Tag: MARKET

  • Fed Govt moves to flood market with kerosene

    The Independent Petroleum Marketers Association of Nigeria (IPMAN) yesterday said the Federal Government has placed an order for the importation of the Dual Purpose Kerosene (DPK) or kerosene.

    Its chairman, Board of Trustees (BoT), Alhaji Sharif Abubakar Usman who spoke in Abuja during the inauguration of the Eastern Zonal Executive, said the cooking fuel will be available to every nooks and crannies of the country.

    Meanwhile, Okronkwo has assured that the price of petrol will crash soon as the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) increased access of importers to foreign exchange (forex).

    He said: “Very soon, the products DPK and AGO (automotive gas oil) will be in circulation under the leadership of Elder Chinedu Okoronkwo . Those that are not aware they are aware now. Sooner or later but I cannot say today or tomorrow but very soon AGO will arrive. DPK will arrive this country under the leadership of Okoronkwo.

  • NSE reduces bonds’ fees to boost debt market

    NSE reduces bonds’ fees to boost debt market

    The Nigerian Stock Exchange (NSE) yesterday announced a revision of the listing and trading fees for securities listed and traded on its fixed income market. The revised fee structure will become effective on August 17, 2016.

    The new fee structure will run through a six-month pilot phase after which it will be evaluated to determine if it has met its objectives.

    Under the revised fee structure, NSE will no longer charge trading fees on fixed income traded on its platform. Also, the initial flat listing application fee of 0.15 per cent for all types of bonds has been replaced with variable listing application fees.

    With this, corporate bonds exclusively listed on the NSE, with existing equity listing, will attract 0.01 per cent listing application fee. Dual-listed corporate bonds with existing equity listing and other corporate bonds will attract 0.0375 per cent listing application fee while the listing application fees for State and Supranational Bonds has been reduced to 0.05 per cent.

    The Exchange also replaced the fixed brokerage commission of 0.0005 per cent with a negotiable rate capped at 1.0 per cent. This will enable investors to negotiate trading commission with brokerage firms.

    Executive Director, Capital Markets, Nigerian Stock Exchange (NSE), Mr. Haruna Jalo-Waziri, said the reduction in fee demonstrated Exchange’s commitment to boost market efficiency.

    “The reduction in listing application fees gives issuers opportunity to raise their profile and increase visibility through listing on a globally recognised Exchange with the highest regulatory standards. The aim is to reduce issuers cost of accessing long term capital and to provide investors with diverse investment products at competitive trading fees,” Jalo-Waziri said.

    He urged issuers to raise cheap long term capital through bond issuance for business expansion, project finance and loan refinancing, noting that Nigeria has huge investment opportunities.

    “NSE remains committed to building an enduring marketplace and will continue to pursue initiatives that add value to issuers and investors,” Jalo-Waziri said.

     

  • Clue vitamin beverage hits Nigerian market

    Denna Rossi Limited, a Fast Moving Consumer Goods (FMCG) company in Nigeria, has introduced Clue Vitamin Beverage to the Nigeria market.

    In a statement signed by its Head, Marketing/Corporate Services, Mr. Ifeanyi Nihe, the company said Clue Vitamin Beverage provides a healthy, hydrating, and rejuvenating miracle elixir that reduces the risk of chronic disease like diabetes, gives more energy and provides a healthier immune system.

    He said the product is an alternative to soft drink and other fruit juices. “It’s refreshing and healthy for an active lifestyle,” Nihe pointed out.

    According to him, the product has been designed to be sipped neat, mixed or in cocktails and offers innovative and unique gourmet and luxury experiences with extensive nutrient enrichment.

    Some of its nutritional attributes include immune support and antioxidant properties. In addition, nutrients were often juxtaposed with messages related to performance and emotional well-being, benefits that go beyond conventional nutritional science.

    It also has extensive micronutrient additions at levels often well in excess of nutrient requirements and very good for daily vitamin needs. Clue Vitamin Beverage, Nihe said, is made from highly purified water, natural flavor, citric acid, ascorbic acid, and vitamins A, C, E, B6 and B12.

    The company’s Chief Executive/Managing Director, Dr. Ifeanyi Nwafor, also revealed that Clue Vitamin Beverage provides the benefits of water along with enjoyable flavors and added nutrients, which can replenish the body.

