Tag: manufacturers

  • Manufacturers lose N500b to flexible forex policy

    The Manufacturers Association of Nigeria (MAN) yesterday lamented that its members lost a whopping N500billion to the flexible exchange rate introduced by the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN).

    Its Chairman, Apapa Branch, Mr Babatunde Odunayo,  who spoke yesterday  during the branch’s 45th Annual General Meeting (AGM) in Lagos, Letters of Credit and Form Ms approved to manufacturers at N197/$ before the regime of the flexible exchange rate on June 20, are now expected to be redeemed at N320.

    A letter of credit is a letter from a bank guaranteeing that a buyer’s payment to a seller would be received on time and for the correct amount.

    “Unfortunately, this unfolding situation poses a great burden on manufacturers since the pricing of the related manufactured goods was made at N197 or N198 to dollar when it was approved.

    “Manufacturers currently face up to N500 billion in exchange difference between the approved Form M and Letter of Credit established rates and the flexible market rate of N320 to a dollar.

    “This is a huge loss that manufacturers are expected to bear, whereas the related goods had been mostly sold before the commencement of the new exchange rate system,’’ Odunayo lamented.

    He said the exchange rate loss of N500 billion reflected in their accounts and had led to factory closure, unemployment and loss of investments in the sector.

    According to him, the exchange rate losses will require additional working capital to shore up cash difference between N320 and N197.

    “Many of our members are in the middle of factory projects execution, but the viability of such projects is now questionable due to recent forex (foreign exchange) developments,’’ he said.

    Odunayo warned that if loans were not reversed to pre-flexible exchange rate at which the transactions were contracted, losses to manufacturers would be colossal.

    He urged the government to remove pre-approved form M from the flexible forex market and deal with it through a structured sovereign loan.

  • FG tasks manufacturers, industrialists on public housing

    FG tasks manufacturers, industrialists on public housing

    Minister of Power, Works and Housing, Babatunde Raji Fashola, has tasked local manufacturers and industrialists to get involved in the Federal Government’s public housing project by providing standard materials that can be sourced locally for the project.

    The minister said that the Federal Government has placed embargo on the importation of 10 building materials for the project in order to encourage the local industry and therefore galvanize the ailing economy.

    Fashola made the remark yesterday during the City People Real Estate and Housing lecture held at Planet One event centre, Maryland, Lagos.

    He said: “We are going to standardize the fittings, the windows, the doors, roofing sheet, tiles and all the components. We are going to use those standards to stimulate local mass productions of fittings to meet our demands. Let us take a one bedroom flat as an example. One bedroom flat will have a door, a toilet with one door, a kitchen with one door. We will not use imported doors, we will not use imported windows, we will not use imported tiles, we would not use imported plumbing accessories, and we would not use imported paints.  We have 10 of such items that we will not import. We are still looking for people who make sockets locally. We have found one that makes something similar and they said they can make it. If they do, then we will remove imported sockets from what we need.  We want to challenge the Nigerian manufacturers and industrialists to get involved.

    “After this, the next step will be who will build.  From time to time we receive letters from developers who claim they can build 10, 000 housing units but they have not been able to show us where they built 100 units.  We also have letters from road construction companies, may be because of the economic challenges who now want to go into building.

    “Anybody who is a serious professional in the industry knows that logistics for road construction are different from logistics for housing.  Thankfully, the Real Estate Developers Association of Nigeria has recommended to us accredited developers who will be allowed to participate. Like in UK Singapore that have time tested model of public housing, the government led the initiatives. Our programme will not be different. It will start with the government.”

    He hinted that the buildings when completed will be for people who do not have a house of their own, adding: “Sometimes, public housing is not defined by everybody having a house, it is more defined by how many people who move from rental to ownership and ensuring that those who own don’t go back to renting houses. People can lose their homes when things get difficult and also could those who do not have, own houses when things get better.  We need to gradually and consistently increase the number of tenants who become owners.  We are focusing on people who are first time applicants, that is, those who do not have any because some people already have one and want another. These designs do not accommodate those who want mansions and duplex, we know they are there but they are not among the vulnerable people and not in the majority.”

