Tag: Inflation

  • December inflation may drop to 7.8%

    December inflation may drop to 7.8%

    There is hope for a drop in inflation rate in the last quarter of 2013.

    A financial analyst, Bismark Rewane, has said inflation may drop to 7.8 per cent from 7.9 per cent in November 2013 when the National Bureau of Statistics (NBS) releases the inflation data for the month before weekend.

    He said the price level was within the target range of the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) for 2014.

    Rewane said the reasons for the moderation in the price level include the stability of the naira in the forex market and negative growth in money supply of 7.39 per cent in October 2013. He explained that money supply is now N14.73 trillion adding that other factors include the higher rates of interest in the money markets and the contractionary stance of the CBN.

    He said the base year prices in December 2012 were much higher because of the flood effect, adding that Nigeria suffered from severe floods with a devastating impact on food production and transportation in 2012.

    “Our monthly survey revealed that in the Lagos area, the urban CPI declined by 0.26 per cent to 9.43 per cent in December. In 2013, the level of festivity was relatively subdued compared to the previous year. Most traders complained of less sales than usual. The food basket declined by 0.82 per cent to 9.14 per cent while the non-food was 8.07 per cent compared with 8.39 per cent in the previous month,” he said.

  • Sanusi’s planned exit raises concerns on inflation

    Sanusi’s planned exit raises concerns on inflation

    Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) Governor Sanusi Lamido Sanusi is preparing to leave his post in June. There are fears in the industry that the gains of his success in curbing inflation and stabilising the currency may be reversed.

    Bloomberg reports that in his four years in office, Sanusi overhauled a banking industry that was near collapse, cut the inflation rate to the lowest level in more than five years and helped to keep the currency within a narrow range. Those achievements may be threatened as government spending is set to escalate before elections in 2015.

    A strategist at Standard Bank Group Limited, London, Samir Gadio said: “Sanusi has been ready to tighten monetary policy when needed. We are going into an election in less than 16 months, so what we expect is that for the next year, fiscal policy will be significantly expansionary, and if not checked by the central bank, it could result in increased pressure on the exchange rate.”

    The government of Africa’s biggest crude producer is already drawing down savings to meet its spending needs as oil production misses targets. While President Goodluck Jonathan has pledged to keep the budget deficit under control, Sanusi himself is wary, saying in an interview last month that the CBN is bracing up for fiscal “shocks.” Government expenditure climbed 17 percent before the 2011 presidential vote.

    The key concern among investors is exchange rate stability, including a possible devaluation. The CBN has supported the naira by selling foreign currency at twice-weekly auctions to keep the local unit within a range of three per cent around 155 per dollar.

    The naira has dropped 1.2 per cent against the dollar this year on the interbank market and was trading at 157.98 as on Friday. Yields on naira debt maturing in January 2022 have risen 73 basis points, or 0.73 percentage points, to 12.74 per cent.

    A research analyst at London-based Exotix Limited, Ronak Gadhia said: “In terms of international credibility, there’s not someone who is his equal who could take over.

    “It’s everything Sanusi has achieved. He helped sort out the banking crisis, and the currency is as stable as it’s ever been. It’s been really prudent economic management.”

    Appointed in 2009 during a debt crisis, Sanusi oversaw a N620 billion ($3.9 billion) bank bailout and fired the chief executives of eight of the country’s 24 banks after an audit found evidence of mismanagement and reckless lending.

    Inflation slowed to 7.8 per cent in October from 13.2 per cent in May 2009, the month before Sanusi took office.

    Investors are worried that Jonathan may appoint a governor who is less inclined to challenge overspending by lawmakers and kow-tow to pressure from the Finance Ministry to lower interest rates.

    Sanusi, who drew criticism from members of parliament opposed to his push for spending curbs on salaries, fought off plans by lawmakers last year to amend rules that would curtail the governor’s powers over the CBN.

  • ‘Inflation, high interest rates affecting SMEs’

    Inflation and high interest rates are threatening Small and Medium Enterprises (SMEs), the President, Association of Micro Enterprises of Nigeria (AMEN), Prince Saviour Iche, has said.

