Following the inauguration of the new
administration, the naira may be devalued again to reflect the recent
drop in Nigeria’s foreign reserves, analysts at Renaissance Capital have
said. The analysts said this in a report,
‘Nigeria beyond May 29: Managing expectations,’ which was made available
to our correspondent on Friday.
The analysts, however, noted that the
Central Bank of Nigeria was likely to move back toward a ‘managed float
versus the managed peg’ of recent months.
They said, “Post-inauguration, we think
the naira – which has essentially been pegged at N199/$1 since the
mid-February devaluation – will be devalued, to reflect the $4.5bn fall
in FX reserves since the February devaluation.”
Noting
that a weaker naira implied a build-up of inflationary pressures, they
observed, “We see inflation breaching the central bank’s inflation
target band of six to nine per cent and entering double-
digits in Q3
2015. This rules out any prospect of monetary easing in 2015, in our
view.”
They explained that the devaluation might
be smaller than the market projects (1015 per cent), because
authorities seemed to be focused on medium-term fundamentals, which they
expect would turn in favour of the naira, primarily through a fall in
import demand – particularly of agriculture products (via continued
improvement in production) and fuel imports (due to 650kb/d of fuel
coming onstream from Dangote’s refinery), which account for 60 per cent
of forex usage.
The risk to this view, according to them,
is that the All Progressives Congress comes in with a macro policy that
requires a much weaker naira, i.e. an export-led growth policy.
The RenCap analysts also reviewed the fiscal crisis in the country and the challenge it would pose to the new government.
“Given that the incoming administration
will be substantially resource-constrained, we think Buhari’s biggest
challenge will be managing expectations,” they said, adding that the oil
sector was expected to be the primary focus of Buhari’s crackdown on
graft; in particular, reforms related to the fuel subsidy, repatriation
of oil money and refineries.
Stressing that, as things stand, the
government was experiencing a significant cash crunch, whereby it could
do little beyond paying salaries, they said they expected capex spend in
2015 to be negligible with debt to play a much bigger role in financing
the budget than it had in recent years.
They added, “As we expect the financing
gap to be at least double the FY15 target of 1.1 per cent of GDP, due to
optimistic revenue assumptions and slower growth, we believe the
incoming administration is apt to seek larger loans from the DFIs. Given
the revenue constraint, we think the incoming administration will
continue to wind down some companies’ pioneer status, so they can start
paying taxes, and reduce the number of authorities that can grant
pioneer status, to slow the awarding of tax exemptions.”
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