    While eulogising the feats of the likes of former Lagos State governor, Alhaji Lateef Jakande and ex President Shehu Shagari for their giant strides in providing affordable housing for the masses, Fashola said the present administration also needs to learn from their mistakes.

    He identified the challenge of acceptability as one of the banes of the past housing projects, adding: “We need to put in place a housing project that has wide acceptability. What we have done is to come up with 21 designs, moved it down to 12 and now we have come down to six.  In the northern part of the country, we would be building one, two and three bedroom bungalow with courtyards that will respond very well to the sometimes extreme weather condition and respond also to the cultural ways of life of the people.

    “In the Southeast, South-south and the Southwest, we are starting with a block of 15 flats and another block of 24 flats and some bungalows here and there. We are focusing on the most vulnerable and those who are in the majority. The project is not for civil servants alone. We should be clear about this. We are targeting farmers, artisans market women whose income fall within the salary of workers in level nine and level 15. If your salary falls within that level in the public sector, and or you are an artisan who is earning something within that range, you qualify. We are only using that as a benchmark.”

    He added that 24 states had already provided parcels of land for the project and that his staff is already at work in preparation in for the construction work scheduled to commence in the fourth quarter of the year. He admonished the audience who interjected his remarks with thunderous amens, to stop praying and work.

    “We are not measuring the project by the number of houses we can build at a time, but by our ability to repeat and continue what we have started and leave it as a project that will endure without having political colouration.  We should stop praying and work. This is not time to pray but time to work. We can pray after our work to ask God to bless our labour. It is true that we are in a period of recession but that is not a sin. It only means that we slowed down when we ought to work. So, now is the time to work and not to pray.”

  • Meter manufacturers sack 50% of workforce

    No fewer than 600 workers of meter manufacturers have lost their jobs in the past six months. Reason: lack of patronage in the power sector, The Nation has learnt.

    The firms, under the umbrella of the Electricity Meters Manufacturers Association of Nigeria (EMMAN), resorted to sack because of poor revenue, it was learnt.

    The manufacturers said they couldn’t cope with their overhead costs in view of the prevailing industry challenges, including low patronage of their products by the electricity distribution companies (DisCos), weak exchange rate of the naira to dollar and other foreign currencies.

    A source at one of the local meter manufacturers told The Nation that the meter manufacturers  sacked between 50 and 55 per cent of their workers.

    The source said the meter manufacturing firms, including MOMAS Nigeria Limited, sacked about 220 workers, Unistar Nigeria Limited (100); Mojec Nigeria Limited (100), and Emcon Nigeria Limited (100).

    The Nation learnt that due to low patronage, the firms have been laying off their staff.

    EMMAN’s spokesman Ibrahim Muhideen who, confirmed the staff downsizing, said more workers would go except something was done to address the meter manufacturers’ problems, such as poor patronage to enable them boost their income.

    Muhideen said the companies were operating below capacity, a development, which rendered many of their workers redundant. Describing the development as rather unfortunate, Ibrahim urged the Federal Government to intervene by liberalising the meter market to allow EMMAN members sell to individuals and corporate organisations by the vendors approved by the Nigerian Electricity Regulatory Commission (NERC).

    Muhideen said: “The government should liberalise the meter market so that individuals can also buy meters from approved NERC vendors and installers. If the market is liberalised, more electricity consumers will be metered and it will go a long way in addressing problems such as “crazy” and estimated billing system that is currently being battled by consumers.

    He urged the government to allow meter manufacturers sell meters to the consumers because some distribution firms were not willing to give meters to customers.

    The Chief Executive officer, MOMAS Nigeria Limited, Mr. Kola Balogun, also said his firm retrenched over 200 workers, which according to him represents over 50 per cent of the workforce.

    He said the wage bill is high, and that the firm cannot afford to continue to pay salaries, stressing that more people would lose their jobs across board,if the situation does not  improve.

    “Despite the fact that our production lines have been improved to meet international standards, coupled with the high quality meters we produce, the electricity distribution companies don’t patronise us. Only Ibadan Electricity Distribution Company (IBEDC), Abuja Electricity Distribution Company and Port Harcourt Distribution Company (PHDC) buy from us. But that is not enough. Thousands of meters are in the store because there is no patronage,” Balogun added.