    He told The Nation during the General Meeting of the group in Lagos that small businesses were hit by high bank charges and rising costs. He accused the banks of hiking interst rates.

    According to him, access to finance is key to SMEs’ survival and growth.

    He said this had been exacerbated by the fact that SMEs do not have huge resources to keep them afloat like their larger counterparts.

    According to him, some SMEs will be affected as they endure the hard times, which he described as the “credit squeeze”.

    He said this would lead to a drastic drop in the demand for goods and services, disrupt cash flows as a result of credit tightening, increased payment delays on receivables leading to acute shortage of working capital.

    He advised SMEs’ owners to focus on improving the quality of both their processes and products, if they want to remain relevant and competitive.

    Iche added that AMEN has established a cooperative society to cater for the needs of its members. He urged members to assist in it.

     

  • Inflation decreases by 8.2% in Sept.

    Inflation decreases by 8.2% in Sept.

    The Consumer Price Index (CPI), which measures the rate of inflation, went down by 8.2 per cent last month compared to eight per cent in August.

    Headline index, according to the statement by the National Bureau of Statistics (NBS), yesterday showed that it nosedived from nine per cent in January.

    According to the NBS, the rate of inflation slowed for the second consecutive month, after it jumped in July.

    It noted: “In September, the CPI, which measures inflation, rose by eight per cent year-on-year, 0.2 percentage points lower from 8.2 per cent recorded in August. The year-on-year rate for the Headline index continues to trend downwards from the nine per cent recorded in January, this year.

    “This was largely as a result of a slower rate of increase in food prices as the recent harvest season continues to constrain rising food prices. Compared to August, prices trended lower in most food classes except for the dairy products (milk, eggs and cheese), and oils and fats classes

    “The core sub-index has trended upwards for the third consecutive month (after trending lower in the first half of the year). The rate of increase was however tempered by moderations in the housing, water, electricity, gas and other fuels (division as well as the) furnishings, household equipment and household maintenance division.”

    It added that last month, the headline index increased by 0.75 per cent, an increase of 0.5 percent from 0.25 per cent recorded in the preceding month. This, it explained, was the first uptick in the CPI in four months.

    According to the NBS, the urban composite CPI was recorded at 147.9 points last month, an eight per cent increase from levels recorded same period last year.

    “This was also 0.4 percentage points lower than the 8.4 per cent recorded in August. The corresponding rural national CPI recorded an eight per cent year-on-year change in September, marginally lower from the 8.1 per cent recorded in August,” NBS added.

    Monthly, the Urban All-items index increased by 0.8 per cent in September; up by 0.5 percentage points, from the 0.3 per cent recorded in August, while the Rural All Items index increased by 0.74 percent up from 0.2 per cent recorded in August.

    “The percentage change in the average Composite CPI for the 12-month period ending in September over the average of the CPI for the previous 12-month period was recorded at 9.5 per cent, lower than the average twelve month rate of change of 9.8 per cent recorded in August. The corresponding 12-month year-on-year average percentage change for the Urban index was 10.4 per cent, while the corresponding Rural index was recorded at 8.8 per cent.”

    The rate of increase in food prices moderated for the second consecutive month in September as produce from the on- going harvest continues to put downward pressure on the Food Sub-index.

    The rate recorded in September was 9.4 per cent, 0.3 percentage points lower than 9.7 per cent recorded in August.

    Food prices were higher on a month-on-month basis however. The Food sub-index increased by 0.9 percent in September, up from 0.5 per cent recorded in August by 0.4 percentage points. In September, the highest price increases were recorded in the oils and fats, and Bread and Cereals classes, amongst others.

    NBS further said: “The average annual rate of rise of the Food sub-index for the twelve-month period ending in September was 10.1 per cent when compared with the same period last year. This was marginally lower than the 12-month average year-on-year change for the period ending in August (10.2 per cent).

