A Renaissance Capital report suggests 2024 has a positive outlook for Nigeria with strengthening currency and rise in oil prices.
Renaissance Capital Africa says at the March 28 level of
N1,303/$, the Nigerian naira is still largely undervalued to its long-term
average, to the tune of 30 percent.
In its “Thoughts from Renaissance Capital Africa” report
released on Tuesday, the firm stated that holders of equities had already seen
gains of 20 percent since the end of February, as the naira strengthened from
1,600/$ to around 1,300/$.
It stated, “We expect a bigger rally to come. In US dollar
terms, Nigerian equities are around the cheapest they’ve been in 20 years.”
Stressing that monetary policy had become sensible again,
Renaissance Capital Africa explained that portfolio investors could now invest
with some confidence that sooner or later, inflation will start to fall.
With Nigeria’s 25-year average rate moved from 900/$ to
1,200/$ in last month’s update, through to this month’s model update, the
average rate, it said, was now back at 912/$.
The firm stated, “So at the March 28 level of 1,303/$ the
NGN is 30 percent undervalued to its long-term average. That’s the cheapest in Africa (just decimal
places cheaper than Egypt) and only the Japanese yen is cheaper among 80
currencies we look at.
“We expect a surge in March and/or April inflation to erode
that to perhaps 20-25 percent undervalued.
If the NGN stabilises at 1,269/$ – and if inflation was 20 percent in
March 2025, this would take the average rate up to around the same level by
March 2025.
“As such, the naira could stay here all year – which is much
better return in one-year bonds yielding 18-19 percent than owning US
treasuries at 4-5 percent.
“Alternatively, the CBN could drive the NGN spot rate
stronger, perhaps to 1,100/$ – and then encourage a weaker monthly trajectory
for the currency. So, a 10-20 percent
nominal NGN move stronger from here is plausible, and we ought to get a
re-rating of the equity market too (as in Pakistan and Kenya).”
On the other hand, it said a worsening current account,
higher than expected inflation, and insecurity were obvious risks, stating that
if inflation surges to 50 percent in the next few months, then much of the
undervaluation of the naira will disappear.
Renaissance said, “If inflation stayed at 50 percent into
next year, the naira would become overvalued at 1,300 and would need to sell
off again to become competitive. The 18 percent yield on one-year bonds would
not look so attractive if we lose 20 percent on the currency.
“There are fiscal risks that could lead to higher
inflation. The government has an
expensive liability via fuel and electricity prices. The fuel subsidy may have been officially
removed in 3Q23, when the fuel price went to around N550 and the exchange rate
was more like N700-800/$.”
But on the positive side, it pointed out that the
strengthening currency did make the headline fuel price less loss-making for
Nigeria.
Also positive for Nigeria, it said, was the first quarter
rise in oil prices. “If that could be combined with a rise in oil production
too, a bigger current account surplus will make investors more confident, help
FX reserves pick up and again improve investor confidence in the story,” it
stated.
Renaissance stated that at the beginning of February, when
the naira weakened to 1,600/$, there were not many believers in the theory that
at a weak enough currency level, money would flow back to Nigeria.
However, it explained that it did also require a 400bp rate
hike backed by an additional 200bp hike from the CBN, its biggest ever move.
The report stated, “But the shift has begun. Nigeria is
about to give investors a positive return from investment. While we’ve seen
this before (e.g. 2017-19) this time it is happening within a new market
construct of sensible monetary policy and a floating currency rate that seems
credible.
“What Nigeria is doing, when combined with the positive
direction of Kenya and Egypt, too, is helping change global perceptions of
Africa after a very tough decade indeed.
“Governments are showing they will undertake painful
reforms, they will allow currencies to reflect market realities and these big
economies will meet their debt obligations.
It is a vital message to send after 2022 painted a more negative picture
of the continent’s ability to manage higher global interest rates.”
According to the group, Nigerian equities are about the
cheapest they’ve been in a generation, while the currency is the cheapest in
Africa. “2024 is a turnaround year for Nigeria and other key frontier markets,”
it added.