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'Nigeria Could Be The Next Turkey' - Foreign Investors Hail Economic Turnaround - Politics - Nairaland

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'Nigeria Could Be The Next Turkey' - Foreign Investors Hail Economic Turnaround by Tellmeastory(op): 3:58am On Mar 19, 2025
Bet on Nigerian recovery draws investors seeking to dodge trade wars

Africa’s most populous country among former crisis-hit economies attracting foreign inflows


Foreign investors have flocked to Nigeria’s markets in recent months, as the threat of a US trade war with larger developing economies has sent portfolio managers looking for cover in former crisis-hit frontier markets now on the rebound.

The Nigerian naira is among the world’s top-performing currencies since November’s US election with a rise of more than 7 per cent against the dollar, as a turnaround in the continent’s most populous nation — and the lure of yields of 20 per cent to 25 per cent — trigger a rally in the local bond market following a massive devaluation.

The rally in Nigerian assets reflects how “idiosyncratic” trades, or specific bets on countries coming out of currency crises or defaults, are in favour as investors are finding it increasingly hard to read how US President Donald Trump’s threats of tariffs will affect emerging markets as a whole.

“Even though everyone is doing a rethink with Trump’s policies and the inflation impact, if at all, of tariffs, investors are looking for potential places to invest that might be able to be resilient to all of that going on in the background,” said Razia Khan, Standard Chartered’s head of research for Africa and the Middle East.

Commodity-exporting frontier economies such as Nigeria are less integrated into the US economy than richer emerging markets that produce higher-value goods such as automobiles or electrical goods. That insulates the former group from wider tariff-driven sell-offs, said Alexis de Mones, debt portfolio manager at Ashmore, the emerging markets asset manager.

They don’t have high trade surpluses with the US [and] they are not as exposed to the noise from tariffs in general,” he said.

Many of these countries are also coming off very difficult periods after high global interest rates in recent years led foreign investors to pull their money out, which exposed weak currencies and sent governments either to the IMF for help or forced drastic self-help economic policies.

Egypt, Turkey and other countries that were hit by capital flight have enticed investors back in the past year with tough economic medicine to raise interest rates. Dropping unsustainable pegs to the dollar has helped drive double-digit returns on local currency bonds. Nigerian local currency government bonds have also performed well, especially in the past month.

Many emerging market hedge funds produced their best returns in years by chasing these opportunities last year, and similar moves in dollar bonds of countries such as Argentina and Ecuador.

“Foreign portfolio investors are thinking Nigeria could be the next Turkey,” said Charlie Robertson, head of macro strategy at FIM Partners. “There’s been proper change in the fundamentals of the Nigerian economy . . . two years ago, you had a currency that was uninvestable.”

Nigeria’s stock market has gained about 4 per cent in dollar terms this year, better than many bigger markets. Nigeria had fallen off the radar for many international investors in recent years as controls on the naira made it difficult to extricate profits.

Since President Bola Tinubu took office nearly two years ago, his government has removed fuel subsidies that had burned up foreign reserves, while the central bank removed a peg that propped up the value of the naira and increased rates to 27.5 per cent.

The currency lost 70 per cent of its value against the dollar after two devaluations, but it has stabilised since November and is currently trading at what many observers believe is closer to its fair value, at 1,541 to the dollar.

“There has been a series of economic reforms that have really made a difference in the tradability of Nigeria from a local currency assets point of view,” de Mones said. “Under the previous administration, the naira was kept at an artificially high level,” he said. “If you had invested in a prior period and you had to get dollars out, you had to get in the queue.”


Despite the inflows of dollars from bonds bought by foreign investors, and a recovery in oil production to a four-year high last month, Nigeria’s gross reserves have fallen so far this year, to $38.5bn from $40bn.

Investors said the drop was likely to reflect the central bank paying down debts that inflated the gross reserves measure. This would improve net reserves, but these are not published. Policymakers also appear to be targeting stability or slight appreciation in the naira, investors added.