    “The “All items less Farm Produce” or Core index, which excludes the prices of volatile agricultural products increased for the third consecutive month in September to 7.4 per cent, up by 0.2 percentage points from 7.2 per cent recorded in August. On a month-on-month basis, the Core sub index was recorded at 0.6 per cent, lower than 1.3 per cent recorded in August by 0.7 percentage points. The increase in the core sub-index was as a result of price increases across various class items in particular: Actual and Imputed rental prices, books and stationeries as a result of the start of the new school year, and accommodation services amongst others. The average 12 month annual rate of rise of the index was recorded at 8.9 per cent for the twelve-month period ending in September 2013, down 0.5 percentage points from 9.4 per cent recorded in August 2013.”

     

  • ‘Single digit inflation to persist till year-end’

    ‘Single digit inflation to persist till year-end’

    Analysts expect inflation to remain in single digits until the end of 2013 as such would also allow interest rate to remain unchanged at 12 per cent this year.

    Regional Head of Research, Africa at Standard Chartered Bank, Razia Khan said although many had predicted a greater risk of easing following the achievement of single-digit inflation, recent pressure on the naira, given market expectations of a tapering of quantitative easing will likely keep the monetary policy committee on hold. She also expressed concerns about Nigeria’s political cycle and spending pressures.

    “There is a risk that elections, due in 2015, are brought forward, allowing for any legal disputes to election results to be settled ahead of a May 2015 transition. If this is the case, spending may rise meaningfully ahead of party primaries which would be held in early half year 2014,” she said.

    Khan explained that given anticipated pressure on future inflation, forecast of a 100 basis points (bps) rate hike in first quarter of 2014, followed by hikes of 50bps each in third quarter and fourth quarter 2014, with the interest rate raised to 14 per cent by end of 2014 is a possibility.

    However, she said pressure on the naira will determine the extent of tightening that is required. “Inflation is likely to remain in single digits this year, but success was hard-won; risks to the naira will keep the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) on hold until the end of 2013; we forecast more tightening in 2014,” she said.

    She said weaker oil output relative to ambitious budget targets risks fiscal deterioration, with Nigeria dipping into its oil savings. With only modest spending increases envisaged in 2013, a budget deficit of 2.17 per cent was initially forecast.

    However, oil production, reportedly averaging 2.1 to 2.2 million barrels per day (mmbd), has fallen short of the 2.53 mmbd assumed in the 2013 budget. In June, output may have hit a low of 1.9mmbd. This, she insisted, has necessitated more frequent augmentation of revenue from Excess Crude Account (ECA).

     

     

  • Analysts see drop in May  inflation, Naira value

    Analysts see drop in May inflation, Naira value

    •Expect interest rate to remain 12% 

     

    Analysts at Financial Derivatives Company (FDC) Limited see May inflation declining to 8.98 per cent from 9.1 per cent recorded last April.

    They forecast the Monetary Policy Committee (MPC) retaining the benchmark interest rate (the Monetary Policy Rate, which determines other interest rates in the economy) that remained unchanged for a 10th consecutive meeting at 12 per cent.

    The Managing Director of FDC, Bismark Rewane, said in a report that last month’s inflation projection is supported by the slight moderation in the food index of the  firm’s Lagos urban inflation and associated high prices in the base period of May last year.

    He explained that FDC’s Lagos urban price index moderated for the third consecutive month by 0.46 per cent to 10.83 per cent, from 11.29 per cent in April.

    Also, the urban index eased as a result of the decline in both the food and non-food indexes while prices of items such as rice, guinea corn, wheat, salt, cereals, and vegetable leaves declined, leading to a 0.08 per cent moderation in food index.

    He noted that the non-food index also declined by 0.35 per cent to 8.73 per cent last month due to a reduction in air fares, fall in cost of insecticides, men’s clothing and toiletries.

    “We anticipate that the headline inflation will remain in the single digit band before the next MPC meeting in July. After the last MPC meeting, the CBN Governor suggested the need for a tight monetary policy and highlighted the current risks to inflation.

    Recently, the Governor of the CBN, Mallam Sanusi Lamido Sanusi, hinted on a possible increase in the cash reserve requirement (CRR) if fiscal spending continues to increase,” he said.

    The FDC’s expectation is that the nominal interest rates in the economy will trend within the two per cent band of the benchmark policy rate until the next MPC meeting in July. However, movement in the government’s spending in coming days will foretell the direction the MPC will lean to when taking position in July, he said.

