Home News Report Projects Nigeria’s Economy To Grow By 3.4% In 2022

Report Projects Nigeria’s Economy To Grow By 3.4% In 2022

by Our Reporter

With just a year into the 2023 elections, a report by Sigma Pensions has said, a large fiscal borrowing plan and higher political risk premiums is expected, adding that, the Nigerian economy is expected to grow by 3.4 per cent in 2022.

The report titled ‘Nigeria 2022 Outlook: Consolidating on recovery but persisting large imbalances present headwinds’ also predicted that, improved oil output would upturn Nigeria’s external balance through 2022.

The report also noted that they expect the investment landscape in 2022 will be shaped by normalisation in global economic growth and tighter global monetary policy.

It forecasts that Nigeria’s growth will stabilise, but twin deficits to persist as well as a wider forex market premiums due to limited dollar supply and import demand suppression and higher fuel prices to reignite inflationary pressures.

” We expect the oil sector to exit recession in 2022 as Nigeria’s crude production rebounds from the 1.6mbpd low base in 2021 towards a range of 1.8-1.85mbpd and as most OPEC+ curbs are removed by May 2022. Given our price and production expectations, we expect Nigeria’s external balance to improve as oil export receipts normalize to trend levels amid persisting import demand suppression on account of the CBN’s currency policy,” it stressed.

On the economic front, it stated that, “we expect Nigeria’s economic growth to stabilise around 3.4 per cent in 2022, reflecting improvements across Telecoms, trade, manufacturing, and oil.

“In 2022, the large fiscal borrowing requirements amid less liquid financial system conditions relative to the last two years suggests ample scope for heightened market expectations about higher interest rates.

“Furthermore, likely stronger dollar demand will convince the CBN of the need to tighten monetary conditions as with the trend across global central banks to manage forex reserve depletion. Against this backdrop, we think the current bearish trends in the fixed income will likely persist over 2022.

” For equity markets, we see bearish trends dominating market sentiments as the fixed income optionality becomes available to investors after a two-year hiatus and as political risk premiums on Naira risk assets heighten ahead of the 2023 general elections,” it pointed out.

Nevertheless, it noted that, expectations are that, the  domestic institutional investor support in bellwether names to continue to curtail downside to the overall market.

The report stressed that, “despite the emergence of new variants of COVID-19 virus, we view higher vaccine coverage and the existence of drugs as supportive of further normalisation in global economic activity in 2022.

Rising inflation expectations from a mix of supply bottlenecks and stimulus fueled demand is likely to drive a withdrawal of global monetary stimulus and incite interest rate hikes which will underpin higher dollar interest rates.

“We expect OPEC+ to complete its phased increments in oil output over H1 2022 which should drive a reset in crude oil prices towards $65-70/bbl. For Nigeria, despite supportive oil prices, we continue to view the subsisting external and fiscal imbalances as underpinning the need for policy reforms.

“While emerging pressures on the fiscal and forex fronts should naturally drive renewed urgency towards reducing large subsidies and forex rate misalignments, the onset of the 2023 electioneering season is likely to lead to continued policy inertia which will cascade into half-hearted attempts at reforms.”

” However, the transmission of macroeconomic pressures to financial markets is unlikely to be linear with more stable trends across economic indicators in the first half to be followed by greater room for negative swings in the second half as pressures from the large imbalances induce greater need for steep policy adjustments,” it stated.

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