‘Naira may be devalued as oil price slumps’
There may be devaluation of the naira as a result of the drop in global oil prices,Reutersreported yesterday.
Nigeria, the continent’s top producer, relies on oil for only 14
percent of its gross domestic product (GDP) but crude makes up 95
percent of foreign exchange and about 80 percent of government revenues,
both of which have shrunk rapidly as Brent crude lost more than a quarter of its value since June.
Foreign portfolio investors fearing heavy losses on the currency have
pulled out — the main share index hit a 16-month low and the yield on
government bonds rose 10 basis points on Wednesday.
The naira has
lost around 4 percent this year, prompting the central bank to hold
frequent additional dollar sales and lower the limit on banks’ foreign
currency borrowing in efforts to prop it up.
At around 167 to the
dollar, it is well outside the central bank’s target band of 3 percent
plus or minus 155 to the dollar. The last time it was in the target
range was in late January.
Foreign reserves fell rapidly from a peak
of $48.9 billion in May 2013 to just $36 billion in June. They have
since rebounded slightly and are currently around $38.3 billion.
Despite these losses, analysts say that a devaluation before the
elections, when President Goodluck Jonathan will seek a second term,
would be so unpopular that it’s unlikely unless oil prices, now at $82 a
barrel, tumble further and force the bank’s hand.
“It will take
some time of relatively low prices … before you see foreign reserves
really being gobbled up,” Matthew Searle, senior African analyst at
Business Monitor International, said.
“If oil prices fall further to
the $60s or $70s a barrel, then the central bank will become the main
source of dollars,” and will have to decide for how long it can keep up
the fight.
At what point it throws in the towel is hard to tell.
Alan Cameron, London-based economist at Nigeria’s First City Monument
Bank, thinks reserves would likely have to slide to close to $30 billion
before a “last resort” devaluation would be considered.
The last
time the bank lowered its target range for the currency was in late 2011
after the naira came under speculative attack and tight monetary policy
failed to defend it.
“FISCAL EXPANSION”
In addition to a weak currency, Nigeria faces an increasing squeeze on its government finances.
Finance Minister Ngozi Okonko-Iweala told journalists last week that
“Nigeria is not broke”, and analysts agree the country is a long way
from struggling to meet its commitments.
Yet a squeeze on funding is
being felt. A source at the national assembly said money for projects
is not being dispersed as easily as before oil prices fell. An official
at a construction company, who declined to be named, said payments for a
number of projects are in arrears.
Oil analysts do not anticipate
Brent recovering to over $100/bl with an average of $93.70/bl expected
in 2015. A production cut by the Organisation of the Petroleum Exporting
Countries (OPEC) seems unlikely.
Oil producers have become
accustomed to high oil prices, which have held largely above $100/bl
since the Arab Spring in 2011, and all are having to adjust to the new
climate.
“There was significant fiscal expansion since 2010 as they
were used to much higher oil prices, which makes the current price
really problematic,” Samir Gadio, Head of Africa Strategy at Standard
Chartered Bank in London, said.
“You really wonder how they will
cope if prices stay at $85-90 a barrel and sustain the existing
position,” he said, adding that even with prices at $100 a barrel it
would struggle.
11/06/2014
‘Naira may be devalued as oil price slumps’
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