Lagos, Nigeria – In the wake of President Bola Tinubu’s administration allowing a 40% devaluation of the naira, Nigeria has witnessed a significant increase in overseas investment flows, according to data from the Nigerian Exchange in Lagos.
While the initial devaluation caused a reset in the foreign-currency price of the benchmark index, the resulting stock market gains have offset the impact, leading to a noteworthy 7.5% rebound over the past two weeks.
Investors find reassurance in historical data that demonstrates how currency devaluations, despite causing short-term challenges, can ultimately enhance stock values and attract long-term investment flows.
The top-performing stock market globally in the past year has been Argentina, which saw a remarkable 101% increase in dollar terms following a 51% decline in the peso. Following closely behind is Turkey, with a 74% surge in stocks after a 34% slump in the lira. Lebanon, despite experiencing the most severe currency losses worldwide, witnessed a 20% increase in dollar terms. Similarly, Egypt’s stocks rose by 20% following a 39% devaluation of the currency.
These examples serve as encouraging indicators for Nigeria, as the weakened naira paves the way for increased foreign investment and potential long-term economic growth.
“Foreign investors are coming now because they believe they are taking a position on the future,” said Adetilewa Adebajo, chief executive of Lagos-based CFG Advisory.
“If the government comes out with a good budget, oil prices stabilize, crude production goes up, foreign exchange becomes more available, those will be good signals for foreign-investor participation and the positive market movement will be sustained.”
Nigerian stocks are already one of the world’s best performers in local-currency terms.
Though Tinubu wasn’t the markets’ most favorite candidate at the February hustings, his administration has surprised investors with the intent and execution of a range of economic reforms. He wound down expensive fuel subsidies, brought changes to the management of the central bank and pledged to move to a flexible foreign-exchange rate.
The World Bank is forecasting the West African nation will almost double its growth rate to 4% from 2024 onward compared with an average of 2.1% since 2015 if it implements reforms to increase non-oil revenue and cut inflation.
Bank of America Sub-Saharan Africa economist Tatonga Rusike expects the central bank to intensify its fight against consumer-price growth, potentially hiking interest rates by 700 basis points by the end of the year.
The NGX All Share Index has risen 6% this month in naira terms, its third monthly gain. That translates to a 3% advance in dollars. The post-election rally has helped the gauge to reduce its valuation discount to its emerging-market peers. It now trades 31% below the forward price-earnings ratio of the MSCI Emerging Markets, compared with 40% in April.
Meanwhile, foreign-investor participation has increased to 12% of transactions from 4% before the devaluation, according to the exchange. For the flows to continue and deepen, however, they would need assurances the reforms will continue. They will also monitor other variables including foreign-exchange volatility and inflation before committing more funds, said Samuel Sule, director of the financing group at Renaissance Capital Africa.