Bloomberg writes on the Devaluation of the Naira, says excitement is short-lived as Nigeria economy sinks further | Welcome to Linda Ikeji's Blog

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Thursday, 30 June 2016

Bloomberg writes on the Devaluation of the Naira, says excitement is short-lived as Nigeria economy sinks further

International business website, Bloomberg, has written a new article on the recent devaluation of the Naira. According to the magazine, the excitement from the devaluation is shortlived as the Nigerian economy has since sunk further. Read the article below 
Optimism that a devaluation of Nigeria’s naira would breathe life into the country’s banking stocks faded almost as quickly as it started.
The central bank’s abandoning of a 16-month currency peg was greeted with a world-beating rally in the nation’s shares on expectations foreign investors would return to Africa’s largest economy. It didn’t last, with all but two of the country’s biggest banking stocks falling since the naira started trading freely on June 20.
The main risk is coming from a possible recession that will make it harder for lenders to make money and extend credit with unpaid loans on the increase. Trading in foreign currency, which all but dried up because of the exchange controls, is yet to pick up. Foreigners have not flocked back amid lower oil prices and the U.K.’s vote to leave the European Union, with investors such as AllianceBernstein LP and Loomis Sayles & Co. saying the naira’s 29 percent depreciation isn’t enough.
“The devaluation of the naira is not a silver bullet,” said Jaap Meijer, the managing director of research at Dubai-based Arqaam Capital Ltd., who helped his clients make a 55 percent return if they followed his advice over the past three months on Guaranty Trust Bank Plc, Nigeria’s biggest lender by market value. “There are just too many headwinds, with a devaluation probably worsening the asset quality outside the oil and gas industry.”
The 10-member Nigerian Stock Exchange Banks Index has declined 6 percent since surging to a 9-month high on June 23. That compares with a 4 percent drop in the NSE All Share Index over the same period, with Sterling Bank Plc, Unity Bank Plc, Zenith Bank Plc and FBN Holdings Plc among the 10 biggest losers.

‘Natural Concern’

“The ability of companies to pay back the money that banks have given them is a natural concern,” said Adewale Okunrinboye, an analyst at Lagos-based Asset & Resource Management Co., which has 690 billion naira ($2.4 billion) under management. “Companies will be struggling to sell products and generate cash flows.”
Not everyone is bearish on banks following the devaluation, with the country’s lenders trading at 4.5 times future earnings compared with 9.2 for South African banks, according to data compiled by Bloomberg.
“The benefits outweigh the risks,” although smaller lenders may struggle to replenish capital levels, said Derrick Mensah, an analyst at African Alliance in Accra. “Net-net the depreciation is positive, not just for banks, but for the broader economy. It’s not going to happen overnight.”

Long Dollars


Most of the country’s biggest lenders have long-dollar foreign-exchange positions, which will result in revaluation gains that will compensate for any deterioration in the quality of their assets and capital levels caused by the currency’s decline, Renaissance Capital analysts Adesoji Solanke and Olamipo Ogunsanya said in a June 27 note. An interest rate increase will also help improve margins on loans, they said.
“The economy might not immediately return to growth, but at least the bleeding should stop,” said Ronak Gadhia, an analyst at Exotix Partners LLP in London, who has buy ratings on Guaranty Trust Bank and United Bank for Africa Plc, and sell recommendations on Access Bank Plc and Skye Bank.
“If the foreign-exchange market functions properly, it should allow bank customers to source foreign currency, which is a positive,” he said. “It will enable the banks to grow their letters of credit and commission income.”

Rules Delayed

 

Nigerian authorities delayed by at least a year the introduction of more stringent capital rules for banks on June 27, as the regulator seeks to spur the economy and encourage lending. The economy shrank for the first time since 2004 in the first quarter as investment shriveled and businesses battled to find dollars to import materials.
The ratio of loans not paid for more than three months worsened to 4.9 percent at the end of last year from 2.8 percent in 2014, according to the Nigeria Deposit Insurance Corp. The naira, which weakened to a record low of 286.50 per dollar on June 21, gained 0.1 percent to 282.50 by 7 a.m. in Lagos.
Nigeria may have to again consider buying bad debts to reverse a contraction in lending, Arqaam’s Meijer said. Regulators six years ago had to rescue the industry from collapse after a debt crisis and amid allegations of corruption, setting up the Asset Management Corp. of Nigeria to take on non-performing loans.
“There are a lot of issues that haven’t been addressed that still need to come through in terms of asset quality,” with the devaluation probably increasing leverage by 20 percent and pushing foreign-exchange loans to 50 percent of the system, he said. “A weak banking sector isn’t conducive to economic growth.”

35 comments:

Unknown said...

That's the change the myopics crave!

Chizzy Liz said...

*********************okokobioko

LIB REP (中华人民共和国) said...

I reserve my comment

Unknown said...

I care less about this country....










........ Liber maniac......

Unknown said...

Nigeria in a mess. God abeg o

...LIB doctor

Lokoleko said...

Is this not the same Bloomberg that this blogger likes to quote as smart for requesting devaluation while calling the President hard headed for resisting same.
Some people and the rubbish spewed or written.

