The market capitalisation, which
stood at N11.887tn on Tuesday, plunged to N11.576tn on Wednesday according to
records made public.
The losses
recorded by many stocks listed on the Nigerian Stock Exchange in the last three
days of trading have wiped out a total of
N780bn in investor wealth.
The NSE
All-Share Index fell by 2.45 per cent to close at 32,233.80 basis points on
Friday, while the market capitalisation of listed equities dropped to N11.107tn
from N11.386tn on Thursday.
The market
capitalisation, which stood at N11.887tn on Tuesday, plunged to N11.576tn on
Wednesday. Stocks had been gaining since late April on the back of the currency
moves by the Central Bank of Nigeria.
On April 21,
the CBN established a forex widow for investors and exporters to boost
liquidity in the forex market and ensure timely execution and settlement for
eligible transactions.
The market
capitalisation of listed equities on the NSE stood at N8.716tn on April 21,
down from a peak of N12.135tn on April 2, 2015.
As of last
Tuesday, the nation’s stock market gained over N3tn, some of which has,
however, been pared by sell-offs by investors.
The Acting
Managing Director, Afrinvest Securities Limited, Mr. Ayodeji Ebo, attributed
the decline in the market to half-year activities by domestic investors.
He
said, “For most of the domestic investors, portfolio managers, fund
managers, when you compare the performance of the market relative to the end of
March, all the shares in their portfolio would have appreciated significantly.
“And for
them to be able to realise their income, they need to sell. So, for some of
them, it just makes sense that they realise their profits and come in again in
July.”
According to
Ebo, the Etisalat loan saga may have triggered the sell-off of banking stocks.
“I think
people were trying to be cautious in terms of the impact of the loan on the
banks involved. But based on analysis, it is not going to be very significant.
We expect that even before the end of the year, something will be done such
that we can’t say the loan has gone totally bad,” he said.
He also said
the downward trend in the market might continue up until the end of the month.
Banking shares have been spooked after talks between a group of lenders and the
telecoms firm, Etisalat Nigeria, over a debt renegotiation collapsed.
United Bank
for Africa Plc, which led 33 losers on Friday, was among the 10 banking stocks
that suffered losses. Fifteen banking stocks recorded price depreciation on
Thursday.
The Chief
Executive Officer, Financial Derivatives Company Limited, Mr. Bismarck Rewane,
attributed the recent bullish trend in the stock market to improved forex
policy and positive market sentiments.
He noted
that there had been improved investment and corporate earnings due to the
improved macro economy. He said foreign investments into Nigeria grew
year-on-year for the first time in the first quarter of this year after nine
consecutive quarters of decline.
Rewane noted
that the equity market was by far the biggest destination of portfolio
investments, which had picked up recently due to fixed income market. He noted
that market capitalisation closed at N10.4tn in the month of May, representing
an 11 per cent increase from N8.8tn with a gain of N1.2tn.
On the
future of the investments, Rewane had earlier in the month said, “Market
capitalisation may reach N12.5tn by the third quarter of 2017. Portfolio
investment inflows into the equity market are expected to increase in the long
term as currency stabilises.”
But the
market sentiment weakened last week amid the possibility that the MSCI Inc, a
global index provider, would downgrade Nigeria later in the year.
Last week,
the MSCI deferred its decision on the reclassification of Nigeria index till
November.
It said the
decision on the potential removal of the MSCI Nigeria Index from the MSCI
Frontier Markets Index had been delayed to November to allow more time for
international institutional investors to better access the effectiveness of the
new forex trading window introduced by the CBN.
Nigeria,
which is struggling to restore investor confidence in its currency, has seen
its benchmark stock index lose more than 30 per cent in dollar terms over the
past 12 months.
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