    He urged the government to create a five per cent special fund for meter manufacturers to aid their operations and enable them sell their products at competitive price.

  • Industrialist makes case for tile manufacturers

    The tile industry is capable of producing quality tiles both for the Nigerian market and for export, if the Federal Government can address the challenges facing manufacturers, the Chief Executive Officer of Mallinson and Partners Limited, producers of quality tiles, Mr. Mallinson Ukatu, has said.

    He said some of the major challenges impeding the competitiveness of indigenous tile manufacturers include lack of stable electricity supply, high cost of funds, which hovers around 22 per cent; prizing of gas in foreign currency in a market that is 90 per cent naira –controlled; and Nigerians’ penchant for imported products at the detriment of made-in-Nigeria goods.

    Ukatu whose company is also involved in the manufacturing of building materials and plastic products, said steady electricity supply is vital for industrial production and growth. He said reliable electricity supply will reduce the financial burden imposed on tile manufacturers because of the high cost of alternative sources of power to carry out production.

    “If the government supports the tile industry with stable power supply, the heavy reliance on generators, which results in high cost of production will stop, the industrialist told The Nation, adding that it will also rub off positively on manufacturers’ margin.

    While calling for the government’s support in energy supply, he noted that at present, manufacturers are using natural gas to power their in-house generators. He also expressed shock that government charges gas in foreign currency in a market that is 90 per cent naira –controlled.

    Ukatu, therefore, urged the  government to subsidize gas in order to encourage local tile production. He also called on government to “stop charging gas in dollars.”

    While noting that the tile industry is growing, he also said government should encourage made-in-Nigeria goods. “Goods produced in Nigeria are stepping up in terms of qualities,” he pointed out, noting for instance, that in the wire industry, Nigerian wires are of higher quality than the imported ones.

    To buttress his point that made-in-Nigeria goods have come of age in terms of quality, Ukatu said: “You cannot manufacture products of low quality standards when you are aware that Standards Organisation of Nigeria (SON) will inspect the standards and quality of what you are doing every fortnightly.”

    He, however, commended the Bank of Industry (BoI) for giving its best to grow the industries by bringing in machineries to support manufacturers. “If you are unable to get BoI’s assistance, how will you start your factory with the current bank interest rate of 22 per cent?” he asked, pointing out that if interest is not single digit, manufacturers will not make any headway.

    “For first time comers in the industry, it is not easy to penetrate the market at 22 per cent interest rate. I funded my company with my personal money as a pilot plant. On the second expansion I did, I also used my money. It is on the second phase that we got government’s support through BoI. Accessing these loans has been very good,” he said.

    The industrialist noted that partly because of BoI’s support and partly because of the increasing needs of the market and the quest to attain a leadership position in the industry, his company has moved from trading in tiles to manufacturing.

  • ‘What flexible forex policy means to manufacturers, investors’

    The Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN’s) decision to adopt  flexible foreign  exchange (forex) rate  has been long-awaited by local and international investors, analyst at Eczellon Capital Limited, Mustapha Suberu, said yesterday.

    According to him, the policy allows only one single market structure where rates are determined by market forces, adding that it is expected to boost investors’ confidence and get more dollars into the system.

    The policy, which was unveiled yesterday by the CBN Governor, Godwin Emefiele, would not only increase the volume of dollar in the system, but give government the desired confidence to approach the issue of $1 billion Eurobonds in August.

    Explaining what the new policy entails, Suberu said the interbank market will from Monday, become the only market where rates for the naira and dollar would be determined. He said the naira three-month forward rate currently trades at N333 to dollar, and that the rate to be adopted would not be too far from the forward rate.

    Going forward, he said the naira/dollar rate would be determined by the forces of demand and supply, adding that the policy would help government source debt from the international market because investors would be more confident about the state of the local currency against the dollar.

    Suberu said the manufacturing sector would no longer access forex at the official rate, a practice that would likely raise the prices of goods.

    Also, Nigeria is expected to source for more foreign loans  to take advantage of lower interest rates and allow local banks to lend to small businesses.

