Pre MPC Meeting Outlook

Godwin Emefiele, Governor, Central Bank of Nigeria. Image Credit: reuters.com

May 23, 2023/CSL Research

25bps rate hike likely as MPC concludes meeting.

As the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) concludes its third Monetary Policy Committee (MPC) meeting of the year today, we anticipate a likely sustenance of its contractionary monetary measures, though we expect a very moderate 25bps increase in the Monetary Policy Rate (MPR). We, however, expect the other policy parameters such as the Cash Reserve Ratio (CRR), liquidity ratio, and asymmetric corridor to remain unchanged. We believe that the MPC will continue to toll the way of other advanced countries such as the Bank of England and the Federal Reserve who have increased their interest rate by 25bps. We expect price pressures, elevated interest rates in advanced countries, and the need to attract foreign portfolio investors (FPIs) to remain top on the committee’s mind as the CBN has been clearly prioritising these concerns over growth.

No worries around economic growth: The committee believes that the economy has maintained a growth trajectory for nine consecutive quarters, since exiting recession in 2020. The improved performance has been largely driven by sustained growth in the services and agricultural sectors amidst a decline in oil revenues. The committee believes output growth has been sustained by a combination of development finance interventions by the Bank and fiscal stimulus by the Federal Government. We however believe that continuous rate hikes will continue to limit and put the country’s fragile growth at risk while doing little to stem inflation.

The need to attract foreign capital inflows: Capital inflows continue to decline, and this remains a key concern for the committee. The elevated interest rates by global central banks have continued to reinforce flight to safety as foreign portfolio investors sheds their investment portfolio in emerging markets and developing economies in favour of safer haven advanced economies. Again, FX concerns and inability of FPIs to repatriate funds in recent years, amidst poor economic indices continue to deter portfolio investments. The Nigerian equities market has remained bearish with total foreign portfolio decreasing from N122.53 billion to N8.47billion between April 2018 and April 2023. We believe that concerns around foreign exchange stability and liquidity will continue to pressure foreign portfolio inflows in the medium to long term

Inflationary pressures likely to drive another MPR hike: The headline inflation maintained its upward trend in April, increasing by 18bps to 22.22%, driven by a 16bps and 28bps increases in food and core inflation. We believe inflation rate at this level still falls below CBN’s expectations, hence we eliminate the possibility of a rate cut. Moreover, the CBN will likely toe the line of its global peers, hence, we anticipate a 25bps increase in the Monetary Policy Rate. That said, we reiterate that the rate hikes have had a minimal effect on inflation as supply side factors remain dominant, We also reiterate that exchange rate stability and FX repatriation concerns remain ahead of any carry trade opportunities in the mind of Foreign Portfolio Investors (FPIs). In our view, In our view, the continuous rate hikes have stifled the country’s fragile growth much more than any associated benefits.

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