    The expert explained that the probability for an accommodative monetary policy is reduced by the continued increase in government’s spending, which it did not see dropping due to the approaching election season. Also, one of the major concerns of the MPC is its inability to discern if the level of inflation in the economy is a trend or a blip. Other concerns of the MPC, he said, include increased fiscal expenditure and naira stability.

    “In addition to the above, our forecast of a flat rate of inflation in May makes the chances for an accommodative monetary policy dim. Notwithstanding, our analysis suggests that the current inflation rate is more of a trend rather than a blip. Hence, we do not expect the MPC to change its monetary policy strategy as the CBN is poised to maintaining economic, monetary and exchange rate stability,” he said.

    Rewane also explained that inflation could impact the bond market based on CBN’s response through the use of monetary policy tools at its disposal. The second is more subtle and insidious to the portfolio returns of bond investors’ overtime. This is the effect of the lag between the nominal return and the real return provided by a bond.

    “Given our forecast and the likely monetary policy response, the bond market is expected to be negatively impacted. Year-to-Date, the average bond yields have declined 84 basis points to 11.11 per cent per annum, indicating the impact of the tight monetary policy,” he said.

    The FDC boss also said the naira is likely to depreciate further against the dollar due to the increasing demand for the dollar. Growing government spending and declining foreign reserves levels are other pointers to the naira’s fall adding that in May, the naira was stable only because of the CBN’s intervention in the forex market.

    “Evidently, our analysis on the true value of the naira against the dollar reveals the naira is currently overvalued by 13.95 per cent.  We therefore note that the CBN intervention may become unsustainable if government spending continues to go up. This is likely to prompt the apex bank to allow the naira to find its true value,” he said.

    He opined that the eventual depreciation of the naira would translate to increased cost of imports, reserves depletion and increased fiscal spending. This will immediate translate to higher cost of goods and services, hence higher inflation.

     

     

     

  • Not Enough Inflation

    Ever since the financial crisis struck, and the Federal Reserve began “printing money” in an attempt to contain the damage, there have been dire warnings about inflation — and not just from the Ron Paul/Glenn Beck types.

    Thus, in 2009, the influential conservative monetary economist Allan Meltzer warned that we would soon become “inflation nation.” In 2010, the Paris-based Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development urged the Fed to raise interest rates to head off inflation risks (even though its own models showed no such risk). In 2011, Representative Paul Ryan, then the newly installed chairman of the House Budget Committee, raked Ben Bernanke, the Fed chairman, over the coals, warning of looming inflation and intoning solemnly that it was a terrible thing to “debase” the dollar.

    And now, sure enough, the Fed really is worried about inflation. You see, it’s getting too low.

    Before I get to the trouble with low inflation, however, let’s talk about what we should have learned so far.

    It’s not hard to see where inflation fears were coming from. In its efforts to prop up the economy, the Fed has bought more than $2 trillion of stuff — private debts, housing agency debts, government bonds. It has paid for these purchases by crediting funds to the reserves of private banks, which isn’t exactly printing money, but is close enough for government work. Here comes hyperinflation!

    Or, actually, not. From the beginning, it was or at least should have been obvious that the financial crisis had plunged us into a “liquidity trap,” a situation in which many people figure that they might just as well sit on cash. America spent most of the 1930s in a liquidity trap; Japan has been in one since the mid-1990s. And we’re in one now.

    Economists who had studied such traps — a group that included Ben Bernanke and, well, me — knew that some of the usual rules of economics are in abeyance as long as the trap lasts. Budget deficits, for example, don’t drive up interest rates; printing money isn’t inflationary; slashing government spending has really destructive effects on incomes and employment.

    The usual suspects dismissed all this analysis; it was “liquidity claptrap,” declared Alan Reynolds of the Cato Institute. But that was four years ago, and the liquidity trappers seem to have been right, after all.

