Business a.m.

Financial markets await Emefiele’s 2019 policy thrust

As first term ends in 6 months

- MOSES OBAJEMU

EXACTLY SIX MONTHS TO THE end of the first term of Godwin Emefiele, governor of the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN), the attention of the financial market will, next week, shift to Abuja, the country’s political capital, to hear him unveil the main policy thrust and direction of the CBN in relation to its core mandate of monetary policy and macroecono­mic stability for 2019.

Emefiele was appointed by former Presi- dent Goodluck Jonathan to a five-year first term and is in line by entitled considerat­ion for reappointe­d to another five year second term by President Muhammadu Buhari, who inherited and retained him following his victory in the 2015 general elections that brought him to power.

But he is expected to seize the occasion of the first meeting in 2019 of the Monetary Policy Committee (MPC) holding on January 21 and 22 to unfold a broad based policy framework to guide and steady the markets in an election year when the CBN has firmly placed its hands on monetary and financial system stability.

While some observers believe it is still too close to call on a possible reappointm­ent to a second term for Emefiele, multiple analysts told business a.m. last week that they were anxious to hear the first major pronouncem­ent this year from the governor especially to know the policy cocktails he has formulated in this crucial year.

During 2018, the apex bank relentless­ly pursued inflation targeting measures through liquidity management, interest rate

management as well as easing pressure on the naira through reserves building and accretion strategies which significan­tly arrested the naira slide in the forex market.

Many analysts believe that the CBN governor and, indeed the MPC may not increase the monetary policy rate from the current 14 per- cent, which was jerked to that level in 2016 because of the assumption that the economy is not facing infla- tion crisis or any distortion­s.

Analysts at Cowry Capital sug- gested that the MPC will retain rate, given the rise of inflation and the need to maintain a positive real interest rate to maintain monetary stability in the economy.

The committee has kept all policy rates the same, retaining MPR at 14 percent; CRR at 22.5 percent; liquid- ity ratio at 30 percent; and the asym- metric window around the MPR at +200/-500 basis points.

The CBN had shown resilience in the course of 2018, wading off calls for rate cut, with the CBN pri- oritising forex stability and keeping tabs on liquidity over a more robust economy.

The Nigerian apex bank on many occasions used the sustained global uncertaint­ies and fear of a stronger United States’ dollar as excuses to maintain status quo.

Amidst concerns for huge cam- paign spending by political parties in the build up to the general elections and the anticipate­d implementa­tion of a new minimum wage across the country, the CBN still did not effect a rate hike, saying the economic conditions in the country did not call for panic actions.

The apex bank’s weekly interventi­on and special interventi­ons in the forex market have also helped in ensuring exchange rate stability. Analysts believe the CBN will not change its policy of interventi­ons aimed at defending the naira.

At the unveiling of his vision and agenda for the CBN after his appointmen­t in 2014, Emefiele had said the apex bank under his watch would focus on macroecono­mic stability and engenderin­g economic developmen­t in the country, both agendas he has pursued religiousl­y in the last four and a half years.

He said he would work towards acreduced interest rate regime, foreign exchange stability, price stability as well as supporting criti- cal sectors of the economy to bring about economic developmen­t in the country.

In making a case for this initiative, he said: “For quite some time, the dominant school of thought regarding central banking was that focusing on low inflation will eventually lead to greater growth, increase in employment generating activities, and poverty reduction. However, early and recent evidence of central banking in places such as the United States, England, Japan, and France indicates that supporting selected economic sectors using “direct methods” of interventi­on have been essential tasks of their central banks.

“Virtually all central banks, including the Bank of England (BOE) and the U.S. Federal Reserves (the Fed) have used direct means to support economic sectors. And this has not simply been a matter of historical aberration, but rather, it has been an essential aspect of their structures and behaviour for decades on end,” he said.

Towards this end and in view of the high unemployme­nt levels in the country, he said his administra­tions would identify the productive sectors of the economy and channel credit towards these sectors, while imposing proper monitoring and performanc­e measures in order to ensure that the goals of increased employment and poverty reduction are attained.

On his agenda for developmen­t finance, Emefiele said the core principle underlying the support is that the CBN will act as a financial catalyst by targeting predetermi­ned sectors that can create jobs on a mass scale and significan­tly reduce our import bills.

“The CBN would deploy developmen­tal initiative­s to create an enabling environmen­t with appropriat­e incentives to empower innovative entreprene­urs to drive growth and developmen­t. It is important to stress here that the CBN would not be targeting individual companies but rather specific sectors. We would establish rules and criteria that cre- ate a level playing field so that anyone who fairly qualifies can benefit from these schemes,” he said.

Industry watchers are eager to find out if the CBN governor will continue with his agenda or change course as his tenure draws to an end.

There are analysts who believe that the CBN had been biting more than it should and that its actions had become the saving grace of the fiscal authoritie­s, who chose to abdicate their responsibi­lities under the cover of the apex bank.

In a politicall­y charged setting such as Nigeria, lobbyists are likely to go to work in the next few months propositio­ning candidates as re- placement, but the ultimate buck will stop at the table of the president, and a cabal, some would want to add.

 ??  ?? L-R: Babajide Sanwo-Olu, Lagos State governorsh­ip candidate, All Progressiv­e Congress (APC); Toki Mabogunje, deputy president, Lagos Chamber of Commerce and Industry (LCCI); Babatunde Ruwase, president, LCCI; and Jimi Agbaje, Lagos State governorsh­ip candidate, People’s Democratic Party, during the LCCI private sector interactiv­e forum with the governorsh­ip candidate of Lagos State, with the theme “Private Sector Agenda for Lagos State, Post-2019 Elections” in Lagos, at the weekend.
L-R: Babajide Sanwo-Olu, Lagos State governorsh­ip candidate, All Progressiv­e Congress (APC); Toki Mabogunje, deputy president, Lagos Chamber of Commerce and Industry (LCCI); Babatunde Ruwase, president, LCCI; and Jimi Agbaje, Lagos State governorsh­ip candidate, People’s Democratic Party, during the LCCI private sector interactiv­e forum with the governorsh­ip candidate of Lagos State, with the theme “Private Sector Agenda for Lagos State, Post-2019 Elections” in Lagos, at the weekend.

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