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Africa’s Biggest Economy Defying Currency Critics Chokes Growth by PRYCE(m): 3:59pm On Oct 30, 2015
**Nigeria refuses to go way of other oil economies and devalue

**Currency controls starve companies of dollars to pay suppliers

Nigeria’s economy is growing at the slowest pace this decade as oil prices drop. Companies are complaining they can’t get the dollars they need to do business. And trading in the naira has long since dried up.
There are many good reasons why Godwin Emefiele, who runs the central bank of Africa’s biggest economy, should lift currency controls and let the naira depreciate. One of the things holding him back is politics.

Devaluing the naira may give opposition parties the opportunity to claim that Emefiele’s main supporter, President Muhammadu Buhari, has lost control of the economy. With his backing, the policy chief will be able to resist his critics into 2016 before the worsening economic slump eventually forces him to capitulate, according to Standard Chartered Plc and Bank of America Corp.

“They could probably hold out for at least six months, maybe even a year,” said Ayodele Salami, chief investment officer for London-based Duet Asset Management Ltd., which manages about $200 million of African equities. “The central bank has chosen currency stability and the price they’re paying for that is growth. They could hold the line for a lot longer than the markets expect.”

Africa’s top oil producer introduced curbs on buying foreign-exchange from late 2014 in a bid to prop up the naira as prices for crude, the source of two-thirds of government revenue and 90 percent of export earnings, plummeted. These measures have all but fixed the exchange rate at 198-199 per dollar since March, even as other oil exporters from Russia to Colombia and Malaysia have let their currencies slide.

Barclays Plc and HSBC Holdings Plc still think the central bank will be forced to weaken the naira to between 220 and 230 before the end of 2015. The currency dropped 0.1 percent to 199.20 by 12:53 p.m. in Lagos, the commercial capital.

‘In Denial’

The International Monetary Fund says the currency measures are detrimental to Nigeria, where growth slowed to 2.35 percent on an annualized basis in the second quarter. Former central bank Governor Muhammadu Sanusi II said last week his successor was “in denial” if he thought he could continue propping up the naira.

Former general Buhari, who took office as president in May, acted to stabilize the naira when he ruled Nigeria in the 1980s, and since coming to power this time around has said a devaluation wouldn’t be “healthy.” The government put out a statement late Thursday reiterating its opposition to debasing the naira. Emefiele has also warned a devaluation would stoke inflation.

“The central bank governor is doing what he thinks the president wants,” David McIlroy, chief investment officer at Alquity Investment Management Ltd., which oversees $100 million of frontier market stocks and is put off buying more Nigerian shares until the currency weakens, said.

Strategists who earlier this year cut their naira forecasts on expectations Emefiele would capitulate have pushed them back up.

The median year-end estimate in a Bloomberg survey fell to as low as 230 per dollar in May and has since been increased to 200. 

While companies including Dangote Cement Plc, the country’s largest publicly traded stock, and Sahara Group, a power plant operator, have complained that they are struggling to pay for imports, Buhari insists the central bank is provides “legitimate businesses” all the dollars they need.

The authorities’ position is bolstered by foreign reserves that equate to almost six months of imports, double the IMF’s recommendation, and giving authorities
enough firepower to defend the naira.

The exclusion of the country’s bonds from JPMorgan Chase & Co.’s local-currency emerging-market indexes last month has also given Emefiele less incentive to keep portfolio investors on side. They’re already fleeing Nigeria, with foreign holdings of naira government debt falling to less than 10 percent of the total from 27 percent in 2013, according to Standard Chartered. The London-based earns most of its income from emerging markets.

“There’s enough room to maintain the current regime for now,” said Samir Gadio, head of African strategy at Standard Chartered in London, which in September changed its end-of-year forecast for the naira to 200 from 222. He now predicts a devaluation by the end of March. “Eventually an adjustment will take place if oil prices remain at these levels. It’s unlikely to be imminent.”


http://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2015-10-30/africa-s-biggest-economy-defying-currency-critics-chokes-growth

Cc: lalasticlala
Re: Africa’s Biggest Economy Defying Currency Critics Chokes Growth by Tallesty1(m): 4:00pm On Oct 30, 2015
cry cry
Re: Africa’s Biggest Economy Defying Currency Critics Chokes Growth by Almeja: 4:12pm On Oct 30, 2015
Interesting, as you mentioned, devaluing the currency means a potential stoking of inflation.
http://www.focus-economics.com/countries/nigeria/news/inflation/inflation-inches-up-in-september
Re: Africa’s Biggest Economy Defying Currency Critics Chokes Growth by CSTR2: 4:16pm On Oct 30, 2015
Emefiele should resign when he can.
By the time the shitt inevitably hit the fan, buhari's supporters would ignore the president and target you for criticism.
Their president can do no wrong as far as they are concerned.

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Re: Africa’s Biggest Economy Defying Currency Critics Chokes Growth by PRYCE(m): 4:29pm On Oct 30, 2015
Almeja:
Interesting, as you mentioned, devaluing the currency means a potential stoking of inflation.
And if they don't, It possess Great risks to the economy.

But why play politics with the Nigerian Economy?
Re: Africa’s Biggest Economy Defying Currency Critics Chokes Growth by Abagworo(m): 4:38pm On Oct 30, 2015
PRYCE:

And if they don't, It possess Great risks to the economy.

But why play politics with the Nigerian Economy?

The politics started with Jonathan but somehow it is good for the masses. They could engage in gradual devaluation to 250 Naira but it means minimum wage has to be raised to around 30, 000 Naira and consequently stirring massive inflation and attendant hardship.
Re: Africa’s Biggest Economy Defying Currency Critics Chokes Growth by 989900: 5:01pm On Oct 30, 2015
Devaluation is like taking paracetamol for headache, while you keep banging your head against the wall.

We should be treating underlying cause(s), and not symptoms.

We should be working on those things that are putting pressure on forex . . . excess liquidity, imported fuel, imported 'garbage', among other stuffs like stable power supply, and encouraging exports.

Then we would be talking about a stronger Naira, in lieu of devaluation.


Baba, where is your economic team FFS?

Businesses are suffering/collapsing; workers owed/jobs lost!

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Re: Africa’s Biggest Economy Defying Currency Critics Chokes Growth by PRYCE(m): 5:11pm On Oct 30, 2015
989900:
Devaluation is like taking paracetamol for headache, while you keep banging your head against the wall.

We should be treating underlying cause(s), and not symptoms.

We should be working on those things that are putting pressure on forex . . . excess liquidity, imported fuel, imported 'garbage', among other stuffs like stable power supply, and encouraging exports.

Then we would be talking about a stronger Naira, in lieu of devaluation.


Baba, where is your economic team FFS?

Businesses are suffering/collapsing; workers owed/jobs lost!
Nicely Put!
Re: Africa’s Biggest Economy Defying Currency Critics Chokes Growth by kingdompropty: 5:22pm On Oct 30, 2015
This government is a joke. Mr. Buhari thinks government is a fairytale, you don't run a country like a private estate where you call the shots, from politics to legislation to judiciary and economy.


Nigerians will soon start getting weary and call for his.....

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