“I think they’re intervening to make sure the naira doesn’t come under a speculative attack,” said Bismarck Rewane, chief executive of Lagos-based consultancy Financial Derivatives. “My personal worry is that if oil prices drop or there’s a real reversal in gains from foreign portfolio inflows, the currency could be at real risk.”

Inflation is also elevated at 23 per cent as of February, with higher food prices driving the high cost of living. “For the second leg of the trade, you need to see disinflation kick in,” said de Mones.

StanChart’s Khan said: “We shouldn’t underplay the very real pain that ordinary Nigerians have felt through this liberalisation experience. The pain that people took may mean it takes a while longer before the benefits of all this are realised.”

While the naira still appears cheap and insulated from trade risks versus other emerging markets, “it has become a more populated trade for foreign investors”, one manager said. “The more interest there is in these trades, the less idiosyncratic it is in terms of risk.”
https://www.ft.com/content/5b5a4a67-cc17-419e-96d6-4f7ba7c3be7d
Re: 'Nigeria Could Be The Next Turkey' - Foreign Investors Hail Economic Turnaround by quadraheem(m): 4:06am On Mar 19, 2025
This is indeed a positive development, Nigeria shall be great again.
Re: 'Nigeria Could Be The Next Turkey' - Foreign Investors Hail Economic Turnaround by EKONGKING: 4:30am On Mar 19, 2025
quadraheem:
This is indeed a positive development, Nigeria shall be great again.
The direction the country although painful, is on right track.
Security and electricity are next big job for this government, if we can control that .
jobs and many other benefits will follow automatically.
Re: 'Nigeria Could Be The Next Turkey' - Foreign Investors Hail Economic Turnaround by Tellmeastory(op): 4:36am On Mar 19, 2025
quadraheem:
This is indeed a positive development, Nigeria shall be great again.
Absolutely.

Plus these are the same publications that were broadcasting that the Nigerian economy was heading for the abyss a few months back, so when they are now reporting that it is heading up to the sky, you must take them equally serious.

Kudos to Mr President and his team.

Something else I've noticed is that Tinubu doesn't talk too much.

He's a silent but deadly economic wizard, just quietly implementing policies that work, while saying very little in public. It's almost as if he feels that by talking too much he'll be feeding his enemies information on his roadmap.

He's a highly sophisticated technocrat and administrator. I've never seen a leader like him in this country.
Re: 'Nigeria Could Be The Next Turkey' - Foreign Investors Hail Economic Turnaround by Shegebanza: 5:30am On Mar 19, 2025
Agbado investors
Re: 'Nigeria Could Be The Next Turkey' - Foreign Investors Hail Economic Turnaround by LoveJesus87(m): 5:30am On Mar 19, 2025
Tinubu is trying his best but May God help us

Meanwhile check out this thread for Easy Money-making Idea for 2025:

https://www.nairaland.com/8317077/very-good-money-making-idea-2025
Re: 'Nigeria Could Be The Next Turkey' - Foreign Investors Hail Economic Turnaround by FitCorper: 5:31am On Mar 19, 2025
No Mr foreign investor. Nigeria cannot be the next Turkey. Nigeria will always be Nigeria but greater than before. We have a very decisive president who will crush all and every uprising from the root. God bless Naija
Re: 'Nigeria Could Be The Next Turkey' - Foreign Investors Hail Economic Turnaround by Vadese1: 5:34am On Mar 19, 2025
Another madness
Re: 'Nigeria Could Be The Next Turkey' - Foreign Investors Hail Economic Turnaround by sammy7410(m): 5:34am On Mar 19, 2025
Na so
No be only turkey

Re: 'Nigeria Could Be The Next Turkey' - Foreign Investors Hail Economic Turnaround by Nukilia: 5:35am On Mar 19, 2025
Shegebanza:
Agbado investors
grin grin grin
Re: 'Nigeria Could Be The Next Turkey' - Foreign Investors Hail Economic Turnaround by cenaman(m): 5:36am On Mar 19, 2025
kiss

