Stock market lost N1.732tn in one year under Buhari
The Nigerian stock market crashed by N1.732tn within one year of the Muhammadu Buhari-led Federal Government.
The Nigerian Stock Exchange data showed
that the NSE market capitalisation on May 28, 2015 was N11.658tn, while
that of May 27, 2016 was N9.926tn.
Market capitalisation is the total market value of the shares outstanding of a publicly traded company.
The NSE All-Share Index also crashed to 28,902.25 basis points from 34,310.37 basis points.
Investors in the country’s capital market (equity category) lost over N1.053tn in the first quarter of 2016.
During the first three months this year, the equities market depreciated by 10.79 per cent.
As of the first day of trading this
year (January 4), the NSE market capitalisation stood at N9.757tn, while
the All-Share Index was 28,370.32 basis points.
But as of the last day of trading in
2016 Q1 (March 31), the market capitalisation and All-Share Index
crashed to N8.704tn and 25,306.22 basis points, respectively.
Equity investors in the country’s
capital market had, in the first seven trading days on the floor of the
NSE in 2016, lost N804tn of their investment’s worth. Market
capitalisation after the close of trading on the floor of the Exchange
on the first seven days closed at N8.953tn.
The All-Share Index also dropped from
28,370.32 basis points recoded on the first day of trading in 2016 to
26,034.94 on the seventh trading day of this year.
The downward trend in the Nigerian stock
market, weeks into 2016, did not show any sign of abating as the market
capitalisation continued to fall, with 10 out of the 12 indices of the
NSE recording negative stance 10 weeks into 2016.
The market capitalisation of the NSE fell by N811bn in the first 10 weeks of trading this year.
The NSE market capitalisation dropped
from N9.75tn on January 4, 2016 to N8.939tn 10 weeks into the year,
while the All-Share Index also closed at 25,988.40 basis points from the
28,643.67 basis points recorded on the first trading day of the year.
Investors had also made huge losses in
the Nigerian equities market last year as the market capitalisation
(equities only) of the NSE shed a total of N2.354tn between December
2014 and December 2015.
The President, Nigerian Stock Exchange,
Mr. Aigboje Aig-Imoukhuede, last week, said the country’s capital market
could not continue to lag behind in the global arena, adding that it
needed to strategise for growth to better the economy.
He said the capital market must facilitate capital raising for economic growth as well as mobilise savings for investment.
Aig-Imoukhuede said part of the
strategies was a broad consensus on sectorial priorities for growth,
which should feed into policy formation.
He advocated for incentives for priority
economic sectors like Information and Communications Technology, while
pushing for non-listed national champions to be listed on the NSE for
others to follow.
He said, “Nigeria is facing a huge
growth challenge. Nigeria, indeed, has a big challenge in terms of
growth. Employment rate must grow owing to the fact that the population
is also growing very fast. Growth is difficult to realise; so,
government must stimulate growth.
“Nigeria is only exaggerating the
impacts of falling oil prices now. This is because with a robust
financial market the economy can be sustained. The financial market
must be encouraged.”
He described the Nigerian financial
market as a ‘high-risked’ market, saying the situation was capable of
attracting limited investors who could ultimately stop at nothing to
maximise returns.
An analyst at WSTC Financial Services
Limited, Mr. Tola Oni, said in the last one year, the efficiency of the
country’s economy had been constrained by policies – monetary and
fiscal.
He noted that the country had not been
able to chart the right path in the past one year, saying some actions
by the Federal Government in recent times had shown a rethink especially
in the partial deregulation of the petroleum downstream sub-sector and
the flexible foreign exchange market.
“Our concern is that this flexibility
must mean flexibility in the whole sense of it. We’ve seen the capital
market make progress recently owing to these. Any attempt by the
government to interfere again could drag us back significantly,” he
added.
The President, Constance Shareholders
Association of Nigeria, Mr. Shehu Mikail, said the happenings in the
stock market in the past one year were a reflection of the country’s
economic stance, which is very hostile policy-wise
He said the country had been plagued
with serious economic and financial challenges, which had resulted in
activities being slowed down especially in the financial sphere, which
included the NSE.
Mikail added, “The prices can be better
if things turn around economically. The 2016 budget had been passed and
the implication of the passage would start filtering into the economy in
due course. With the recent forex flexibility, we expect the game to
change.
To this end, the NSE Chief Executive
Officer, Mr. Oscar Onyema, while commenting on the state of the market,
had said, “Among emerging markets, recession has materialised in Brazil
and Russia, and the trend is likely to continue amid weakening oil and
other commodity prices. The Nigerian stock market had already lost $30bn
since July 2014.
“In the sub-Saharan Africa, while the
recent performance of Nigeria and South Africa, has been lackluster, the
overall region has weathered the commodity slump better than Latin
America and elsewhere, with growth slated at 4.3 per cent in 2016, up
from 3.8 per cent in 2015.”
Comments
Post a Comment