  • New market for Ondo community, 10 years after

    New market for Ondo community, 10 years after

    Commercial activities will soon begin to boom in Ifara community in Akoko South East Local Government Area of Ondo State after the construction of a new market 10 years after their market collapsed and killed a 12-year-old boy. The construction of the market was at the instance of the member representing the area, Mr Babatunde Kolawole. The new market comprises 14 open stores.

    The people, who are mainly farmers and traders, had been transacting their businesses under the sun and in the rain for the past 10 years when the only market in the town and which was constructed by the community, collapsed and killed

    Since then, they had hoped that successive administrations at the local and state levels would help in reconstructing the collapsed market which had been a death trap. Their hopes were dashed.

    Any wonder the people were ecstatic during the inauguration of the new market, during which 78 aged people from the three wards in Ile-labo zone which comprises ward 3 Ifira, ward 6 Ipesi and ward 11 Sosan Akoko were empowered.

    Kolawole said market women are the backbone of any family and should not be subjected to hardship.

    He reiterated his commitment to provide environment conducive to buying and selling for market men and women.

    The lawmaker, who frowned at the attitude of the chairman of Akoko South East, Mr. Sola Agunloye for playing politics with developmental projects meant to enhance people’s well-being, alleged that he (the chairman) attempted to stop the market project.

    He said: “I don’t know why a local council chairman should be working against the progress of a community under his domain. He should be appreciative that someone is coming to his rescue since he has failed in his primary assignment.

    “The Chairman should stop playing politics with progress of the community. They are afraid of the November 26, governorship election and that is why he has been sent to stop the market project because when the campaign starts, they may not have anything to campaign with.

    “We intended to also reconstruct the dilapidated market because we have budgeted N5 million for that but they preferred to send security operatives to stop the job; claiming they have this in their budget. We have given them sometime to start the reconstruction or we return to the site”.

    On the N5, 000 monthly stipends for the aged people, Kolawole said: “I do promise them that. As long as I am at the National Assembly, they will not go hungry again.

    “This is going to be a continuous empowerment programme because what we did was to take care of three wards and other wards will soon benefit from the programme.”

    The Chairman of the All Progressives Congress (APC) in the council, Mr. Oluwasannu Ogunbi praised the lawmaker for coming to the rescue of the people, whom he said had been subjected to hardship due to non-availability of decent market.

    He, however, urged the lawmaker not to be distracted by the activities of his opponents, saying the community is behind him and appreciates his developmental projects.

    Meanwhile, a chieftain of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP), Mr. Joshua Orepo joined the APC.

    Dignitaries that attended the event were the state Chairman, Isaack Kekemeke, Secretary, Raman Rotimi, Financial Secretary, Moshood Ishola, Administrative Secretary and Smart Omodunbi, among others

  • Brexit: U.K. property market may crash

    Brexit: U.K. property market may crash

    For Nigerians and other nationals, owning a property in the United Kingdom (U.K.) is a viable investment because of its huge returns. But less than a month after the country signed up to exit the European Union (EU), otherwise known as ‘BREXIT’, investing in U.K. properties may no longer be that attractive as experts have predicted a 30 per cent drop in value, writes MUYIWA LUCAS.

    London property prices could fall by more than 30 per cent in the wake of Britain’s vote to leave the EU and may halve in the most expensive parts of the city, according to analysts at the French bank, Société Générale.

    Brexit may be the trigger to end London’s seven-year house-price boom as companies move employees out of the U.K., forcing sales of high-end properties, the company’s real estate analyst Marc Mozzi said in a note to clients.

    Commercial property has been at the centre of post-Brexit fears as investors have tried to get their money out of property funds, but residential real estate could be hit harder, Société Générale said.

    “While in recent stress tests the major UK banks were assessed with declines of about 30 per cent in commercial real estate prices, we fear that London residential could experience an even more severe downturn,” it said.

    Sean Farrell of UK’s The Guardian writes that prices are already falling on properties previously valued at £1m or more, and may have further to go, particularly in the priciest parts of the city, such as Hammersmith and Fulham as well as Kensington and Westminster, as well as other high priced boroughs where London’s highly paid investment bankers and hedge fund managers congregate.

