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Is Bloomberg Now Part Of The Wailers Team?... Buhari Which Way Na??? - Politics - Nairaland

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Team Buhari Vs Team Gej. Hailing Hailers Vs Wailing Wailers. / Why I Excluded Private Sector Players In Economic Team – Buhari / Nigeria Economics Loses To Politics As Buhari Takes Naira Stand – Bloomberg (2) (3) (4)

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Is Bloomberg Now Part Of The Wailers Team?... Buhari Which Way Na??? by buJu234: 12:27pm On Mar 30, 2016
Nigeria's Promise Turns to Peril as Investors Head for the Exits:-


http://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2016-03-30/nigeria-s-promise-turns-to-peril-as-investors-head-for-the-exits


The promise of Africa’s biggest economy has turned to peril.
Companies drawn to Nigeria by the prospect of a population bigger than Germany and Turkey’s combined are retreating; those staying have publicly criticized the president, a military strongman in the 1980s who came back to power via an election last year; and foreign investors are pulling their money out.
The corporate tribulations that began with a slide in oil prices and accelerated after the imposition of capital controls are also entangled in a global emerging-market slump. In propping up the naira in a futile bid to contain inflation, officials have jacked up pressure on an economy running out of cash, deepening a black market in currency trading and causing shortages of imported goods from fuel to milk. U.S. officials said they will press their Nigerian counterparts to change tack during talks in Washington this week.

“Our clients, Fortune 500 and other multinationals, are all quite concerned by the state Nigeria finds itself in,” said Alexa Lion, a senior analyst at Washington-based Frontier Strategy Group, which advises companies looking at developing nations. “Sentiment has worsened. There’s a lot of anxiety.”
Frustration too.
After four years trying to gain traction, Truworths International Ltd., a South African clothing retailer, last month gave up. It closed its last two outlets in Nigeria, in the southeastern cities of Enugu and Warri. Willing to tolerate dilapidated infrastructure, complicated red tape and expensive rent, the company said the import and foreign-exchange restrictions caused it to throw in the towel.
‘Impossible’
“We were happy to lose money for a few years while we developed the business and opened new stores,” Chief Executive Officer Michael Mark said in an interview. “The straw that broke the camel’s back was not being able to get stock into Nigeria. You can’t have a clothes shop with no clothes. With all the other things, it just wasn’t worth it. It was impossible to do business.”
Nigeria’s appeal has faded as the price of oil, source of 90 percent of export earnings, has crashed. Growth slumped to 2.8 percent last year, the slowest since 1999, and will decelerate to 2 percent in 2016, according to Morgan Stanley. In dollar terms, the economy in 2019 will still be 17 percent smaller than its 2014 peak of $542 billion. Only two years ago, McKinsey & Co. said Nigeria had the potential to grow 7.1 percent annually until 2030 and build a $1.6 trillion economy.
As Nigeria lags, other countries in sub-Saharan Africa have gotten more appealing. Last month, Nigeria fell from first to fourth, behind Ivory Coast, Kenya and Tanzania, in a ranking of business prospects by the research unit of Nielsen Holdings Plc.
Portfolio investors including Aberdeen Asset Management Plc and Ashmore Group Plc, which together oversee about $450 billion of assets, have retreated from Nigerian markets. The main stock index is down 10 percent this year, while the MSCI Frontier Markets Index has lost 2.8 percent. Nigeria’s local-currency bonds are the only ones among 31 emerging markets tracked by Bloomberg to have generated aloss this year. Foreign direct investment this year is set to be the lowest since the 2008-09 global financial crisis, according to data from the central bank.
For now, President Muhammadu Buhari and Central Bank Governor Godwin Emefiele say they aren’t budging from their strong-naira policy. While both acknowledge that businesses are struggling to source enough dollars, Buhari says that a devaluation and easing of capital controls would be akin to “murdering” the naira and send prices up. That’s already happening as manufacturers struggle to buy foreign inputs, with inflation accelerating to a three-year high of 11.4 percent in February.
Markets are betting Nigeria will be forced to follow oil exporters from Russia to Kazakhstan and Mexico and let the currency weaken. While the naira has been all but pegged at 197-199 per dollar since March 2015, forward prices suggest it will drop 29 percent to 280 in a year. The black market rate has weakened to 320.

Bruno Witvoet, the Africa President of Unilever, whose Nigerian subsidiary has seen its shares plunge 31 percent since Buhari came to power, said it would be “very insane” for the country to persist with the currency policies. Nestle SA says its local unit, which has fallen 18 percent in that period, has had to widen the number of banks it uses so that it can access enough foreign exchange.
Not all companies are gloomy. In January, Coca-Cola Co. agreed to pay about $240 million for a 40 percent stake in Chi Ltd., which is based in Lagos, and makes fruit juice and dairy products. Boston Consulting Group this month opened its first office in Nigeria.
“It’s an immense market,” said Geoffrey White, CEO for Africa at Kuwait-based Agility Public Warehousing Co K.S.C., which plans to spend hundreds of millions of dollars building four warehouse and logistics parks in Lagos and the capital Abuja by 2020. “You can’t really have an African policy without having Nigeria high up on the list.”
For Frontier Strategy Group’s Lion, Nigeria is too important for foreign companies to exit en masse.
“But a lot will depend on what happens with the currency,” she said. “For now, the opportunity cost of not being there is too high. That could change if the currency situations worsens. It’s definitely a pivotal time.”
Before it's here, it's on the Bloomberg Terminal.

