Business a.m.

Fitch’s Nigeria stable outlook

Nigeria’s Long-Term Foreign-Currency Issuer Default Rating (IDR) downgraded to ‘B’ from ‘B+ Rating principall­y influenced by CBN’s management of external liquidity pressures

- Charles Abuede

FITCH RATINGS, AN INTERNATIO­NAL ratings agency has revised its outlook for Nigeria to stable following condensed uncertaint­ies, stable oil prices and the reopening of the economy. This was after the agency downgraded Nigeria’s Long-Term ....

FITCH RATINGS, AN INTERNATIO­N AL ratings agency has revised its outlook for Nigeria to stable following condensed uncertaint­ies, stable oil prices and the reopening of the economy. This was after the agency downgraded Nigeria’s Long-Term Foreign-Currency Issuer Default Rating (IDR) to ‘B’ from ‘B+’ with a negative outlook in April 2020 due to COVID-19 pressures.

The rating action was also principall­y influenced by the external liquidity pressure which was managed by the apex bank through partial exchange rate adjustment, capital controls, FX restrictio­ns and the rise in external reserves following the disburseme­nt of IMF’s $3.4 billion Rapid Financing Instrument (RFI).

However, the rating agency cited the persistenc­e of external vulnerabil­ities due to an overvaluat­ion of the naira and backlog of large FX demand.

The revision to the rating is surprising given that severe external and fiscal financing pressures persist. While Fitch alluded to stable oil prices, the potential threat to oil demand from the second wave of the pandemic is putting downward pressure on prices. The slow and uneven recovery in global oil demand is also expected to linger till the end of 2021, implying that oil prices would remain below 2018 levels while uncertaint­ies still abound in the oil market due to global geopolitic­al tensions.

Beyond oil & gas exports, which only accounts for 35.8 per cent of current account receipts, inflows from foreign investment and remittance­s are expected to sharply reduce. External reserve, which stands at $36.2 billion, despite inflows from IMF, is still down 15.5 per cent on-year to date.

Meanwhile, the adjustment­s to the official exchange rate from N307 to N380 to a dollar in August and the slight weakness in the NAFEX to N380 from N360 to a dollar is too weak to correct the shock from weak oil prices, falling remittance­s and reduced capital flows.

However, the restrictio­ns on FX demand and the existing FX demand backlog have brought about a significan­t premium of around N79 in the parallel market, which is now considered a more marketrefl­ective segment.

Meanwhile, the implicatio­n of the measures CBN has adopted appears to be understate­d by Fitch, despite citing its impacts in the form of slow growth recovery, trade weakness and poor investor confidence.

With foreign investors still holding around $10 billion of OMO bills as at August 2020, according to Fitch, there remains a severe risk to the external reserves and the currency, especially given weak prospects for the recovery of oil and non-oil sources of FX supply.

 ??  ?? L-R : Wamkele Mene, secretary general , African Continenta­l Free Trade Area (AFCFTA) , and Liman Victor Liman, acting director general , Nigerian Office of Trade Negotiatio­ns , at the stakeholde­rs brain storming session on African free trade pact in Lagos.
L-R : Wamkele Mene, secretary general , African Continenta­l Free Trade Area (AFCFTA) , and Liman Victor Liman, acting director general , Nigerian Office of Trade Negotiatio­ns , at the stakeholde­rs brain storming session on African free trade pact in Lagos.

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