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Home » Fitch Ratings Suggests Naira May Settle at 1450/$ by December

Fitch Ratings Suggests Naira May Settle at 1450/$ by December

Staff Writer by Staff Writer
June 5, 2024
in Finance
Reading Time: 3 mins read
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Nigeria in revenue crisis - new Naira notes, Fitch Ratings | Thursday

Someone holding new 3D rendered Nigerian naira notes.

Fitch Ratings, an International credit rating agency, has forecasted that the naira, the Nigerian currency, will end the year at 1,450 per $1.

Gaimin Nonyane, director, Sovereigns, at Fitch Ratings, hinted on this during a post-sovereign rating webinar on Tuesday focused on Nigeria and Egypt.

Earlier in May, Fitch Ratings revised the Outlook on Nigeria’s Long-Term Foreign-Currency Issuer Default Rating to Positive from Stable, and affirmed the IDR at ‘B-’, on the back of reforms in the foreign exchange market, oil industry and monetary policy over the past one year.

Speaking on the fate of the Naira which has struggled since its floating in June 2023, Nonyane said,

“The Naira is still finding its feet. It is still in price discovery mode. So we would expect a lot of volatility in the near term. However, as I just mentioned, there is the expectation of multilateral donor funding coming in Q3 this year in addition to improved oil receipts. So that should help to reduce volatility somewhat by Q3 this year.

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“We project that will average about 1200/dollar this year and end the year round 1450/dollar. And in terms of next year, we see a gradual depreciation but it also depends largely on the foreign exchange reforms momentum. So, this is our baseline scenario on the basis that the momentum continues at the current pace.”

On the likelihood of Nigeria being upgraded further, Nonyane said:

“Currently, we see a path to a sustainable recovery in CBN foreign exchange position. And sustained current account surpluses. Currently, the current account surplus is low, below one per cent of the GDP, although they are experiencing some surpluses, it is still not significant in addition to that, if we see a sustained reduction in inflation and greater stability in the foreign exchange markets, and one key factor is the tax revenue. We need to see stronger mobilisation of domestic non-oil revenue. So all of these combined collectively, it’s not one or the other, which could potentially lead to an upgrade.

“Low tax revenue base has contributed to the government’s very high interest-to-revenue ratio which currently stands at 38 per cent and that is quite high. This is about four times more of the B rating median and forms a key rating consideration.”

Fitch Ratings, however, projected recovery in the oil sector.

“However, we do expect a recovery in the oil sector to support the current account over the short term. We also expect the oil refining capacity to increase over the short term as the Dangote plant ramps up capacity. We expect the PMS to come on stream later this year or early next year and this would help to reduce transport costs and lower refined oil imports which should help to ease foreign exchange demands,” the director at Fitch Ratings said.

Delving into the foreign reserves of Nigeria, Nonyane said that the gross foreign exchange reserves have fallen from its peak in March at about $34bn and it is currently standing around $32.7bn with recent gains from oil receipts eroded by repayment of existing debt obligations as the Central Bank of Nigeria repaid draw down on foreign exchange swaps and foreign exchange sales to Bureau De Change to support the Naira.

“In terms of the outlook, we project foreign exchange reserves to rise modestly by year-end and this would be as a result of a recovery in oil receipts, multilateral funding and potentially commercial borrowing.

“This would equate to about 4.2 months of current external payments which is still in line with our B-medium but following the CBN’s recent publication of its financial statement, we still estimate that more than 30 per cent of the gross reserves are from bank swaps, this highlights an external risk.

“Although we do expect the majority of the swaps to continue to be rolled over, providing space to navigate some challenges in external debt servicing.

“External debt servicing is expected to rise by about $4.8bn in 2024 and a further $5.2bn in 2025 and this includes amortisation and the $1.1bn Eurobond which would be due in November 2025. So sustaining the foreign exchange momentum is key,” she concluded.

[Source: Punch]

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