Why Foreign Investment Dropped by 40.1% in 2021

The CBN would thus continue to be the most important barrier to the inflow of portfolio investment into Nigeria until May 2023”.

Foreign Portfolio Investments in the Nigeria plummeted by 40% in 2021, indicating the lowest level of inflow in 5 years. Foreign Portfolio Investments (FPI) refers to investment in financial assets such as stocks, bonds, mutual funds, exchange-traded funds, and other financial instruments held by foreign investors in Nigeria.  The active participation of foreign investors in the Nigerian market declined by 11% from 34% of total market transactions in 2020 to 23% in 2021.

Total transactions by foreigners on the floor of the Nigeria Exchange Limited fell from NGN729 billion recorded in 2020 to NGN 434. 5 billion in 2021, according to data published by the Central Bank of Nigeria on Nigeria’s foreign investments.

The FPI report which is widely regarded as the most credible measure of foreign investors’ participation in the Nigerian capital market is published by the Nigerian Exchange Limited; the report is prepared using all transactions reported by all custodians and capital market operators including portfolio managers, financial institutions, stockbrokers, finance houses etc. The report has shown a continuous decline in the foreign portfolio investment performance in Nigeria since 2019, implying that foreign investors sold off more assets than they bought.

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Why has FPI fallen massively in Nigeria?

The new coronavirus pandemic affected inflows into emerging and frontier markets such as Nigeria from March 2020 till around July 2020. FDI inflows have since recovered and in some cases risen above pre-pandemic levels. However, the continuous decline in foreign portfolio investments in the country can be attributed to several internal and external factors, which are highlighted below:

Also, insecurity and the high cost of doing business dimmish the appetite for Nigerian assets; these factors mean the Nigerian market is shrinking and that companies’ profits is also being reduced by the inclement investment climate.

Multilateral organizations such as the International Monetary Fund (IMF) predict that Nigeria will grow by 2.7% in 2022 as a result of a recovery in global crude oil prices, an expected increase in Nigeria’s crude oil production volume towards the new OPEC cap of 1.83 million/bpd from the previous cap of 1.45 million/bpd. and a recovery in global economic activities. This would translate to an increase in foreign earnings but not up to a level that makes the CBN able to unpack its restrictive foreign exchange policies without allowing a decisive devaluation of the naira.

The CBN in the last six years has proven to be extremely politically attuned, it is hence is extremely unlikely to devalue the naira in a pre-election year.  The CBN would thus continue to be the most important barrier to the inflow of portfolio investment into Nigeria until May 2023. This not only means that Nigeria would forgo this important source of foreign exchange, Nigerian firms would also be deprived of the capital for investment and expansion.

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