    The Federal Government said it wants to switch its debt mix so that 40 per cent of loans would come from abroad, compared with 16 per cent that obtains now, and extend its debt maturity profile.

    It plans to borrow as much as $10 billion from debt markets, with about half of that coming from foreign sources, to help fund a budget deficit worsened by the slump in oil prices that has slashed revenues and weakened the currency.

    President, Association of Bureau De  Change Operators of Nigeria (ABCON), Alhaji Aminu  Gwadabe,  said the policy  is skewed in favour of only a few operators in the forex market. “To me, instead of deepening the market, the policy will lead to further shrinking in the volume of dollar available in the market,” he said.

  • Manufacturers seek 3%  interest rate reduction

    Manufacturers seek 3% interest rate reduction

    The Manufacturers Association of Nigeria (MAN) has canvassed a reduction in interest rate to between three and five per cent. The prevailing rate does not support the government’s economic diversification drive, it said.

    MAN President Dr. Frank Udemba Jacobs, who spoke during the week on the sideline of the association’s Council in Lagos, said: “One of the challenges we have is funding.We are concerned with the high interest rate that banks charge manufacturers. Government is serious about diversification but they cannot diversify at this current rate. We hope the government will reduce the rate to three to five percent.”

    He condemned multiple taxation, insisting that it is wrong for companies moving goods from one place to another to pay the same tax in every local government. He said there should be a one-stop-shop where taxes are paid.

    Jacobs recalled his recent discussion with Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) Governor Godwin Emefiele, where he (Emefiele) made good his promise to make further concessions for manufacturers in foreign exchange (forex) allocation.

    “Apart from the 41 items that are not valid for forex, all the 10 sectors said that they have been getting forex allocations now. I want to report to you that CBN has been allocating foreign exchange to some of our members now,” he stated.

    Jacobs urged the government to hurriedly assent to the budget to ensure its full and timely implementation.

    “We are happy that a huge sum was allocated to infrastructure in the budget, which is a major bane of industrialisation. Energy is still a major problem for manufacturers and railways that should be conveying goods at  relatively cheap costs are still not there. It is our hope that when its full implementation starts, some of these challenges will be addressed,” he said.

    On the lingering fuel crisis, Jacobs stated that it has had a huge impact on the economy, noting that when factories cannot get fuel, they will not produce and it will  create problems.

    Jacobs also maintained that the widely held belief that locally-made goods are inferior to imported ones is  wrong, pointing out that for a manufacturer to be a MAN member, the products of such a firm must meet acceptable standards.

    He further said MAN has signed a Memorandum of Understanding (MoU) with the Standards Organisation of Nigeria (SON) to ensure quality standards.

    “We have MoU with SON, such that any MAN member must ensure that any product they make in Nigeria meet standards. Similarly, those in food and drugs have MoU with National Agenda for Food, Drug Administration and Control (NAFDAC), which has quality parameters they have to meet. So no manufacturer who is a member of MAN can produce substandard products,’’ he clarified.

    The MAN chief expressed optimism that with the media hype that is going on today about awakening the consciousness of people on the need to patronise made-in-Nigeria goods, sooner or later the attitude of Nigerians will change.

    He said before now, people enjoyed foreign goods, but the point must be made that whenever anybody patronises any imported good in favour of the locally manufactured one, the nation exports employment and imports unemployment.

    The MAN boss lamented the closure of many companies, attributing it to lack of power supply.

    “If you don’t have enough power and diesel to power your generator, or your generator gets old and you cannot replace it, chances are that you will close down the factory,” he said.

    He also identified multiple taxation, which, according to him, could force a business owner that cannot cope to close the factory. “Even the interest rate of 23 to 25 per cent can make a manufacturer close down, he added.

  • Meters manufacturers accuse DisCos of neglect

    The Electricity Meters Manufacturing Association of Nigeria (EMMAN) has said the reason the electricity distribution companies (DISCos) do not patronise them is that they make more money through estimated billings.

    Other reasons, the body claimed, include plans by the energy firms to import meters from China and other developed countries to attract foreign investors.

    Its Executive Secretary, Mr Muhdeen Ibrahim, said the DisCos were not ready to source meters locally for their customers.

