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Reading: Foreign capital inflows rise to $4.15b
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The Capital > Blog > Business > Foreign capital inflows rise to $4.15b
Business

Foreign capital inflows rise to $4.15b

semasir
Last updated: February 16, 2018 2:48 pm
semasir
Published: February 16, 2018
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Foreign capital inflows into the economy rose by 148 per cent to $4.15 billion, according to a report released yesterday.

The Financial Derivatives Monthly Economic Update titled: “Hot Money: Foreign Direct Investment and the Central Bank of Nigeria’s Monetary Policy” attributed the increase to renewed investors’ confidence in the economy.

It said a further breakdown showed that foreign portfolio investment (FPI) — hot money —accounted for 67 per cent of inflows; foreign direct investment (FDI) and others accounted for the rest.

The report said policy makers were wary of relying on FPIs because they are  considered to be highly volatile and politically sensitive. “Some nations have restricted the tenor of FPIs to a minimum stay of three years. In 2018, with the expectant increase in US interest rates, these investments could be subject to capital flow reversals. In the run-up to a general election, any outward investment flows could be debilitating,” the report said.

It said with oil prices rising by 17 per cent since 2017’s average, staying at current levels, means oil revenues may help mitigate the consequences of any form of capital flight.

The Monetary Policy Committee (MPC), it said, voted in May 2016 to adopt greater flexibility in exchange rate policy and held other monetary policy parameters un-changed. “This was the first in a sequence of monetary policies aimed at salvaging a near-crisis situation in the foreign exchange (forex) market. The situation in the forex market was occasioned by a steep fall in global oil prices and domestic oil production shocks, and was exacerbated by economic policy inertia,” it said.

It said the euphoria surrounding the flexible ex-change rate and higher interest rate was short-lived as capital imported in fourth quarter of 2016 declined by 15 per cent to $1.55 billion and was followed by a 41.36 per cent fall in capital imported in first quarter to $908.27 million.

“This was largely due to the skepticism about the flexible forex policy and investors’ apprehension about the huge disparity between the interbank forex rate and the parallel market rate. This trend continued until the Investors Export Foreign Exchange window (IEFX) was launched in late April 2017. The IEFX boosted liquidity in the forex market, calmed the frayed nerves of foreign investors and supported the convergence of exchange rates,” it said.

It said the introduction of the IEFX window in late April 2017 is arguably the most important policy implemented by the CBN in 2017. It said prior to the introduction of the IEFX, foreign portfolio investors, particularly those repatriating funds from Nigeria, were concerned about the multiple ex-change rates in the country. There was a huge gap be-tween the official exchange rate and the parallel market exchange rate, plus an opaqueness in the foreign ex-change management system (which caused uncertainty), and the acute scarcity of hard currency. Consequently, there was an exodus of foreign capital and little or no new investments into the country.

“However, foreign portfolio investors returned with the opening of the IEFX. Prior to this, investors were of the view that the naira was overvalued and not at a market-determined level. The IEFX window, higher oil prices and production, and the CBN’s consistent intervention in the forex market are the main drivers of the stability and the convergence of exchange rates in Nigeria today. The graph below shows how the IEFX window has gained traction since it was introduced,” it said.

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