Re: 'Nigeria Could Be The Next Turkey' - Foreign Investors Hail Economic Turnaround by Getbetter(m): 5:37am On Mar 19, 2025
The days ahead are bright ones for Nigeria.
Re: 'Nigeria Could Be The Next Turkey' - Foreign Investors Hail Economic Turnaround by DEHVEHLOP(m): 5:38am On Mar 19, 2025
OUR FLAT HEAD BLODAS WON'T LIKE THIS NEWS










SHIORRRRRR
Re: 'Nigeria Could Be The Next Turkey' - Foreign Investors Hail Economic Turnaround by Osiris12: 5:38am On Mar 19, 2025
Audio investor.

Go ask Guinness and Pfizer wetin their eyes see .

Investor isonu
Re: 'Nigeria Could Be The Next Turkey' - Foreign Investors Hail Economic Turnaround by ALISMILE(m): 5:39am On Mar 19, 2025
With regards to the economic trajectory of Nigeria, I trust tinubulation
Re: 'Nigeria Could Be The Next Turkey' - Foreign Investors Hail Economic Turnaround by Honestey: 5:39am On Mar 19, 2025
Too bad the haters within the country can't see it.
Re: 'Nigeria Could Be The Next Turkey' - Foreign Investors Hail Economic Turnaround by DEHVEHLOP(m): 5:40am On Mar 19, 2025
Shegebanza:
Agbado investors
Àgbàdo is better than drugs ok?







Get that, get peace
Re: 'Nigeria Could Be The Next Turkey' - Foreign Investors Hail Economic Turnaround by Osiris12: 5:41am On Mar 19, 2025
Honestey:
Too bad the haters within the country can't see it.
one of your brothers go forest to hang himself in ogun state recently. In fact two of them.
Continue lying till you loose the whole unit
Re: 'Nigeria Could Be The Next Turkey' - Foreign Investors Hail Economic Turnaround by helinues: 5:42am On Mar 19, 2025
Good

Ahead ahead Nigeria
Re: 'Nigeria Could Be The Next Turkey' - Foreign Investors Hail Economic Turnaround by owobokiri(m): 5:43am On Mar 19, 2025
Portfolio investors and their sugar tongues!
Re: 'Nigeria Could Be The Next Turkey' - Foreign Investors Hail Economic Turnaround by Sheuns(m): 5:43am On Mar 19, 2025
Everything about Nigeria is always good on paper.
Re: 'Nigeria Could Be The Next Turkey' - Foreign Investors Hail Economic Turnaround by Shegebanza: 5:43am On Mar 19, 2025
DEHVEHLOP:
Àgbàdo is better than drugs ok?









Get that, get peace
Ironically, both (the bolded) forms the necleus of your present government.
Re: 'Nigeria Could Be The Next Turkey' - Foreign Investors Hail Economic Turnaround by Antichristian2:
cool

Adupe fún Olohun!

May BAT succeed exceedingly!
Re: 'Nigeria Could Be The Next Turkey' - Foreign Investors Hail Economic Turnaround by owobokiri(m): 5:46am On Mar 19, 2025
Hsnds-off Portfolio investors and their sugar tongues!
Re: 'Nigeria Could Be The Next Turkey' - Foreign Investors Hail Economic Turnaround by DeLaRue:
And some want us to change President again in 2027.

According to them, the new President will perform magic and turn Nigeria into Eldorado.

That's laughable.

The economic changes made by Mr Tinubu in less than 2 years have been the deepest, most far-reaching and compelling changes made by any Nigerian leader in 65 years of independence. Full stop.
Re: 'Nigeria Could Be The Next Turkey' - Foreign Investors Hail Economic Turnaround by Sheikhosma: 5:49am On Mar 19, 2025
EKONGKING:
The direction the country although painful, is on right track.
Security and electricity are next big job for this government, if we can control that .
jobs and many other benefits will follow automatically.
Stop the crap!