    He urged the DisCos to patronise local manufacturers, adding that this would enable them to meet their customers’ demands.

    According to him, when this happens, the power firms would not be able to charge their customers estimated bills, arguing that  this would  affect their earnings.

    According to him, local meter manufacturers have the capacity to produce enough meters in the country, insisting that the DisCos know this but refused to patronise them because they want to continue making money through estimated billings.

    He said: ‘’It is not that the local meter manufacturers do not have the capacity to produce enough meters in Nigeria. The capacity is there, but the problem is that DisCos want to make money through estimated billings. Also, they want to continue to patronise meter producers abraod, where they falsely hope to get better meters.

    ‘’Meters produced by indigenous companies are far better than the ones produced abroad. The craze for anything western is making DisCos to jettison local meter producers for their foreign counterparts.

    He said the allegation by the DisCos that the meters produced in Nigeria are not compatible with their technology was untrue.

  • CBN’s forex policy raises production capacity for manufacturers

    Local manufacturers are pleased with the Central Bank of Nigeria’s (CBN’s) forex policy, saying it has raised  production capacity and enhanced their operations.

    Two leading local manufacturers in the packaging industry, acknowledged that the impact of the CBN policy on forex  has more than doubled their productive capacities, helping them to meet increased demand for their products.

    Deputy Managing Director, Tempo Paper Pulp & Packaging Limited, Nassos Sidirofagis, said since the policy’s implementation started, his firm has  increased its production capacity from 50 per cent to 70 per cent.

    He said this raised their export volume and foreign exchange earnings for their firms and the economy.

    He said the policy has helped manufacturers to realise the urgent need to expand because of increasing demand for their products.

    Sidirofagis said the company planned to start an expansion project due to expected increase in demand within this year and next.  “We have since developed capacity to also attract foreign investors, who we believe are exploring investment opportunities in our organisation. Therefore, on all sides this is a win-win situation for Nigeria and local manufacturers”, he said.

    On mitigating challenges facing local manufacturer’s capability to expand, he noted that government should focus more on manufacturers so that the local economy will not experience what Greece experience.

    For him, the CBN should continue to implement the policy for the next two or more years, to facilitate full development of local capacity to attract investors.

    Also speaking, Group Operation Manager of SREN Chemicals Limited, Oluwasesan Taiwo-Tijani, said his firm has benefitted from the CBN foreign exchange policy. He explained that the policy has forced several companies who are import-driven to patronise SREN Chemicals and hence, raised their transaction volume and profitability.

    “This impacted on our sales with our productive capacity increased by 30 per cent,” he said.  Taiwo-Tijani urged the Federal Government to retain the policy so as to sustain local content development and to turn Nigeria into an export dependent country.

    He urged the CBN and Federal Government to mitigate challenges facing local manufacturer’s capability to expand so as to enhance the economic development f the country.

  • Manufacturers, Bureaux  De Change disagree as CBN rejigs forex policy

    Manufacturers, Bureaux De Change disagree as CBN rejigs forex policy

    The fall in Nigeria’s monthly foreign exchange (forex) earnings from $3.2 billion to $1 billion in the last six months as oil prices tumble triggered yesterday’s suspension of weekly dollar sales to Bureaux De Change (BDCs) by the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN’s). The stoppage will enable the apex bank to meet forex demand by domestic importers, preserve the reserves and naira. But, the BDCs have kicked against the policy shift, saying it will spell doom for the local currency and the economy, writes COLLINS NWEZE.

    Aminu Gwadabe, Chief Executive Officer, SABIL Bureau De Change Limited, is always confident when discussing his business. But, the boisterous foreign exchange dealer lost his voice yesterday. He was contacted immediately the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) hammer fell on Bureaux De Change (BDCs) operators over what the apex bank called abuse of privilege and alleged sharp practices.

    CBN Governor Godwin Emefiele announced a new foreign exchange (forex) policy that includes the stoppage of weekly dollar sales to BDCs).

