Nigeria’s central bank may soon give bond and stock investors what they have been pleading for: a weaker naira.
Governor
Godwin Emefiele announced after a meeting of the Monetary Policy
Committee in Abuja, the capital, on Tuesday that a more flexible
foreign-exchange system would be unveiled “in the coming days.” But he
gave scant detail and left plenty of questions. Here are some answers:
What’s the problem?Nigeria
has held the naira at 197-199 per dollar since March 2015, even as
other oil exporters from
Russia to Colombia and Malaysia let their
currencies drop amid the slump in crude prices since mid-2014. Foreign
reserves dwindled as the central bank defended the peg, while foreign
investors, fearing a devaluation, sold Nigerian stocks and bonds.
While
President Muhammadu Buhari and Emefiele argued a devaluation would fuel
inflation, that happened anyway: consumer prices accelerated at the
fastest pace in six years in April as the black-market naira rate
plummeted. To make matters worse, data released four days before the MPC
meeting showed the economy contracted in the first quarter for the
first time since 2004 as the dollar shortage curtailed manufacturing.
That probably surprised policy makers, prompting the change of heart,
according to Mathias Althoff, a fund manager at Tundra Fonder AB, which
has about $200 million invested in frontier market stocks, including
Nigerian banks.
What happens next?While Emefiele
didn’t specify what he meant by “greater flexibility,” analysts at
Renaissance Capital Ltd. believe the central bank will allocate dollars
at a fixed rate to strategic industries — like energy and agriculture —
while letting the naira weaken in the interbank market, where everyone
else would buy their foreign currency. The central bank may also try try
to control the new interbank rate by imposing a trading band of about 5
or 10 percent around it, according to Althoff.
Will that satisfy investors and save the economy?If
the central bank doesn’t allow the naira to drop enough, foreign
investors will continue to shun Nigerian assets, according to Althoff.
The currency should trade at around 285-290 per dollar, according to
Alan Cameron, an economist at Exotix Partners LLP. A devaluation won’t
solve Nigeria’s structural economic problems — which include an
over-reliance on oil exports — and may fuel inflation in the short term.
But it would make Nigerian exports more competitive, curb imports and
encourage foreign investment.
What are the pitfalls?Most
investors would prefer a fully-floating naira, yet doubt that Nigeria,
which has always had currency controls of some sort, will take that
option. And there are concerns it will be impossible for the central
bank to ensure that only importers meeting its criteria will be able to
buy foreign-exchange at the discounted official rate. Many analysts fear
that in a nation U.K. Prime Minister David Cameron described as
“fantastically corrupt,” access to the official rate will come down to
political connections.
“The suggestion of a dual exchange rate,
with the maintenance of the official window, is a concern,” Razia Khan,
head of African research at Standard Chartered Plc, said. “This might
lead to continued distortions in the market, ultimately with pressure on
foreign-exchange reserves.”
What else should investors watch out for?
Buhari.
He has made it clear that he, not Emefiele, is the person in charge of
exchange-rate policy. The president is loath to allow the currency to
drop unless he’s forced to and in February likened such a move to
“murder.” He has yet to make any response to the MPC’s announcement. And
while he is due to make a speech on May 29, the first anniversary of
his coming to power, local press reports suggest he will focus on the
government’s fight against corruption and Boko Haram’s Islamist
insurgency.
The central bank has hinted at change before, only to
do nothing. “The MPC has dangled the carrot of exchange rate reform,
but without giving any details of what a reformed market would look
like,” Cameron at Exotix said. “To the skeptics among us, this will
simply sound like a re-hash of the same old material we’ve been hearing
about since December 2015.”
Source: Bloomberg
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