    Société Générale added: “We see a classic housing bubble in London and Brexit as the trigger for the correction.  Given the current ratio of prices to incomes in London, a price correction of even 40-50 per cent in the most expensive London boroughs does not seem impossible.” This prediction is premised on the fact that London property prices have more than doubled since they began to recover from the financial crisis in 2009. Last month, the average London house price was £472,000 – 12 times average London earnings, compared with a long-term average of six times, Société Générale said.

    Brexit could push those stretched conditions to breaking point by forcing about 3,000 senior employees of financial firms to sell their London houses to relocate to Europe, Mozzi said. That would be more than a year of transactions in the market for homes costing £2million or more, leading to big potential declines in prices.

    Many non-UK banks and other financial companies base their European operations in Britain because EU membership allows them full access to the single market. That “passporting” arrangement may end when the U.K. leaves the EU, forcing companies to relocate businesses to Europe.

    Mozzi cited a report by a reputable accounting firm, Pricewaterhouse and Coopers (PwC), before the referendum that said Brexit could result in between 70,000 and 100,000  people employed in the financial sector. The report, published in April, compared likely post-Brexit numbers in 2020 with a forecast for jobs if the UK stayed in the EU.

    Another firm of estate agents, Savills, presented a less gloomy picture though. It said London sellers were already adjusting prices, while interest rates are expected to stay low and the pound’s fall could attract overseas investors to buy property.

    “The vote in favour of Brexit suggests that political and economic uncertainty is likely to remain a feature of the market for some time to come. Of course it is not all negative news. We expect the newly formed UK government to be highly motivated to protect London’s position as a major global financial centre in any negotiations with the EU,” Savills said.

    Mozzi said the pound’s fall was unlikely to have a lasting positive effect on investors, who will hold off if they fear further falls in the value of sterling will reduce the value of purchases.

     

    What’s next for the housing market?

    According to Susan Emmett of The Spectator, UKm since buying a house is a major decision, few people will want to commit to such a life changing purchase in times of uncertainty. Therefore, she noted, it is no surprise that the confusion, fear and downright shock that followed the EU referendum vote to leave has had an effect on sentiment in the housing market.

    Figures from the latest survey from the Royal Institution of Chartered Surveyors have confirmed what is been all already suspected – that Brexit uncertainty has had an impact on market activity. From the survey, new buyer enquiries declined significantly across the UK in June to its lowest reading since the mid-2008. The survey also recorded further decline in sales and many expect this to continue. Last month also saw a reduction in house price growth. While values are still rising at a national level, they are doing so at a more moderate pace.

    However, the extent to which this is a consumer reaction, than to political upheaval or a sign of things to come in the housing market is still unclear. Appetite for clarity of the direction of the housing market is only matched by the dearth of data that would allow stakeholders to properly assess the situation. Emmett said it will be autumn before all the numbers are in and even then, there will be great potential to misread the runes.

     

    Tough decision

    Emmett observed that for every homeowner worried about the potential erosion in the value of their asset, there is also a prospective first-time buyer rubbing their hands and hoping for the kind of price drop that would really help them get on the ladder. But she explained that none of this is any help for someone in the middle of buying a home for the first-time or trading up. Should you just get on with it or wait? And if you do wait, how long for and will it be worth it?

    Over the coming weeks and months, stakeholders in the housing sector expect buyer caution to continue and consumer sentiment to fluctuate as negotiations to leave the EU proceed. This will have an impact in the number of sales, with fewer deals done. As a result, transaction numbers are likely to fall from the annual high of 1.3 million recently recorded. The extent of that decline will depend on other factors- how mortgage lenders react, the strength of the economy and how that affects consumer spending power.

     

    Shape of things to come

    But at this point, analysts say it’s business as usual as far as mortgages go. The base rate is at 0.5 per cent this month but the cost of borrowing is likely to stay lower for longer. The Bank of England is at great pains to ensure the lending cogs continue to turn. It has already eased capital requirements for banks, potentially freeing up £150 billion of capital. Lenders’ choice of customers, however, will be the thing to watch. Should banks perceive a risk, they will be less likely to lend to borrowers with small deposits who require loans at large multiples of their income. That might raise the stakes for first-time buyers and particularly impact on London where affordability is already quite stretched.