    “The bank (CBN) would henceforth discontinue its sales of foreign exchange to BDCs. Operators in this segment of the market would now need to source their foreign exchange from autonomous source. They must however note that the CBN would deploy more resources to monitoring these sources to ensure that no operator is in violation of our anti-money laundering laws,” Emefiele said yesterday at news conference on the review of the contentious forex policy at CBN’s Abuja head office.

    “There is fire on the mountain. The CBN has done its worst. We’re all running, chasing an elusive dollar. We have travelled that road before and knew it will only worsen the bad situation we are facing today,” Gwadabe, who doubles as the President, Association of Bureaux De Change Operators of Nigeria (ABCON) told The Nation.

    In the sweeping review of the forex policy, Emefiele said. “The CBN would henceforth discontinue its sales of forex to BDCs. Operators in this segment of the market would now need to source their forex from autonomous source,” Emefiele disclosed yesterday at the CBN headquarters, in Abuja.

    According to Emefiele, the CBN will monitor the forex sources to guard the violation of anti-money laundering laws by operators.

    The apex bank took some measures on forex following a drop in oil prices from a peak of $114 barrel in July 2014 to as low as $33/barrel this month. The reserves have also suffered great pressure from speculative attacks, round-tripping and front loading activities by actors in the forex market.

    Before the hammer fell, the CBN was selling $60,000 to each BDC weekly, translating to $167 million per weekly and about $8.6 billion yearly. The amount was reduced to $10,000 per BDC, translating into $28.4 million depletion of the foreign reserve per week and $1.476 billion per annum.

    “This is a huge hemorrhage on our scarce foreign exchange reserves and cannot continue especially because we are also concerned that BDCs have become a conduit for illicit trade and financial flows,” said Emefiele, who added that the policy shift will enable it continue to fund matured letters of credit from commercial banks, importation of petroleum products, importation of critical raw materials, plants and equipment as well as payments for school fees and related expenses.

    He flayed the BDCs of abandoning the original objective of their establishment, which was to serve retail end-users, who need $5,000 or less. The operators, he noted, have become wholesale dealers in forex to the tune of millions of dollars per transaction, only to come up with fake documentations like passport numbers, Bank Verification Numbers (BVN), boarding passes and flight tickets to render weekly returns to the CBN.

    Pointing out that it was painful taking such sweeping measures, Emefiele said such steps became necessary to sustain its mandates as set out in the CBN Act of 2007.

     

    BDCs operators kick

     

    But, Gwadabe refuted the Emefiele’s claims. He said the regulator will pay heavily for its actions.

    Gwadabe said: “The CBN cannot justify its actions because we control less than five per cent of the forex market value. Whatever imperfection is in the market, it is a wrong approach for the CBN to say it will no longer fund BDCs.”

    Continuing, he said the BDC is a market driven by demand and supply, adding that by reducing the dollar supply to the market, the naira will fall as high as N400 to the dollar within the next six months, unless the policy is reversed.

    According to the ABCON chief, the CBN has always blamed the BDCs whenever there is disequilibrium in the market. He described as worrisome that the CBN decision came few days after the International Monetary Fund (IMF) asked the CBN to raise the dollar liquidity in the market.

    “It is a first step towards further devaluation of the naira but we will fight back. We provided N175 billion cautionary deposit to the CBN at three per cent interest rate. We will demand for the money even though we lost over $100,000 in exchange rate volatility as a result of depositing that money,” he said.

    Also speaking, Managing Director, E.M Consolidated Investment Limited, Emeka Moses, said the CBN will learn the bitter truth about the roles of BDCs in the economy. He lamented that under Emefiele, the regulator has been treating BDC operators as if they add no value to the economy.

    He said: “Let’s wait and see how the market will allocate forex without BDCs. Let’s see if banks that have severally been blamed for round-tripping will do it more effectively than BDCs. All the allegations against the BDCs are baseless because even if they exist, the CBN should learn to punish offenders.”

    Moses warned that the policy could lead to liquidation of majority of the BDC operators, job loss and more volatility in the forex market.

    The BDC operator said the forex market was in disarray before the CBN instituted BDCs in 2005.

    “I am sure the policy shift will be temporary and they will come back to their senses unless there is a better strategy to sell to small forex users,” he said.

