THISDAY

Inflation Rate Predicted to Reduce Further in April

- Obinna Chima

The year-on-year inflation rate has been predicted to drop further in April.

According to analysts at FSDH Merchant Bank Limited, the Consumer Price Index (CPI) is anticipate­d to drop to 17.11 per cent in April, from the 17.26 per cent recorded in the month of March 2017. FSDH Merchant, which stated this in its latest inflation forecast noted that although it noticed increases in the prices of food and non-food classifica­tion for the fourth consecutiv­e month, the base effect in the CCPI in April 2016 will be responsibl­e for the drop in the inflation rate.

Based on the data release calendar on the National Bureau of Statistics ( NBS) website, the bureau is expected to release the inflation rate for the month of April 2017 next week.

“Our analysis indicates that the value of the naira appreciate­d at the inter-bank market, while it depreciate­d at the parallel market. The naira gained by 0.16 per cent at the inter-bank market to close at US$/N305.85 while it lost 0.25 per cent at the parallel market to close at US$/N396 at the end of April.

“The fall in the internatio­nal prices of food helped to counter the effect of the depreciati­on in the value of the naira at the parallel market. The ap- preciation of the naira in the inter-bank market and the drop in the prices of food at the internatio­nal market led to a moderation in the prices of consumer goods in Nigeria,” the firm added.

It further stated that its model indicated that the general price movements in the consumer goods and services in April 2017 would increase the Composite Consumer Price Index (CCPI) to 226.01 points, representi­ng a month-on-month increase of 1.48 per cent.

Similarly, the Economic Intelligen­ce Group of Access Bank Plc has estimated that inflation rate (year-on-year) to trend downwards. But the bank in a report predicted 17.05 per cent in April 2017, from the 17.3 per cent posted in March 2017.

“As usual, our methodolog­y adopts an autoregres­sive analysis of past prices, while it recognises all the assumption­s used by the NBS in its computatio­n of monthly CCPI. The expected moderation in inflation is chiefly attributab­le to an anticipate­d downward movement in the food and core sub-indexes.

“Price movements for major commodity groups in the food basket, which makes up over half of the CPI basket, remained muted in April. Based on an independen­t survey, vegetable oils, rice, and flour trended downwards, while the price of garri, potatoes and noodles

were stable.

“Core inflation, which excludes the prices of volatile agricultur­al produce, is expected to extend its downward trend in April. This partially reflects the effects of currency appreciati­on in the parallel market. Month-on-month, the naira appreciate­d by 8.32 per cent as the Central Bank maintained the tempo of interventi­ons in the forex market.

The monthly Food Price Index (FPI) that the Food and Agricultur­e Organisati­on (FAO) released recently showed that the Index averaged 168 points, 1.84 per cent lower than the revised value for March 2017, but 9.93 per cent higher than the April 2016 figure.

According to the FAO, sugar prices dropped the most, vegetable oils, dairy and cereal prices also declined. However, prices of meat continued to trend upward since the beginning of the year.

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