    Further down the line, economic factors will determine the health of the property market. Household finances could come under pressure from a spike in inflation triggered by a weak pound. The prospect of slower economic growth is likely to constrain income growth, reducing spending power further still. All this is likely to affect house price growth. Already, the pace of activities in the sector has slackened and this could continue.

    Emmett submits that at this stage however, there may not be many forced property sellers. In fact, one of the key features of the market at the moment is a lack of property for sale. She however didn’t rule out price falls in some markets where affordability is really stretched, leading to house prices being underpinned by low interest rates and low supply.

  • Dogara’s quest to deepen the capital market

    Rt. Hon. Yakubu Dogara, Speaker of the House of Representatives, made history on Friday, July 8, when he became the first ever presiding officer of the National Assembly to visit the Nigerian Stock Exchange (NSE) and to sound the closing gong to signal the end of the trading on its floor.

    But while his visit was a new development, it is well known that since his emergence as the Speaker last year, Dogara has been very active in championing calls for the revival and deepening of Nigeria’s capital market.

    The NSE is not in its best of times. The market is yet to recover from the global financial meltdown of 2008 which resulted in over N10 trillion being lost by hapless Nigerian investors. Sadly, efforts to investigate and bring all those responsible for the crash to book for their actions or inactions have been frustrated by powerful forces, leading many Nigerians, especially the middle class, to stay away from the NSE after losing their savings and pensions to insider abuses and other infractions by some operators.

    A 2010report by the National Bureau for Statistics puts over 100 million Nigerians below the poverty line. With the dwindling revenue from oil resulting in non-payment of salaries by 27 out of 36 states, and almost 500 local government councils, more Nigerians are being daily plunged into poverty.

    This calls for desperate and urgent measures by political institutions to diversify the economy, create wealth, and reduce income inequality. There is therefore the urgent need to deepen the capital market and make it attractive to the ordinary Nigerian to make living.

    Not new to the happenings in the stock market, having served in the committee of the House that investigated the events that led to the crash of the market, Dogara has continuously advocated for measures that will deepen the market and return investors’ confidence. It is his conviction that democracy, the best system of government ever to be invented by mankind, can only function effectively and deliver on its promises of life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness when wealth is created and deliberately allowed to trickle down to the ordinary people. He believes strongly that this can be achieved through the capital market.

    For him, a situation where a large chunk of the nation’s resources or capital is heavily concentrated in the hands of few chief executive officers, CEOs,  would further widen the inequality gap, eliminate the middle class and plunge more people into abject poverty, thereby posing serious threat to the sustenance and survival of democracy. He has made it known in different fora that the skewed distribution of wealth is even more worrisome because the flow of resources from Nigerian citizens to multinational companies operating in the country that makes them rich but unfortunately, these same companies, rather than invest in the NSE and grow the economy of Nigeria, would rather repatriate their profits 100 percent to their own countries without investing a dime back to the system.

    On many occasions, the speaker has made his position on this sad trend clear, sounding it out to all that care to listen that major extra-ordinary measures will have to be taken by the parliament and indeed all political institutions in the country to compel these large multinational companies with interests in oil and gas and telecommunications to get listed on the NSE.

    His argument is simple: foreign telecommunication companies who have been operating in the country since 2001 have not only been declaring huge profits, but are also listed in their countries’ stock exchanges yet have continued to rebuff calls for them to list in the NSE, even though they make most of their profits here.

    Dogara has noted that ironically, it  is only from the patronage they get from Nigerians that they make this huge profit, which explains why even though Nigeria is the largest economy in Africa, its capital market ranks third – a very big anomaly.

    No wonder when he sounded the closing gong of the Nigerian bourse on July 8, he said that the parliament would strengthen capital market laws to empower regulators to sanction erring operators. The Speaker told the market operators that his visit underpins the fact that the House pays serious attention to the Nigerian capital market and that for the capital market to take its rightful place, drastic measures must be adopted. He said that having rebuffed calls for them to list on the stock market, it was now time to get the multinational companies to comply by adopting the carrot and stick approach.

    Dogara also charged the capital market regulators on the need to be on top of their responsibilities in order to boost investors’ confidence in the market. To make them more efficient, he suggested that the regulators be empowered to sanction operators that arbitrarily abuse the market so as to regain investors’ confidence. He said it was important to regain investors’ confidence and give them the needed assurance that anyone who perpetuates infractions in the market would be dealt with. According to him, this will also serve as deterrent to others who may want to scam investors in the future.

