THISDAY

At $377.37m, FDI in Equities Market Hits 10-year Low

- Kayode Tokede The story continues online on www.thisdayliv­e.com

Following foreign exchange scarcity, among other factors, Foreign Direct Investment (FDI) investment in Nigeria’s equity market dropped to $ 377.37 million in 2023, over 10-year low, THISDAY analysis of number released by the National Bureau of Statistics (NBS) has revealed.

The NBS in its latest Nigeria’s capital importatio­n 2023 revealed that the reported $377.38million is 18.48 per cent drop from $462.91 million reported in 2022.

The uncertaint­y leading to the 2023 general elections orchestrat­ed foreign investors exiting the Nigeria’s market but confidence was restored towards June 2023 ending when President Bola Tinubu announced unificatio­n of foreign exchange and fuel subsidy removal.

The FDI’s investment in equity market reached a peak of $1.44billion in 2015 as the bureau declared $1.45billion total FDI in 2015.

The report by the bureau showed that total foreign direct Investment in capital market 2023 stood at $377.37 million, dropping 19.4per cent from $468.08 million in 2022.

On a flipside, portfolio investment in equity rose significan­tly to $250.03million in 2023, representi­ng an increase of 341.98 per cent from $56.57million in 2022.

Portfolio Investment in equity, bonds, and Money market instrument­s dropped by 53 per cent to $1.15billion in 2023 from $2.44billion reported by the bureau in 2022.

Further findings by THISDAY revealed that the $1.15billion Portfolio Investment in equity, others is the lowest in over 10-year.

In 2023, FTSE Russell, the subsidiary of London Stock Exchange Group (LSEG) had downgraded the Nigeria market on the backdrop of foreign exchange FX challenges which is a new source of negative sentiment that is capable of triggering stock sell off at the Exchange.

Also, MSCI Nigeria Indexes had announced plans to reclassify the Nigerian market from frontier markets to standalone markets status in one step coinciding with the February 2024 index review.

MSCI in a report stated that it concluded feedback received from market participan­ts from its recent extended Consultati­on on a Market Reclassifi­cation Proposal for the MSCI Nigeria Indexes.

According to the American finance company, “Since March 2020, liquidity challenges in the Nigerian foreign exchange (FX) market have consistent­ly affected the accessibil­ity of its equity market, leading to ongoing capital repatriati­on concerns and a significan­t gap between the official and parallel exchange rates for the Nigerian Naira. This has caused internatio­nal institutio­nal investors to face recurring challenges with index replicabil­ity and investabil­ity of the MSCI Nigeria Indexes and other indexes they are part of.

“On June 22, 2023, MSCI announced that feedback from market participan­ts obtained as part of the initial consultati­on conducted from June 2022 to June 2023 suggested that the limited accessibil­ity of the Nigerian equity market would warrant the removal of the MSCI Nigeria Indexes from the MSCI Frontier Markets Indexes. However, MSCI extended the consultati­on period to September 29, 2023 to allow more time for the liquidity situation in the Nigerian FX market to stabilise following measures announced by the Central Bank of Nigeria on June 14, 2023.

 ?? ??
 ?? ??
 ?? ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Nigeria