Unknown said...

Well said.
NIGERIA IS CRYING FOR THE RAIN THAT IS RAINING WHAT OF THE STORM AND THE WIND OF DOOMED THAT IS ABOUT TO BLOW?
THIS IS JUST THE BEGINNING.
THIS IS THE REWARD FOR VOTING UNEDUCATED MAN AS PRESIDENT NOT GOVERNO O PRESIDENT AWW I WEEP.
TERRORIST BUHARI DONT CARE AFTERALL IT WON'T AFFECT HIS FAMILY WHAT DO U EXPECT.
MAY GOD BLESS BLOOMBERG FOR WRITING THIS,THIS IS TO SHOW TERRORIST BUHARI AND APC THAT THE WORLD IS WATCHING THEIR USELESS GOVERNMENT.

















#sad indeed

Unknown said...

Well said.
NIGERIAns are CRYING FOR THE RAIN THAT IS RAINING WHAT OF THE STORM AND THE WIND OF DOOMED THAT IS ABOUT TO BLOW?
THIS IS JUST THE BEGINNING.
THIS IS THE REWARD FOR VOTING UNEDUCATED MAN AS PRESIDENT NOT GOVERNO O PRESIDENT AWW I WEEP.
TERRORIST BUHARI DONT CARE AFTERALL IT WON'T AFFECT HIS FAMILY WHAT DO U EXPECT.
MAY GOD BLESS BLOOMBERG FOR WRITING THIS,THIS IS TO SHOW TERRORIST BUHARI AND APC THAT THE WORLD IS WATCHING THEIR USELESS GOVERNMENT.

















#sad indeed

Alloy Chikezie said...

Part of the reason why the country is in recession.

Your comment will be visible after approval.

Unknown said...

Our economy will surely get better

Unknown said...

a.k.a EDWIN CHINEDU AZUBUKO said...
.
I swear my popsy for do withdrawal method when dey wan start my existance bcos mehn this country don tire me... Depression every where even the country self na depression i swear....
.
.
***CURRENTLY IN JUPITER***

SongsOfSUSSAN said...

Why won't the economy sink? The government is not investing. They are just sitting down RE-LOOTING recovered loots. What a shame!

Unknown said...

Can these idiots let Biafra go
Stupid selfish individuals.
Suffering in an undeveloped zoo


Instagram____@hanaokafor


Miss Freeborn!!

Unknown said...

Hmmmmmmmmmmm

Anonymous said...

Bloomberg, this analysis is too technical for a cattle rearer with age related dementia and no high school diploma.

gentle said...

Our president said he doesn't know what economics is. So he won't even read this message.

Unknown said...

It will only get better.

Lube-section said...

Ahh Obviously

NaijaDeltaBabe said...

We will rise again


...merited happiness

Unknown said...

NIGERIA IS REALLY IN TROUBLE.








AUNTY LINDA....

Joyous babe,Linda ikeji first cousin said...

God will help us.

Unknown said...

sad!
-D great anonymous now as Vivian Reginalds

Unknown said...

Hmmmm it is well

Emeka said...

Please if this CBN man feels he can't handle things, he should graciously excuse himself. The President said time and again that he couldn't see the benefit of devaluing the Naira. I also felt that way especially since Nigeria doesn't export much at the moment.

People that are under the influence of the IMF/World Bank and those that felt they know too much insulted the President and asked that the Naira be devalued. Now we have let market forces to take over and we can see the result.

People should understand that what works in one country doesn't necessarily mean it will work in the next. Also not everybody that gives advise to the Nation from outside wants the best for the country.

Anonymous said...

Buhari should resign, he has failed as a president.

Unknown said...

Just see his face! na so him face dey always be like person wey bird fart for him face.... Arrant Nonsense! BuhariA you have failed woefully, in-fact you have fumbled and soon you'll be tumbled!


*Grachi Dynasty*

Unknown said...

Pray for Nigeria👏🏽🙏

Unknown said...

Make dem carry another man's load for head. Linda take note!

Anonymous said...

is still the same thing. Criminals everywhere.

Anonymous said...

Buhari please resign by fire or by force!

Anonymous said...

Buhari please resign by fire or by force

Unknown said...

Freeborn dat storm & wind will fall on ur head, oloriburuku,linda boy boy.

Anonymous said...

God bless you. These idiots want the naira to be devalued for their own benefits, they don't give a hoot about this country, all they wabyvis to milk it dry. This stupid write up is to force the president dance to their tune , they won't succeed.

Anonymous said...

People just talk and complain. That is too bad. They love to loath in their problems.

On the flip side. There are solutions to reverse this trend and it will start with the market space but most people are just too dumb to imbibe it.

For the same reason, foreign companies will come into Nigeria and make big bucks. Their customer's are not ghosts, they are the same grumbling Nigerians that patronise them. But to apply the technique they use to sell their own products.

Tell me about the average Nigerian. The most stupid specie on planet earth.

Anonymous said...

The problem is Buhari - he has bad luck; this same thing happened in 1983, he just can't help it.

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