Business Day (Nigeria)

Stocks fall by most since April after BUA, Cadbury losses

- SEGUN ADAMS

Nigerian equities dipped 1.5% on Tuesday, the most in two months, after BUA Cement and Cadbury slid by the most allowable in a trading session as preCOVID-19 highs continue to elude the market.

On April 6, the market declined 2.02%.

“Although profit taking was the tone of the market today, we expect to see bargain hunting in subsequent trading sessions,” said Lagos-based Afrinvest in a note to clients.

Bellwether stock BUA Cement and Consumer goods stock Cadbury fell 10% each to N38.7 a unit and N6.75 a unit respective­ly, to be the day’s biggest laggards offsetting big gains in Neimeth, Okomu Oil and ABC Transport.

Industrial goods index fell the most although 4 out of 6 sectoral trackers closed in the red.

On a year-to-date basis stocks are down 8.8%.

So far, stocks have declined about 3% in the last one month on profit- taking following the stellar rebound from its year-low in April where historic declines in oil price and lockdowns in key Nigerian states roiled the market. Still, equities are up some 15% in the second quarter. The third quarter however might hold a different outcome for stocks on the heels of direr economic outlook that might dampen investors sentiment.

Manufactur­ing PMI contracted for the second straight month in June at 41.1 points, its lowest at least six years, bringing the quarter’s average to 41.75, a contractio­n, compared to 56.2, an expansion, in the first three months of the year.

Non-manufactur­ing PMI also contracted in the quarter.

Some economists say the PMI predicts GDP growth quite reliably.

In the first quarter GDP grew 1.87% year over year in what beat expectatio­ns of some analysts even though it was the slowest in two years.

The IMF has predicted around 5% decline with a 2.6% rebound in 2021.

For stocks it might be too early to tell but analysts say the outlook for the market is closely linked to that of the economy, as seen in previous years. On Tuesday, Afrinvest noted that Investor sentiment as measured by market breadth (advance/decline ratio) weakened to 0.3x from the 0.6x recorded in the previous session as 10 stocks advanced against 34 losers.

 ??  ?? L-R: Gaurav Bisaria, director, Central Africa, Ariston Thermo Group; Jide Razack, warehouse manager-medical, Lagos State COVID -19 Response Team, and Solomon Umoh, marketing manager, Central Africa, Ariston Thermo Group, during the donation of Water Heaters to Lagos State Government in support of the Lagos State Government COVID -19 Team recently in Lagos.
L-R: Gaurav Bisaria, director, Central Africa, Ariston Thermo Group; Jide Razack, warehouse manager-medical, Lagos State COVID -19 Response Team, and Solomon Umoh, marketing manager, Central Africa, Ariston Thermo Group, during the donation of Water Heaters to Lagos State Government in support of the Lagos State Government COVID -19 Team recently in Lagos.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Nigeria