    And it’s worth mentioning another issue on which the inflation non-worriers have been vindicated: how to measure inflation trends. The Fed relies on a measure that excludes food and energy prices, which fluctuate widely from month to month. Many commentators ridiculed this focus on “core” inflation, especially in early 2011, when rising food and energy prices briefly sent “headline” inflation above 4 percent even as the core stayed low. But, sure enough, inflation came back down.

    So all those inflation fears were wrong, and those who fanned those fears proved, in case you were wondering, that their economic doctrine is completely wrong — not that any of them will ever admit such a thing.

    And, at this point, inflation — at barely above 1 percent by the Fed’s favored measure — is dangerously low.

    Why is low inflation a problem? One answer is that it discourages borrowing and spending and encourages sitting on cash. Since our biggest economic problem is an overall lack of demand, falling inflation makes that problem worse.

    Low inflation also makes it harder to pay down debt, worsening the private-sector debt troubles that are a main reason overall demand is too low.

    So why is inflation falling? The answer is the economy’s persistent weakness, which keeps workers from bargaining for higher wages and forces many businesses to cut prices. And if you think about it for a minute, you realize that this is a vicious circle, in which a weak economy leads to too-low inflation, which perpetuates the economy’s weakness.

    And this brings us to a broader point: the utter folly of not acting to boost the economy, now.

    Whenever anyone talks about the need for more stimulus, monetary and fiscal, to reduce unemployment, the response from people who imagine themselves wise is always that we should focus on the long run, not on short-run fixes. The truth, however, is that by failing to deal with our short-run mess, we’re turning it into a long-run, chronic economic malaise.

    I wrote recently about how, by allowing long-term unemployment to persist, we’re creating a permanent class of unemployed Americans. The problem of too-low inflation is very different in detail, but similar in its implications: here, too, by letting short-run economic problems fester we’re setting ourselves up for a long-run, perhaps permanent, pattern of economic failure.

    The point is that we are failing miserably in responding to our economic challenge — and we will be paying for that failure for many years to come.

     

    Culled from New York Times

  • Low inflation rate to increase equities’ return

    The National Bureau of Statistics (NBS) is expected to release a lower inflation rate for March 2013 today, setting the stage for subsequent increase in average real returns to investors in quoted equities.

    The Data Release Calendar of the NBS indicated that the new inflation figure would be released today. The inflation rate, for February 2013, stands at 9.5 cent.

    Analysts at FSDH Merchant Bank said all indices pointed to a reduction in inflation rate, which automatically would increase the inflation adjusted return of quoted equities.

    The stock market opened this week with average year-to-date return of 19.36 per cent.

    Estimates by the FSDH indicated probability of 60 points decrease in inflation rate from 9.5 per cent to 8.9 per cent.

    Inflation rate of about 8.9 per cent implies double-digit inflation adjusted return of about 10.5 per cent for the equities market. The double digit return will further enhance the attractiveness of equities, especially against the background of low and declining interest rates in the fixed-income market.

    According to analysts, in spite of the expected increase in Consumer Price Index (CPI) in March 2013, the base effect of an increase in March 2012 would produce a year-on-year inflation rate of 8.9 per cent, representing 60 basis points drop from February 2013 inflation rate.

    “The March CPI will have to increase by at least 1.6 per cent from February to produce an inflation rate that is higher than 9.5 per cent reported in February 2013. In our opinion, this is unlikely,” FSDH concluded.

    FSDH stated that analysis of the prices of a basket of consumer goods monitored across the country in March had showed that prices of some major components of the basket increased. The average prices of rice increased by about 25.98 per cent on account of increase in import duties. The price of yam increased by 26.67 per cent, price of Irish potato increased by 24.76 per cent, the prices of meat and vegetable oil increased by 3.33 per cent and 0.56 per cent respectively while the prices of onions and tomatoes dropped by about 12.59 per cent and 3.33 per cent. The price of palm oil also decreased marginally by about 3.33 per cent. However, the price of garri and that of beans remained stable during the period.

    FSDH noted that the observed increases in the prices of food items in March and the increase in the demand for non-alcoholic beverages during the Easter celebration should result to about 1.30 per cent increase in the Food and Non-Alcoholic Index pointing out that it also noticed increase in prices of transportation, clothing and foot wears, recreation and culture and restaurants and hotels.