Which country is going on right direction ?, if you are referring to Turkiye fine but not Nigeria definitely...... It's high time you stop the word "if we can". Tinubu is now in power not election campaigning and every step the man take leads to more collosal failure.

Do you even know what Turkiye has achieved in the past 10 years ?, have you ever know Turkiye and Nigeria are on same par around early 2000's ?.

Search about MINT Countries to learn more.
Re: 'Nigeria Could Be The Next Turkey' - Foreign Investors Hail Economic Turnaround by Nerosoft19(m): 5:52am On Mar 19, 2025
Stop spreading propaganda and misinformation, Nigerias economy is in the shambles. There is a famous proverb that no one will want to travel on a leaking boat. I wonder what investors will be looking for in a country where even small businesses are failing rapidly

Re: 'Nigeria Could Be The Next Turkey' - Foreign Investors Hail Economic Turnaround by Sheikhosma: 5:53am On Mar 19, 2025
FitCorper:
No Mr foreign investor. Nigeria cannot be the next Turkey. Nigeria will always be Nigeria but greater than before. We have a very decisive president who will crush all and every uprising from the root. God bless Naija
You can never meet where Turkiye is currently in the next 30years...... You think it's just about bragging or praying that boost economy and enhance security?

Just keep playing
Re: 'Nigeria Could Be The Next Turkey' - Foreign Investors Hail Economic Turnaround by Hohaiiiode(m): 5:54am On Mar 19, 2025
quadraheem:
This is indeed a positive development, Nigeria shall be great again.
any one who believes this needs to get his head checked , propaganda government! Governance na beans?
Re: 'Nigeria Could Be The Next Turkey' - Foreign Investors Hail Economic Turnaround by Konquest:
Tellmeastory:
Bet on Nigerian recovery draws investors seeking to dodge trade wars

Africa’s most populous country among former crisis-hit economies attracting foreign inflows

Foreign investors have flocked to Nigeria’s markets in recent months, as the threat of a US trade war with larger developing economies has sent portfolio managers looking for cover in former crisis-hit frontier markets now on the rebound.

The Nigerian naira is among the world’s top-performing currencies since November’s US election with a rise of more than 7 per cent against the dollar, as a turnaround in the continent’s most populous nation — and the lure of yields of 20 per cent to 25 per cent — trigger a rally in the local bond market following a massive devaluation.

The rally in Nigerian assets reflects how “idiosyncratic” trades, or specific bets on countries coming out of currency crises or defaults, are in favour as investors are finding it increasingly hard to read how US President Donald Trump’s threats of tariffs will affect emerging markets as a whole.


“Even though everyone is doing a rethink with Trump’s policies and the inflation impact, if at all, of tariffs, investors are looking for potential places to invest that might be able to be resilient to all of that going on in the background,” said Razia Khan, Standard Chartered’s head of research for Africa and the Middle East.

Commodity-exporting frontier economies such as Nigeria are less integrated into the US economy than richer emerging markets that produce higher-value goods such as automobiles or electrical goods. That insulates the former group from wider tariff-driven sell-offs, said Alexis de Mones, debt portfolio manager at Ashmore, the emerging markets asset manager.

“They don’t have high trade surpluses with the US [and] they are not as exposed to the noise from tariffs in general,” he said.

Many of these countries are also coming off very difficult periods after high global interest rates in recent years led foreign investors to pull their money out, which exposed weak currencies and sent governments either to the IMF for help or forced drastic self-help economic policies.


Egypt, Turkey and other countries that were hit by capital flight have enticed investors back in the past year with tough economic medicine to raise interest rates. Dropping unsustainable pegs to the dollar has helped drive double-digit returns on local currency bonds. Nigerian local currency government bonds have also performed well, especially in the past month.

