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Nairaland Forum / Nairaland / General / Politics / Nigeria Was Right To Stand Up To JP Morgan (3787 Views)
Why Nigeria Was Progressing Under Jonathan - Ben Bruce / Buhari's Administration Is Not Responsible For JP Morgan's Removal. / FG Responds To JP Morgan Delisting Of Nigeria From Bond Index (2) (3) (4)
Re: Nigeria Was Right To Stand Up To JP Morgan by hinwazaka: 10:29pm On Sep 13, 2015 |
dustmalik:Another disciple without a direction. Do you know what it means for a CREATIONIST who is always engaged in debates, to be unable to quote the bible. Keep on following, like a fly into the GRAVE. 3 Likes |
Re: Nigeria Was Right To Stand Up To JP Morgan by Nobody: 10:30pm On Sep 13, 2015 |
PassingShot: Very soon, some people will have mental problem defending DD. 4 Likes |
Re: Nigeria Was Right To Stand Up To JP Morgan by mbhs139(m): 10:31pm On Sep 13, 2015 |
hinwazaka: What is this one saying again, shey we dey econs class ni? We already know that you know the answer, so please save us the stress, Biko nu, inugo? Thanks. 5 Likes |
Re: Nigeria Was Right To Stand Up To JP Morgan by 989900: 10:42pm On Sep 13, 2015 |
4Play: 3 questions: 1. Is the exchange rate obedient to the law of demand and supply? 2. If yes, what is the average (%) drain the importation of refined petroleum products and commodities such as rice, chicken, turkey, palm oil, sugar exert on our monthly forex demand? 3. Do you think these are products that we should be importing that much of, if at all? BTW, pls. kindly take your time to go through the links below: https://www.nairaland.com/2573929/poison-further-devaluation-naira https://www.nairaland.com/844884/solution-fuel-subsidy-wahala-look P.S. Let's let this stay strictly apolitical. 4 Likes |
Re: Nigeria Was Right To Stand Up To JP Morgan by Nobody: 10:49pm On Sep 13, 2015 |
hinwazaka:professor we have seen you. u can now clap for yourself and maybe in the process show us that you didnt just go look those up. lol. people proving needless book levels on nairaland, looking for relevance. 4 Likes |
Re: Nigeria Was Right To Stand Up To JP Morgan by 989900: 10:55pm On Sep 13, 2015 |
Ioannes: Probably dude has never even managed to run a simple successful business in his life. Forming textbook economist -- more like hot air. I guess the average trader in Aba, Ladipo, or Balogun, Naira for Naira, $ for $, would always run a more successful business than him all day, everyday. 5 Likes |
Re: Nigeria Was Right To Stand Up To JP Morgan by Nobody: 10:57pm On Sep 13, 2015 |
op. thanks for the info. that was quite enlightening. until we decide as a nation to pick up our dignity from the slimy gutters where past governments left it, we are just playing ludo with the development of this nation. we want quick and short fixes which look good now but will hurt us in the long run instead of us to work hard and fix the economy, a process which is hard, long and tedious but is more enduring. we have what it takes to be the pride of the black man, but we will never get there by listening to institutions like the world bank and imf, and succumbing to arm twisting tactics of jp morgan. 5 Likes |
Re: Nigeria Was Right To Stand Up To JP Morgan by TonyeBarcanista(m): 11:06pm On Sep 13, 2015 |
It is very unfortunate that some section of Nigerians, particularly supporters of the Buhari government don't understand the benefit of this trusted JP Morgan index. Some don't even understand what our bonds stand to lose/is losing since the announcement. On this issue, any sane mind will be against the clueless stand of FG. Let us be sincere, JP Morgan is very right. We want foreign investors but we don't want to play to the rules. For the umpteenth time, nobody asked us to devalue our currency. We were only asked to stop fx manipulation and the absence of fiscal policy. Bevista: 2 Likes |
Re: Nigeria Was Right To Stand Up To JP Morgan by 4Play(m): 11:14pm On Sep 13, 2015 |
989900: Re your first question, assuming no government intervention, exchange rates are a product of demand and supply. The Naira is facing pressure because there is less forex coming in due to the fall in oil prices. The CBN's actions ensure that even less forex will come in and, therefore, makes matters worse. When the supply of anything is low, if demand does not adjust immediately, that thing becomes more expensive. By becoming more expensive, demand is forced to adjust. If the government intervenes to ensure that the scarce thing is obtainable at a fixed price, demand would not adjust easily. Of course, there are no free lunches in economics so the government can only fix price at great costs to it and,usually, with the by-product that a booming black market is created. Hence, the divergence between the official Naira rate and the parallel Naira rate, the latter is the black market and will grow bigger the longer the government maintains its attempt to fix a price. Regarding your second and third questions, I don't know the percentages. I do believe that in an optimal economic environment, we should not import much of those items. However, the CBN's actions make it cheaper to import goods and therefore ensures that we continue to import things we ought not to import. I know the CBN disclosed a list of items it would no longer provide the forex for importers to import. However, such a ham-fisted way of curbing demand creates a lucrative market in