NigeriaOil & GasNigeria to Ensure Orderly Foreign Investor Exits After Oil Price Crash

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ABUJA – Nigeria has put in place policies to ensure foreign investors that want to repatriate funds can exit the country in an orderly fashion, the central bank said late on Sunday, without giving any details.

Foreign investors have sold Nigerian assets at an accelerated pace since February as lockdowns to curb the coronavirus pandemic have stalled economic activity and triggered a crash in the price of oil, Nigeria’s main export.

That has put pressure on the naira currency and foreign exchange reserves. Nigeria’s dollar reserve has declined 24% to $34 billion over the last year.

Last week, the central bank weakened the naira currency on the futures market, mostly used by foreign investors to hedge against a fall versus the U.S. dollar, by an average of 73 naira across maturities, a signal it expects further depreciation.

In a statement late on Sunday, Governor Godwin Emefiele said that where foreign exchange is available, strategic importation or service obligations would take priority, adding that the central bank wanted to galvanise local manufacturing activity.

The statement noted that the central bank had settled all dollar commitments in an orderly manner in 2015, when the last oil price rout created a similar dollar shortage.

Then, the bank introduced capital controls to avoid a mass exodus. It later created a multiple currency regime to manage pressure on the naira which culminated in a 15% devaluation two months ago as the central bank sought to converge the rates.

The naira has since hit a series of lows on the black and over-the-counter spot markets and the gap with the official market has widened, especially after the bank suspended dollar sales in the wake of a coronavirus lockdown. The oil price crash has exacerbated a shortage of dollars.

The central bank resumed forex sale to locals last week following the phased easing of a coronavirus lockdown but has yet to start sales to foreign investors, instead urging them to be patient and citing its new orderly exit policy.

(Reuters)

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