    According to the FSDH estimates, the price movements in the consumer goods in March will increase the Consumer Price Index (CPI) to 144.46 points, an increase of 1.03 per cent month-on month.

    FSDH however indicated possibility of increase in inflation rate to more than 9.5 per cent in April, calling for balance in financial and investment planning.

     

  • Single digit Inflation will foster growth, say experts

    Single digit Inflation will foster growth, say experts

    The ability to keep inflation at a single digit of nine percent for three months will help in fostering macro-economic growth, experts have said.

    The yearly inflationary rate, which was 9.7 per cent on January, dropped to nine per cent in March, indicating that the Central Bank of Nigeria’s (CBN’s) aggressive mopping  up of funds via issuance of Treasury Bills among other instruments has paid off.

    CBN’s former Director of Research, Mr Titus Okunronmu, said the economy would benefit in the long run if the trend is sustained. He said various sectors of the economy would benefit on account of the drop in inflation to nine per cent.

    Okunronmu said: “Though it is expected that the rate would further reduce to seven per cent in line with CBN’s stance on the issue, the nine per cent will help in stimulating growth of some sectors of the economy. Manufacturers are hard hit in an environment with high inflation and interest rates.This implies that they are not only go battle with huge cost of production, but would find it difficult to get enough sales.  But with inflation coming down, it is a good development for real sector operators.”

    He urged CBN to reduce the benchmark interest rate of 12 per cent, arguing that maintaining it for the six consecutive periods is not good enough for Nigerian economy where there is an impeded access to funds.

    “I think a remarkable drop in major macroeconomic rates would be better. The MPR, inflationary rate, among others must be reduced to grow the economy,” he added.

    An economist with the Lagos Business School, Dr Austin Nweze hailed CBN’s decision to focus on the maintenance of a favourable macroeconomic outlook.

    “It is obvious that the economy is not moving now. Activities are very low due to hindered access to funds. While the apex bank is curtailing the rate of inflation, it must not lose sight of the fact that the economy needs credit to grow. This can be made possible by a reduction in the monetary policy rate,” he said.

    FBN Capital Limited, had in a report entitled: Inflation still single digit, projected that the headline inflation rate will fall to 7.5 per cent by the end of 2013, while that the core –inflation rate will drop to 6.6 per cent.

     

  • Inflation to drop to 7.5%, says FBN Capital

    Inflation rate will drop to 7.5 per cent before the end of this year, FBN Capital Limited, a research investment firm, has said.

    The price increase had risen to 9.5 per cent yearly in February, up from nine per cent in January. The Monetary Policy Committee (MPC) of the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) met on Monday and yesterday in Abuja to deliberate on the Monetary Policy Rate (MPR). It influences interest rates in the country.

    FBN Capital, in a statement, entitled: Inflation still in single digits, said the inflation rate would fall below nine per cent in March and end at 7.5 per cent by 2013 in line with the CBN’s policy of maintaining a single-digit inflation rate via the use of money market instruments.

    It said: “The CBN has an objective of single-digit headline inflation. It has met its objective for two successive months. In our view, this good run has more legs, and we see the rate below nine per cent year to year in March and at 7.5 per cent at the end of the year.”

    According to the firm, the CBN’s forecast as reported in the personal statements after the last meeting of the MPC in late January, projected year-to year core and headline rates at 6.6 per cent and 8.5 per cent at end-June.

    It noted: “The headline rate of inflation picked up in February to 9.5 per cent year-to-year from nine per cent in January. This was our precise call in analysts’surveys for the wire services. Base effects pointed to a modest acceleration in the headline rate after the dramatic decline of three percentage points in January. Food price inflation increased from 10.1 per cent to 11 per cent year to year, while the rate for the core measure slowed from 11.4 per cent to 11 per cent.”

    FBN Capital recalled that two members of the committee voted for a policy rate cut, while eight ignored the benign inflation outlook at the last meeting.

    “Our expectation is that there will again be no change. Split voting is likely although we feel the majority will be guided by concerns for the global economy, the oil price and the domestic fiscal stance,” it said.