    Said he: “We need to deepen the market, we need to create and sustain confidence in the market and for confidence to come back, we need to do more. When we start sanctioning, confidence will come back to the market.”

    The speaker received a standing ovation when he told operators on the floor of the NSE that the House would soon pass laws that would compel multinationals, oil and gas companies, telecommunication firms and privatised companies to list on NSE to deepen the market as part of efforts to engender economic prosperity.

    One thing that emerged from the speaker’s visit is that unknown to many, most of the public enterprises that were privatised were actually mandated to list certain percentage of their shares on the NSE as part of the sales and purchase agreement. Regrettably, none of the companies is listed, in contravention of the sales and purchase agreement they signed with the Bureau for Public Enterprises (BPE).

    Dogara however, assured that the House, through its committee on Privatisation and Commercialisation will investigate these cases of abuse with a view to getting them to stick to the terms of agreement they had with BPE.

    Describing Dogara’s visit as historic, NSE’s council president, Aigboje Aig-Imoukhuede, noted that the House under his leadership had shown concern about the economy and the capital market. While assuring the speaker that market operators will not relent and would do everything to ensure that the market becomes the best in the continent, he said it was very gratifying that Dogara is leading moves to create a conducive environment for the market.

    Of course, the speaker needs the support of all men and women of goodwill to bring his dream of deepening the capital market to fruition. Here, his colleagues and senators alike must, as a matter of necessity and urgency, consider and treat proposed legislations related to this purpose with the seriousness and urgency they deserve and for the President to assent to the bills when they are eventually passed into law.

     

    • Hassan is Special Adviser on Media & Public Affairs to Speaker Dogara.
  • BDCs’ return to forex market

    •We hope the appropriate lessons have been learnt by both CBN and the operators?

    Six months after locking them out of the official window, reprieve may finally be coming the way of Bureau de Change (BDC) operators. At the end of the interactive session between BDC operators and the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN)on the new foreign exchange regime last week, President, Association of Bureau De Change Operators of Nigeria (ABCON), Aminu Gwadabe, told newsmen that the apex bank has finally accepted to create special window for the BDC operators. The position was confirmed by no less than the CBN governor’s representative at the parley, Anthony Ikem, when he also told newsmen that the apex bank was working out modalities on how to accommodate the BDCs under the new arrangement.

    To the BDC operators, that, no doubt, is something to celebrate. Faced with dramatic decline in the country’s foreign exchange earnings, the uncontrollable surge in demand for foreign exchange by mostly domestic importers, and sharp practices by BDCs, the CBN had dramatically swung the hammer on the operators on January 11. Specifically, the BDC operators were accused of abandoning the original objective of their establishment which was to serve retail end-users who need $5,000 or less; turning themselves to “wholesale dealers in foreign exchange to the tune of millions of dollars per transaction”; and, finally, of “using fake documentations, like passport.”

    At best, the latest decision by the CBN to resume dollar sales to BDCs can be rationalised on the need to reduce such sharp practices as round-tripping of foreign exchange by closing the gap between the interbank and parallel market exchange rate. And to the extent that the CBN seeks to deepen and liberalise the forex market, the move to align the operations of BDCs with the official forex system would seem inescapable. With the BDCs currently representing the weakest link in the forex management chain, bringing them into the regulatory orbit would seem somewhat inevitable if only to give the apex bank a better handle on the nation’s forex management.

    Is anything on ground to suggest that the objective conditions which necessitated the CBN hammer have changed in any real sense? The answer seems obvious. First, we know that the rate of forex accretion has not improved in any significant sense; most certainly, the demand for forex shows no signs of slowing down. This of course means that the potential for the depletion of the foreign reserves is as real as it was six months ago. Ordinarily, the idea of bringing more forex retailers on board will make sense if there is likelihood of improvement in the forex supply situation. At the moment, the signals are far from reassuring.

    What about the BDC operators? Have they learnt their lessons? Are they ready now to play by the rules, particularly the rules requiring proper documentation of operations? Will they now cease to serve as conduits to the so-called parallel market? What about the capacity issues? Are the BDCs now better placed to render accounts as required by the monetary authorities?