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Re: Is Bloomberg Now Part Of The Wailers Team?... Buhari Which Way Na??? by Nobody: 12:32pm On Mar 30, 2016
Nonsense angry
Re: Is Bloomberg Now Part Of The Wailers Team?... Buhari Which Way Na??? by brize(m): 12:34pm On Mar 30, 2016
Oh!!! what a nice wail.

2 Likes

Re: Is Bloomberg Now Part Of The Wailers Team?... Buhari Which Way Na??? by senior123: 12:35pm On Mar 30, 2016
That's the point. They should go or employ our people as top managers and stakeholders in the companies. Not as cleaners, gatemen, drivers or secetaries. That is the only way we can derive value from them. If not they are just exploiting us as usual.

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Re: Is Bloomberg Now Part Of The Wailers Team?... Buhari Which Way Na??? by SleekAbokii: 12:38pm On Mar 30, 2016
buhari has finished Nigeria!

7 Likes 1 Share

Re: Is Bloomberg Now Part Of The Wailers Team?... Buhari Which Way Na??? by buJu234: 12:40pm On Mar 30, 2016
sameer1212:
Nonsense angry

Typical trait of a Nigerian youth that just passed through school with nothing in his head...

6 Likes

Re: Is Bloomberg Now Part Of The Wailers Team?... Buhari Which Way Na??? by urboy1: 12:40pm On Mar 30, 2016
“We were happy to lose money for a few years while we developed the business and opened new stores,” Chief Executive Officer Michael Mark said in an interview. “The straw that broke the camel’s back was not being able to get stock into Nigeria. You can’t have a clothes shop with no clothes. With all the other things, it just wasn’t worth it. It was impossible to do business.”[/size][size=8pt][color=#000099][/color]
Re: Is Bloomberg Now Part Of The Wailers Team?... Buhari Which Way Na??? by AZeD1(m): 12:51pm On Mar 30, 2016
Devaluation favours foreigners but not Nigerians.

2 Likes

Re: Is Bloomberg Now Part Of The Wailers Team?... Buhari Which Way Na??? by Nobody: 1:48pm On Mar 30, 2016
I am urging the National Secretariate to produce more wailers form because the clamour for it is increasing everyday










#ISTANDWITHBOOHARITORESIGN

3 Likes

Re: Is Bloomberg Now Part Of The Wailers Team?... Buhari Which Way Na??? by OreMI22: 1:55pm On Mar 30, 2016
SleekAbokii:
buhari has finished Nigeria!

He is just starting.....
Nigerians will hear nweee soon. When he begins his bogus 2016 budget.

4 Likes 1 Share

Re: Is Bloomberg Now Part Of The Wailers Team?... Buhari Which Way Na??? by obailala(m): 2:45pm On Mar 30, 2016
Bloomberg is all about devaluation; that has always been their target even before Buhari took over. Those guys have never said anything good about Nigeria and it's all tied to the refusal to devalue the naira.

1 Like

Re: Is Bloomberg Now Part Of The Wailers Team?... Buhari Which Way Na??? by OfoIgbo: 3:17pm On Mar 30, 2016
Nigeria’s appeal has faded as the price of oil, source of 90 percent of export earnings, has crashed. Growth slumped to 2.8 percent last year, the slowest since 1999, and will decelerate to 2 percent in 2016, according to Morgan Stanley. 

PDP took power in 1999 when oil was probably less than $15 per barrel and yet the economy grew by more than 2.8%. Bear in kind that Abacha and Abdulsalam looted Nigeria blind and yet PDP made these gains.
Now fast forward to 2015, with oil price more than double what it was in 1999, yet the Mumu at Aso managed to crash our economy to just 2.8%.

The Yorubas and Hausas spent the last few years castigating Dr. Iweala as incompetent. Now we have one oogly-eyed buffoon named Kemi Adeosun that graduated from South London Polytechnic, who couldn't do simple additions, now running our economy. Look at how Nigeria has fallen

2 Likes

Re: Is Bloomberg Now Part Of The Wailers Team?... Buhari Which Way Na??? by dunkem21(m): 3:21pm On Mar 30, 2016
Barca001:
I am urging the National Secretariate to produce more wailers form because the clamour for it is increasing everyday










#ISTANDWITHBOOHARITORESIGN

Nah .. How many times we wan reproduce forms?

The only one wey dey now na for Donald Trump!

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