contraband goods, excellent if you are transporter in Cotonou for instance. The best way to curb demand is through the price mechanism not by government fiat. As for your links, I will try and read these later. As far remaining apolitical is concerned, I have to say that I have been a user of Nairaland for 9 years and its remarkable how it's evolved from a forum where people genuinely demanded better governance to one where partisan posters spend all day making tendentious arguments. My view now is my view for the last 9 years - Nigeria is plagued by a political system that almost guarantees inept political leaders. Buhari will prove to be a bad leader just as GEJ, Yar'Adua, OBJ, et al. Those who can't see this are either being paid to be obtuse or are so desperate to believe that salvation is afoot that they have been rendered utterly delusional. 3 Likes 1 Share |
Re: Nigeria Was Right To Stand Up To JP Morgan by FOLYKAZE(m): 11:14pm On Sep 13, 2015 |
TonyeBarcanista: Do you down in your heart want Nigeria to become puppet to the western capitalist? 2 Likes |
Re: Nigeria Was Right To Stand Up To JP Morgan by Bevista: 11:26pm On Sep 13, 2015 |
TonyeBarcanista:If the CBN did not implement the controls they did, naira would probably be trading at N250 - N270 right now. This would have led to imported inflation. Either fuel prices or Subsidy would skyrocket or our Foreign Reserve would have gone below $25b by now. Worst still would be Speculative attack - those who buy and hoard dollars for purposes other than payment for real goods/services. Principle of Double Effect: "When faced with two evils, choose the evil of lesser degree". And - YES - I agree that the President should constitute his cabinet and Economic Team ASAP without further delay. Nigeria needs Fiscal Policy direction. 3 Likes |
Re: Nigeria Was Right To Stand Up To JP Morgan by LRNZH(m): 11:37pm On Sep 13, 2015 |
4Play: I read your initial comment on this thread and your retort to 989900. I am a PMB/APC supporter but I admire your level-headed assertions. I see a lot of good economic reason in what you have stated so far. I am just a bit alarmed that you see no opportunity for a turnaround of Nigeria's fortune with PMB (aka accountability, anti-corruption, reduced gov't wastage, increased self reliance) holding fort. Pray, do enlighten me on the reason(s) for your pessimism. 4 Likes |
Re: Nigeria Was Right To Stand Up To JP Morgan by 989900: 12:11am On Sep 14, 2015 |
4Play: As at late 2013/ early 2014, anywhere between 75-85% of our forex goes into those. Refined petroleum and subsidy alone took up between 40-50% In June 2015, in his comment, currency analyst and trader at Ecobank Nigeria, Mr. Kunle Ezun, pointed out that while the CBN’s decision was necessary, the effects might not be far-reaching due to the fact that Nigeria’s total foreign exchange utilisation in the fourth quarter of 2014 was $17.5 billion, with $9 billon (51.6 per cent of the total) expended on visible imports and $8.4 billion (48.4 per cent) expended on invisibles. A further breakdown of the visible imports revealed that oil importation accounted for 30.1 per cent of visible imports, industrial - 34.1 per cent, food - 13.8 per cent and manufactured products - 15.1 per cent. Oil importation, he pointed out, remained a significant component of the visible imports, constituting 30.1 per cent of the total visible imports. This implies that as long as Nigeria continues to import 100 per cent of its fuel requirement, pressure would not ease on the country’s foreign reserves and the naira. Emefiele maintained that the huge amounts of money that Nigeria spends on importing things that could be produced locally have become a significant drag on our foreign exchange reserves. “Most of you are aware of the often-quoted number of N1.3 trillion, which is what we spend on the average importing rice, fish, sugar and wheat every year. “Each time I ponder these issues, many vexing questions trouble my mind. Let me take the case of rice for illustration. Why should we keep importing rice into Nigeria when vast amounts of paddy rice of comparable quality produced by poor hardworking local farmers across the rice belts of Nigeria are being wasted and ignored? “What will it take for these importers to stop the importation and instead go into processing these locally produced rice? Why are these importers not utilising the vast expanses of arable land for rice cultivation instead of taking the easy route of importing rice? “Do we, as a people, realise how many jobs we are creating for other countries by ignoring local production and simply concentrating on imports? “How can we keep complaining about the depreciation of the naira when all we do as a people is to import everything from ordinary Geisha (canned fish) and toothpicks, palm oil, to even eggs?” he asked. http://www.thisdaylive.com/articles/emefiele-defends-new-forex-controls-says-n1-3tn-spent-on-imports-annually/213066/ Note: We now save/make/gain roughly 1 billion Naira daily on fuel subsidy since June. #lowoilprices If the exchange rate were any better, we would actually be paying almost nothing of the N22/litre the gov't currently pays/day on subsidy. Maybe at N85/litre, we would actually be paying some sum as fuel tax instead. Ironically as long as we import refined products, we will always be shooting ourselves in the foot. That was part of the reason why the Naira never gained considerably even when we sold oil at $110-$140/barrell. |