    It is certainly not sufficient for ABCON leaders to offer bland assurances that BDCs would “abide by the criteria as well as comply with all regulatory requirements to justify the renewed confidence in the sub-sector.” After all, we had in the past seen operators sink deeper into the mire after promising to turn a new leaf. This time, such assurances must come with knowledge of the grave consequences for any infraction.

    What about the CBN itself? What has changed in the last six months? Does the CBN now have the men and material to track and report on the activities of more than 2,000 operators? How does it plan to ensure that forex allocations from the official window do not end up in the black market?

    We can only hope that the latest measure is well thought-out, as against pandering to special interests.

  • Babaloja: I sold my houses in US to build Oshodi market

    Babaloja: I sold my houses in US to build Oshodi market

    How was the popular Cairo Market now Abibatu Mogaji Shopping Complex in Oshodi, Lagos built?

    Contrary to belief in certain quarters, it was not built by government, but by an individual.

    The Babaloja of Oshodi, Alhaji Abdul Rasak Kolawole Sanni, has told The Nation how he sold his three houses in the United States (US) to build the market.

    Popularly called Provida, Sanni said he also used his two houses in the country to obtain loan from FirstBank Plc to start the project.

    He said negative comments by some people abroad about Oshodi made him to develop the market.

    Sanni said: “Anytime I travel to London, Malaysia and other parts of the world and I see how beautiful the cities are, I have always vowed to ensure I am part of the development in Oshodi. Usually when I travel abroad and I introduce myself to my fellow Nigerians there that I am from Oshodi, I don’t like the expression I get from them. Their belief is that Oshodi is home for touts and hoodlums. And I wonder and tell myself how do I correct that perception.”

    He thanked the late Iyaloja of Nigeria, Alhaja Abibatu Mogaji, former Governor Babatunde Fashola and former Oshodi Local Government Chairman Afeez Ipesa-Balogun for the opportunity to turn the market into a modern complex.

    The market leader hailed Governor Akinwunmi Ambode’s desire to turn Oshodi into a model city.

    According to him, the regeneration of Oshodi into a world class Central Business District (CBD) will put the city among the comity of developed communities in the world.

    The project will feature multi-story bus terminals, pedestrian bridges, shopping malls, CCTVs, among others.

    Imploring Ambode not to be distracted by remarks about the project, he said he faced similar situation while working on the market.

    He said: “After Alhaja Mogaji gave me the go ahead on the project, I went back to the drawing board and designed what the market will look like. I went back to the US to sell three of my houses and then real estate was booming. I used two of my houses here in Nigeria to get a loan from FirstBank and started the project. When I started the project, some people went to the government to say all sorts of things, which made the government to lock it up for a month, but it was re opened. They were surprised that I am the only one doing the project. After it was opened, about nine commissioners came to inspect the project and I took them round. Later on, former Governor Fashola came to the site. He was surprised and was also happy. He said thank you for supporting my government, and I said your Excellency, thank you for giving me the opportunity…

    “That was how I started. The saboteurs came they poured chemicals on the construction and two buildings collapsed out of 11 buildings and the place was locked up for like five months. After that happened, they did the material test and I was give 61 percent. I was later allowed to finish the construction.”

    The decision to build the market, he said, pitched him against some politicians in Oshodi.

    He said: “Some politicians and people in Oshodi don’t like me. They believe I am the one who brought the Lagos State Government to come and interfere in the affairs of Oshodi. As far as I am concerned, those are the people who only came to suck from the milk and success of Oshodi, they don’t want the success of this great market. And it’s because all the racket money they were making couldn’t be achieved again. All the area boys are not happy. They believe I brought in the government who demolished so many places where they make money from. They were making the money yet they are not putting it toward the success of the place.

    “In the process, the then Babaloja died at the age of 100. Everybody was fighting to become the Babaloja. The late Alhaja Abibat Mogaji called me and also told others that there is this son of mine who did a good work in Oshodi, I want him to become the Babaloja of Oshodi and the rest is now history.”

  • Night market

    Hardball would have described it as ‘night business’, but it is more appropriately night market for that conjures up its full ominousness. But even that does not capture the thought and idea needed to be purveyed here on a matter that touches deep down to the very soul of our country. Yoruba seem to have a better hang of it. They call it oja okunkun – meaning to trade in the dark.

