Chief Executive Officer Oscar Onyema said the Nigerian
stock exchange is seeking to boost listings and talking to so-called marginal
oil field operators eager to match the success of Seplat Petroleum Development
Co.’s initial public offering in April, Nigeria’s first since 2008.
Foreign investors fleeing Nigeria as oil prices plunge are leaving
stocks undervalued in Africa’s biggest economy, the bourse’s chief executive
officer said.
The benchmark index’s 17 percent decline
this year isn’t justified by economic changes and as a result Nigerian equities
are “effectively on sale,” Oscar Onyema said in an interview yesterday at a
conference in Diani, Kenya.
“The fundamentals demand higher valuations.”
Nigerian stocks dropped as crude slid into a bear market
and the central bank eroded reserves to support the currency, which fell to a
record low this month. Nigeria is Africa’s biggest oil producer, and its $520
billion economy is forecast to grow 6.5 percent this year and next, according
to a Bloomberg survey of economists.
“The local institutional investors are net buyers at the
moment,” said Onyema. “They’re buying and their way of looking at it is that
the prices we’re seeing today are not justified by the fundamentals.”
The Nigeria Stock
Exchange All Share Index (NGSEINDX) reversed a loss to close 0.7
percent higher at 34,115.84 in Lagos, the commercial capital, as 34 shares
increased, 11 fell and 150 were unchanged. PZ Cussons Nigeria Plc, a soap
maker, was the bigger gainer, climbing 9.9 percent.
Foreigners will probably remain wary of the Nigerian
market until presidential elections in February, Onyema said. There is pent-up
demand for stocks, though investors won’t commit funds until they have clarity
on policy and security under the new administration, he said.
Islamist
Insurgency
An Islamist insurgency in northern Nigeria and a campaign
for the presidency pitting candidates from the mainly Muslim north against an
incumbent from the largely Christian south point to “a very perilous contest
whose results may also be disputed,” the Brussels-based International Crisis
Group said in a report last week.
“We’re in a political cycle right now and foreign
investors want to see what the outcome is,” Onyema said. “They want to get
certainty about the security situation and they also want to see the package of
measures that the fiscal and monetary authorities will take in addressing the
shocks that we’ve seen.”
The naira has weakened to a record low of 178 per dollar
this month because of the collapse in the price of oil, which accounts for more
than two-thirds of government revenue. The currency was down 1.7 percent to 177
per dollar at 5:25 p.m. in Lagos, the commercial capital.
‘Perceived
Weaknesses’
“When you look at OPEC countries, they’re all feeling the
sweat, but Nigeria tends to be more pronounced, because of some of the
perceived weaknesses in our buffers such as the level of foreign reserves and
the ability of the central bank to defend the currency,” Onyema said. “I have
confidence in the central bank’s ability to provide a currency that has
stability.”
The Nigerian central bank meets to set interest rates
today, with three of nine economists surveyed by Bloomberg expecting the bank
to raise the benchmark rate from 12 percent.
Onyema said the NSE is seeking to boost listings and
talking to so-called marginal oil field operators eager to match the success of
Seplat Petroleum
Development Co. (SEPLAT)’s initial public offering in April,
Nigeria’s first since 2008.
“The marginal field operators have a real opportunity to
participate in our market, especially given the success that Seplat has shown,”
Onyema said.
Marginal field operators in Nigeria include Bayelsa Oil Co.,
Platform Petroleum Ltd. and Sahara Energy Field Ltd.
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