Many emerging market hedge funds produced their best returns in years by chasing these opportunities last year, and similar moves in dollar bonds of countries such as Argentina and Ecuador.


“Foreign portfolio investors are thinking Nigeria could be the next Turkey,” said Charlie Robertson, head of macro strategy at FIM Partners. “There’s been proper change in the fundamentals of the Nigerian economy . . . two years ago, you had a currency that was uninvestable.”

Nigeria’s stock market has gained about 4 per cent in dollar terms this year, better than many bigger markets. Nigeria had fallen off the radar for many international investors in recent years as controls on the naira made it difficult to extricate profits.


Since President Bola Tinubu took office nearly two years ago, his government has removed fuel subsidies that had burned up foreign reserves, while the central bank removed a peg that propped up the value of the naira and increased rates to 27.5 per cent.

The currency lost 70 per cent of its value against the dollar after two devaluations, but it has stabilised since November and is currently trading at what many observers believe is closer to its fair value, at 1,541 to the dollar


“There has been a series of economic reforms that have really made a difference in the tradability of Nigeria from a local currency assets point of view,” de Mones said. “Under the previous administration, the naira was kept at an artificially high level,” he said. “If you had invested in a prior period and you had to get dollars out, you had to get in the queue.”

Despite the inflows of dollars from bonds bought by foreign investors, and a recovery in oil production to a four-year high last month, Nigeria’s gross reserves have fallen so far this year, to $38.5bn from $40bn.


Investors said the drop was likely to reflect the central bank paying down debts that inflated the gross reserves measure. This would improve net reserves, but these are not published. Policymakers also appear to be targeting stability or slight appreciation in the naira, investors added.

“I think they’re intervening to make sure the naira doesn’t come under a speculative attack,” said Bismarck Rewane, chief executive of Lagos-based consultancy Financial Derivatives. “My personal worry is that if oil prices drop or there’s a real reversal in gains from foreign portfolio inflows, the currency could be at real risk.”


Inflation is also elevated at 23 per cent as of February, with higher food prices driving the high cost of living. “For the second leg of the trade, you need to see disinflation kick in,” said de Mones.

StanChart’s Khan said: “We shouldn’t underplay the very real pain that ordinary Nigerians have felt through this liberalisation experience. The pain that people took may mean it takes a while longer before the benefits of all this are realised.”

While the naira still appears cheap and insulated from trade risks versus other emerging markets, “it has become a more populated trade for foreign investors”, one manager said. “The more interest there is in these trades, the less idiosyncratic it is in terms of risk.”


https://www.ft.com/content/5b5a4a67-cc17-419e-96d6-4f7ba7c3be7d
Those are impressive takes from the respected London Financial Times about FPI inflows into the bonds market, BUT Domestic Direct Investments (DDIs) are largely the best for the medium to long-term stability of Asian, African, and Latin American Emerging economies of which Nigeria is a part of.

DDI must be given a massive priority (to complement any FPI and FDI inflows) because FPIs can be very fickle even though they bring in FX which creates an illusion, but when they start pulling out all of a sudden, it affects the local economy through exchange rate instability. Period.
Re: 'Nigeria Could Be The Next Turkey' - Foreign Investors Hail Economic Turnaround by mytime24(f): 5:55am On Mar 19, 2025
investor sabinus shey🫤
Re: 'Nigeria Could Be The Next Turkey' - Foreign Investors Hail Economic Turnaround by Hohaiiiode(m): 5:56am On Mar 19, 2025
FitCorper:
No Mr foreign investor. Nigeria cannot be the next Turkey. Nigeria will always be Nigeria but greater than before. We have a very decisive president who will crush all and every uprising from the root. God bless Naija
with all this corruption and judicial rascality! No serious investor will put his money in Nigeria . Except all this government contractors lol! Every big corporation have exited Nigeria since this government started! Check FDI figures ! lol
1 2 3 Reply

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