    So why would you transact under the cover of the night? And if you elect to, you cannot but be willing to accept all the vile and vices that come with it.

    Night market is transacted under very opaque lights and lightings. This portends two immediate dangers: you cannot see clearly the faces of buyers and sellers. Second, you cannot be sure of the exact hues and coloration of the articles of trade. For instance, you may have bargained for isi ewu (head of a he-goat, used for that sumptuous delicacy of same name), only to get home and find that you had paid for a bearded skull, and so on!

    But even more portentous is the fact that night market is the fare of everyone – including spirits, witches, wizards and ghosts. You are bound to encounter strange things if they don’t encounter you. Be careful not to look too closely or mope or gawk. Of course the more you look, the less you are bound to see. In fact looking too closely is liable to earn you a cold chill or a fainting spell. The kind of feeling you get when you look too closely at a passerby and swear that that must be Uncle John going. Then you remember Uncle John had passed on last year. You instinctively seek to take a confirmatory look and you are not sure whether the fellow suddenly vanished or mixed with the night crowd. Such is the thing with night market

    Such is verisimilitude of a certain document known as the Report of the Auditor-General of the Federation. And such is the source of Hardball’s gripe today. The all-important Office of the Auditor-General of the Federation (OAGF) is charged with producing the all-important annual report and accounts of all financial transactions in Nigeria.

    Now the OAGF and the so-called report have become like transacting in a night market; or dark market if you like. The crucial document which has the singular capacity of reducing official corruption by half if properly done, like article for night trade, is hardly seen by Nigerians. The document, if and when produced, is passed to the Public Accounts Committee of the Senate as is required by law. The PAC is supposed to stage public hearing on the report but they do nothing of such. In fact, they simply bury the report.

    In this Internet age, you would think the report would be posted up somewhere, but zilch. You will never find it. Between the OAGF and the Senate, the public never finds a copy.

    Bottomline: the OAGF which is the fulcrum of the fight against corruption is a night market where corruption is cleverly concealed under the dark covers of officialdom. To think that the OAGF spends about N3 billion of tax-payers’ money in annual budget for its pointless annual ritual.

     

  • Naira recovers as CBN injects dollar into market

    Naira recovers as CBN injects dollar into market

    Dollar injection by the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) yesterday lifted the naira to N282.5 against the dollar from N284 it closed on Tuesday. The naira rose 0.7 per cent to 282.5 per dollar, after earlier dropping as much as 0.5 per cent.

    The local currency made its first gain against the greenback since starting to trade without a peg, as the CBN sought to stabilize the market by selling dollars.

    The CBN sold dollars onto the interbank forex market for a third day to ease dollar shortages after it floated the currency. The regulator has intervened in the market by selling forex  since it ended the currency’s 16-month fix of 197 to 199 per dollar on Monday. It sold $4 billion in the spot and forwards markets that day to clear a backlog of demand for hard currency, and followed that with about $100 million of sales on the spot market on Tuesday.

    “The market expects the CBN to continue to intervene on a daily basis for now as it is easily the only source of dollar supplies,” Sewa Wusu, head of research at SCM Capital Ltd., told Bloomberg. “Foreign direct investment and portfolio flows are yet to start flowing in as investors wait on the sidelines to watch for liquidity, price discovery and stability.”

    Forward contracts dropped as traders reduced their bets on how much further the naira will weaken, although they still see it dropping 6.5 percent by late September. Three-month naira non-deliverable forward contracts fell 4.7 per cent, the most on a closing basis since May 17, to N302.25 per dollar.

    “The monetary authority will be a regular participant in the interbank market, at least in the short term, to ensure that sufficient liquidity is available to facilitate two-way trade,” analysts at Johannesburg-based Rand Merchant Bank, including Celeste Fauconnier and Nema Ramkhelawan-Bhana, said in a note to clients.

    The benchmark equity index rose for a second day, advancing by 2.4 per cent to 30,127.82, its highest close since October 21. It has soared 34 per cent since falling to a more than three-year low on January 19, as local investors buy stocks anticipating a return by foreigners, who fled when the CBN imposed capital controls to defend the naira’s peg.