    He predicted that the naira will exchange for N300 against the dollar in the first week of the policy implementation, and that the local currency will continue to depreciate if no positive action is taken.

    But, Kennedy Abiodun, another forex dealer said the policy will help reverse the continued slide in foreign reserves.

    He explained that country’s average import bill for the first nine months of 2015 was N917.6 billion per month, even though oil prices are now less than $35 per barrel.

    His words: “The net effect of these combined forces unfortunately is the depletion of our foreign exchange reserves. As of June 2014, the stock of Foreign Exchange Reserves stood at about $37.3 billion but has declined to around $28.0 billion as of today.”

    Abiodun said the CBN acted to protect the reserves in the interest of critical segments of the economy.

     

    Soothing relief for

    manufacturers

     

    Also, the Manufacturers Association of Nigeria (MAN) hailed the CBN’s action, saying the action will enable the apex bank to manage the free fall of the naira.

    MAN’s President Frank Jacobs said that the continued funding of the BDCs was posing danger to the local currency. He urged BDCs to provide alternative funding window to the economy by sourcing their forex independently from other sources and injecting same into the market.

    Jacobs said: “The association appreciates the challenges the country is passing through at the moment and will do everything possible to support the Federal Government to overcome the situation.”

    Only last week, Senate President Bukola Saraki urged the (CBN) to relax its strict foreign exchange policy. He said the policy was doing more harm than good.

    At a meeting with the Managing Director of the International Monetary Fund (IMF), Ms. Christine Lagarde, Senator Saraki said businesses, especially the small scale were suffering unnecessarily.

    He said: “The IMF should support our CBN to bring in low interest loans to SMEs. We need to encourage entrepreneurs and make most of our new graduates job creators rather than job seekers. This is an area where we need the financial support and technical assistance of the IMF.

    “As legislators, we play an important role in making our people understand IMF’s advice, policy trade-offs, consultations and other engagements, so that ownership, transparency and accountability are brought to bear on economic policy choices.

    “The Nigerian legislature strongly believes that having a collaborative working relationship with the Executive Branch of government brings development closer to the people.”

    The Senate President had earlier pushed for a similar measure at a private meeting with CBN Governor Godwin Emefiele. He urged the apex bank to come up with a more flexible foreign exchange (forex) regime and reduce the restrictions on the market, which does not allow businessmen to bring in foreign exchange or utilise what they have in their accounts.

    Saraki reportedly urged the governor to consider the effects of the present forex regime on small businesses which are dying following evaporating crude oil revenue.

    He explained that his office had been inundated with complaints from small business owners, complaining that their businesses are being threatened by the huge bottlenecks now involved in doing business.

    Managing Director, Afrinvest West Africa Plc, Ike Chioke, said BDCs and parallel market spread compared to the official market rates continued to widen considerably in the last few months. “Compared to the N197 to dollar peg of the local currency, rates at the BDC segment of the market were as high as N265 to the dollar. Irrespective of the dollar sales to BDCs last Wednesday, the rate depreciated by N1 to close at N266 to the dollar and further depreciated N14 to N280 to dollar the next day as huge dollar demands remain unmet,” he said in an e-mailed statement.

    Chioke said in the first four trading days of the year, external reserves had declined 0.5 per cent year-to-date to $28.9 billion as inflows continue at a lower rate relative to outflows given lower oil prices of $32 per barrel (Brent).

    The IMF boss, Ms. Chrisitine Lagarde who completed a four-day official visit to Nigeria last week shared her thoughts on possible ways to deal with the current challenges facing the economy.

    She stressed that her visit was only to offer advice and reaffirm the support of IMF to the President Muhammadu Buhari led government.

    Noting the fact that the resilience demonstrated by Nigerians as seen in the outcome of the 2015 general election buttresses the country’s ability to overcome the challenges ahead, she called on managers of the economy to spend wisely in the face of declining crude oil earnings.

    The IMF chief urged the government to build resilience by making careful decision on borrowing. Analysts insist that with a budget proposal to invest borrowing solely into capital spending, most especially in power, infrastructure, housing and transportation, we believe the Presidency is on the right track. Her visit was also meant to give policy makers an opportunity to review their stance on critical issues in the economy within the context of global perception as the country makes hard choices in 2016.

