Nigeria’s stocks sunk on Wednesday after
JP Morgan said it would eject Africa’s biggest economy from its
influential emerging markets bond index due to tough controls imposed to
prevent a currency collapse.
In a move that came earlier in the year
than expected, JP Morgan said late on Tuesday it would remove the bond
listings belonging to the West African nation by the end of October,
forcing fund managers to sell Nigerian bonds, which might raise the
country’s borrowing costs.
JP |
The decision is a blow to President
Muhammadu Buhari, who has promised to diversify an oil-dependent economy
hit by a slump in global crude prices but who faces criticism for not
having appointed a cabinet since his inauguration on May 29.
With no finance minister in place,
foreign investors have been left wondering about government policies and
struggling to sell shares or bonds as the central bank adopted tough
currency restrictions to halt a slide of the naira.
Anders Faergemann, senior sovereign
portfolio manager at PineBridge Investments, said he was surprised that
Buhari had not started tackling the country’s economic problems more
than three months into his tenure.
“As an investor it is flabbergasting
that the Nigerian authorities have allowed themselves to be put in this
situation,” he said.
All Nigerian stocks listed in the MSCI
frontier market index fell by more than 3 percent, while bond yields
spiked across maturities.
While many foreign bonds investors have
exited the market since JP Morgan warned Nigeria in January and again in
June that it would get kicked out of the index unless conditions
improved, stocks investors were now also pondering whether to stay.
The U.S. bank had placed Nigeria on its index watch but a decision had not been expected until later this year.
“You can only imagine the chaos that is
unfolding here,” a regional African investment analyst said from Lagos,
asking not to be named.
“There are many more investors still in
equities who are keenly watching how the central bank manages the exit
process because if they even sniff the possibility that they won’t be
able to get dollars in the future they are going to run for the door,”
he said.
The benchmark 2024 bond yield rose to 17
percent on Wednesday from 16.20 percent previous day. The stock index
shed 3.02 percent to fall below a 30,000 point psychological level.
Meanwhile, FBN Holdings was the top
decliner on the MSCI frontier market index, down 5.15 percent, followed
by Guinness Nigeria, by 5 percent, and Dangote Cement and Guaranty Trust
Bank, which were both down by 4.98 percent.
Nigeria’s central bank has adopted
several currency restrictions to defend the naira after the use of
dollar reserves failed to halt a slide. Traders told Reuters the central
bank started rationing dollars to foreign investors last week.
NO CABINET
The naira has lost around 15 percent in
the last year, with devaluations in November and February. Some have
predicted another may be coming, but central bank governor Godwin
Emefiele said in July that the currency was “appropriately priced”.
“The basic story is very clear the
currency is too expensive … the question now is does the central bank
devalue the currency to respond, or tighten down even more on other
capital measures to try and prolong the inevitable,” said Arko Sen,
director EMEA strategy at Bank of America Merrill Lynch.
Buhari has said he found the treasury
“virtually empty”, forcing him to deal with inherited problems, along
with the impact of falling oil prices on Africa’s top crude producer,
which relies on sales for 70 percent of government revenues.
But investors and business leaders say
the lack of a finance minister, and general uncertainty around the
cabinet which Buhari has said will be appointed later this month, has
resulted in a lack of clear policies that has hurt the economy.
On Wednesday, Buhari’s spokesman Femi
Adesina declined to comment on JP Morgan’s decision beyond a government
statement issued late on Tuesday saying liquidity for financial markets
was improving.
JP Morgan had warned Nigeria that to
stay in the index, it would have to restore liquidity to its currency
market in a way that allowed foreign investors tracking the index to
conduct transactions with minimal hurdles.
By Reuters
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