Foreign direct investment drops to $3.39bn

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.Lowest in 5 years

Foreign Portfolio Investment (FPI) inflow to Nigeria reduced 34 per cent to $3.39 billion in 2021 as against $5.16 billion in 2020 reflecting her harsh operating economic environment.

This is the least FPI in the past five years, According to Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) data, the figure represent the least FPI in the past five years under the administration of President Muhammadu Buhari .

 

FPI has seen two consecutive years of decline, reducing  68.5 per cent from $16.38 billion in 2019 to $5.16 bn in 2020, from where it slashed 34 per cent to $3.39 billion in 2021.

 

FPI refers to the purchase of securities and other financial assets by investors from another country, which could be held directly by  investors themselves or managed by financial professionals and they include stocks, bonds, mutual funds, exchange traded funds.

 

Meanwhile the reduction in FPI can be attributed to depressed economic activities following COVID-19  lockdown and movement restrictions in 2020. It seems, that domestic investors are also taking over the financial market.

Also, data from the Nigerian stock market shows the contribution of FPI to portfolio investment dropped to 22.9 per in 2021 from 33.6 per cent (2020), 48.9 per cent (2019), and 50.7 per cent (2018), according to Nairametrics.

 

A total N1.89 trillion was traded in the local bourse in 2021, which was 12.4 per cent less than N2.17 billion in 2020.

Transactions worth N434.5 billion involved foreign investors, 22.9 per cent of total transactions.

Local equities printed 6.07 per cent gain in the All-Share index in 2021, far below inflation rate, failing to reach the record 50 per cent gain in 2020.

Local investors stepped up to federal government securities, oversubscribing FBN bonds multiple times, despite the low-interest rate.

Low yield in government securities discourages foreign investors from putting funds in the Nigerian market.

Nigeria continues to suffer from a significant dip in foreign investments, both  portfolio and direct investments. This affects FX liquidity.

 

It is compounded by reduction in export earnings, largely due to decline in crude export revenue and diaspora remittance.

 

Meanwhile, experts have blamed the drop in foreign investment on the business environment.

 

They said insecurity and inflationary pressure discourage foreign investors from putting their money in Nigeria as inflation and volatile exchange rate erode returns.

 

Nigeria ranks 131st among 190 economies in the ease of doing business index, a grim picture of an environment characterized  by increasing inflation and plummeting naira exchange rate.