yields with regard to the policy rate - reflected in the significant gap
between the two - foreign investors will avoid local debt, said Gergely
Urmossy, emerging markets strategist at Societe Generale.
"To restore the
anchoring role of the policy rate, the CBN will have to deliver money market
reforms," Urmossy said.

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