     

    How far will oil prices fall?

     

    Managing Director, Financial Derivatives Company Limited, Bismark Rewane said the idea of sub-$30 per barrel (pb) oil was unthinkable.

    “In fact, in some circles, it’s a question of when, not if. The Organisation of Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC) in its last meeting – which ended in utter disarray – dashed any hopes of a supply cut and even raised the threshold to 31.5 million barrels per day (mbpd),” he said.

    Rewane said the immediate impact was more turmoil in the market as Brent crude fell to just below $37pb – lowest level since December 2008 – amid a wider commodities sell-off.

    OPEC is responsible for 40 per cent of world oil supplies. The lack of any real decision betrays the deep divide within the cartel and it could mean even more pain for some members in the new year. Some oil producers have the capacity to increase production while some others do not.

     

     

     

     

    He explained that those in the latter category are suffering the most and this has led to strained relations not just within OPEC but between the cartel and non-OPEC producers as well.

    “Most traders and analysts are convinced that prices still have further to fall. So where lays the bottom? How much lower can the battle for market share drive oil prices? How long can OPEC hold out? The only sure thing is that more losers than winners will emerge as oil prices test seven-year lows,” he said.

    He said despite the challenges, the currency pressures are likely to intensify due to the sharp fall in oil prices. The CBN will continue to intervene in the markets, running the risk of external reserves depletion.

     

    Oil outlook

    The outlook on oil prices remains bearish as crude prices are unlikely to rebound with slowing demand from emerging economies such as China, increased production from non-OPEC producers, and a price war among OPEC members. This has significant implications for Nigeria’s budgetary framework, which is premised on a benchmark oil price of $38pb. Funding options for the government are limited revenue; if oil prices persist in the current downward path, there may be further revisions to the benchmark price.

    The impact on the external balance will be significant.  The current account balance is estimated to move into a deficit position of -$10.8bn, (-2.2 per cent of the Gross Domestic Product (GDP) in 2015. The 2016 budget assumes a fiscal deficit of N2.2 trillion, a figure that may widen further due to revenue shortfalls.

     

     

     

  • No respite in sight for manufacturers

    The manufacturing sector’s outlook for 2016 remains gloomy. The prevailing macro-economic indicators have not improved, pointing to a sector headed for more turbulence.

    Although, the Federal Government is using a crude oil price benchmark of N38 for its 2016 Budget proposal, the oil price has continued to plummet, falling below $37 per barrel, even as international Brent crashed to below $40 for the first time since early 2009.Experts have predicted that prices may fall further.

    The Managing Director, Nesbet Consulting, a Lagos-based firm of finance and management consultants, Dr. Alaba Olusemore, has advised Nigerians to brace for the worst while expecting the best.

    “Nigerians,” he said, “should not expect any miracle as far as economic recovery is concerned until probably, the second quarter of the year.”

    According to him, the on-going fight against Boko Haram insurgents and the renewed anti-corruption battle seem to have diverted the attention of the Buhari-led administration from manufacturing and agric sectors – two critical sectors capable of putting the economy back on track.

    Olusemore, a fellow of the Chartered Institute of Bankers of Nigeria (CIBN), told The Nation that Nigerians, realistically, may not heave sigh of relief until around the second quarter of the year when ministers would have settled down for business.

    The economist analyst, however, urged the President Buhari-led administration to aggressively pursue policies that will end the economy’s over-dependence on oil revenues, before the economy begins to take shape in the second quarter.

    “The monolithic nature of the economy is unsustainable. We must immediately begin to initiate and sustain policies directed at economic diversification,” he said, pointing out that there has been a strategic refocusing on manufacturing and agriculture, which have the potential to create employment opportunities.

    He also identified (SMEs as another area with lots of promises of turning around the fortunes of the economy.

    “The government must encourage SMEs to succeed. SME operators should be supported; they must have access to funds and services of consultants and mentors. Consultants should assist them develop bankable business plans and proposals,” he said.

    But, would the government heed such counsels and unleash the potentials in the manufacturing sector? Only time would tell.