JP Morgan has
threatened to remove Nigeria from its Government Bond Index (GBI-EM) by the
year-end unless the Central Bank of Nigeria, CBN, restores liquidity to foreign
exchange market to allow foreign investors tracking the benchmark to transact
with minimal hurdles.
The bank said, weekend, it had extended the deadline to eject
Nigeria by another six months to take into account the arrival of President
Muhammadu Buhari.
Nigeria held closely-fought presidential elections in March,
in which opposition leader Buhari defeated incumbent President Goodluck
Jonathan in the country’s first transition of power through the ballot box.
JPMorgan, which runs the most commonly used emerging debt
indexes, placed Nigeria on a negative index watch in January and then said it
would assess its place on the index over a three to five months period.
“Nigeria’s status in the GBI-EM series will be finalized in
the coming months but no later than year-end,” JPMorgan said.
Removal from the index would force funds tracking it to sell
Nigerian bonds from their portfolios, potentially resulting in significant
capital outflows. This in turn would raise borrowing costs for Africa’s largest
economy, already suffering from a sharp drop revenue following a plunged in oil
prices.
Nigeria’s forex and bond markets have come under pressure
after the price of oil, Nigeria’s main export, plunged. In response, the
central bank fixed the exchange rate in February after devaluing the naira last
year and tightened trading rules to curb speculation. The naira has lost 8.5
percent this year.
“If we are unable to verify these factors, a review of
Nigeria’s status within the benchmark for removal will be triggered,” it said
in report, adding that the factors included a liquid currency market. Analysts
did not expect JPMorgan to remove Nigeria.
JPMorgan added Nigeria to the widely followed index in 2012,
when liquidity was improving, making it only the second African country after
South Africa to be included. It added Nigeria’s 2014, 2019, 2022 and 2024
bonds.
The bank said Nigeria continues to remain eligible for the
GBI-EM index, which has around $210 billion in assets under management
benchmarked to it, with a weight of 1.8 percent.
The central bank last week made a tiny adjustment to its
exchange rate peg to the dollar, which one analyst said may indicate that it is
beginning to think.
Source: Vanguard
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