Re: Nigeria Was Right To Stand Up To JP Morgan by FreeGlobe(f): 12:17am On Sep 14, 2015 |
Excuses for Buhari. I wonder if passingshot would have help this opinion if Jonathan was still the president. demons 2 Likes |
Re: Nigeria Was Right To Stand Up To JP Morgan by mikolo80: 12:19am On Sep 14, 2015 |
ladyF:when zenith bank that he was CEO did not provide tractors for farmers or industrial park for manufacturers.now how many such loans has he guaranteed from cbn. abeg make we hear word. all these half measures not helping just postponing the evil day |
Re: Nigeria Was Right To Stand Up To JP Morgan by mikolo80: 12:20am On Sep 14, 2015 |
Bevista:why must we borrow when it'll only end up in private pockets 1 Like |
Re: Nigeria Was Right To Stand Up To JP Morgan by mikolo80: 12:21am On Sep 14, 2015 |
MizMyColi:how many bluff has Jonathan ever called in his life 2 Likes 1 Share |
Re: Nigeria Was Right To Stand Up To JP Morgan by likila: 12:34am On Sep 14, 2015 |
mikolo80: aaaaah! have you forgotten how he went to dance owigiri in kano? a few days after you bombed nyanya? that was a bluff. and it won him followers like me. aaaaah! have you forgotten? what of the passage of the same-sex criminalization bill. (something, antigay, i do not support by the way). was that not a bluff? Jonathan was like "in your face, obama". while buhari has been begging and grovelling all day before obama, and is now crawling to grovel before hollande. aaaaah! how can you ask if Oga Jona has swagger? when incredibly, and against all expectations, he picked up the phone and made a call to buhari, asking him to put on the yoke of Nigeria, sparing miserable lives like yours, and more worthy ones too! aaaaaah! is it that you are getting old or what? 4 Likes 1 Share |
Re: Nigeria Was Right To Stand Up To JP Morgan by Bevista: 12:39am On Sep 14, 2015 |
mikolo80:Look at this way. You have a job that pays you N100k a month,such that over the course of 1 year, you expect to earn N1.2m. Now, let's say your annual rent is N350k and your monthly upkeep takes N40k from your salary every month. To pay your rent, you will need to save N60k for at least 6 months. What if your bank tells you that they can lend you the N300k today and then take N30k from your salary over the next 12 months, would you consider that a good deal? Governments always have major infrastructural projects to finance, even when they have not earned the revenue yet. So they borrow and then assure their lenders that once they receive taxes or sell crude oil, they will repay. |
Re: Nigeria Was Right To Stand Up To JP Morgan by likila: 12:40am On Sep 14, 2015 |
mikolo80: dont you think loanees should give reasonable guarrantee of performance before public/shareholder money is entrusted to them? |
Re: Nigeria Was Right To Stand Up To JP Morgan by Bevista: 12:40am On Sep 14, 2015 |
mikolo80:Look at this way. You have a job that pays you N100k a month,such that over the course of 1 year, you expect to earn N1.2m. Now, let's say your annual rent is N350k and your monthly upkeep takes N40k from your salary every month. To pay your rent, you will need to save N60k for at least 6 months. What if your bank tells you that they can lend you the N300k today and then take N30k from your salary over the next 12 months, would you consider that a good deal? Governments always have major infrastructural projects to finance, even when they have not earned the revenue yet. So they borrow and then assure their lenders that once they receive taxes or sell crude oil, they will repay. If government cannot borrow, then sometimes even salary may not be paid. |
Re: Nigeria Was Right To Stand Up To JP Morgan by mikolo80: 12:52am On Sep 14, 2015 |
Bevista:chairman, chairman............ chairman I know how to use other ppls money but as you said, for major projects that will profit us I mentioned tractors and industrial parks not Dubai weddings, Chris aire necklace and gold iPhones personally I'd stay with a friend or face me I face you till I save enough for... I'd never pay 350 for rent. that's for suckers. there are options but keeping up with the Joneses na im de worry 99.9% of ppl as well as govts |
Re: Nigeria Was Right To Stand Up To JP Morgan by Bevista: 12:58am On Sep 14, 2015 |
mikolo80:Ok, I agree with you on the rent part, and also borrowing for the right reasons. |
Re: Nigeria Was Right To Stand Up To JP Morgan by mikolo80: 1:05am On Sep 14, 2015 |
likila:when go and check the date that One that ran into aso rock for Oct 1 for last 4 yrs I hate to say this if not for David mark Who put his don't down the drunkard would have capitulated like a crack head them born am well him get the mind? person Wey de fear world court we threaten am with Sierra Leone treatment him arrange himself sharp sharp aaaaaah! is it that you are getting old or what?your problem is you're too young to understand the intricacies of politics cos you prolly an arm chair warrior and the bolded above proves this via ur lack of class and home training 1 Like 1 Share |
Re: Nigeria Was Right To Stand Up To JP Morgan by mikolo80: 1:20am On Sep 14, 2015 |
likila:industrial parks and tractors are asset backed loans so very little exposure in the banks part do you know how much they write off as bad loans why can't they risk a fraction of this on our gaddem food chain instead of giving car loan to ppl who cannot afford it so unpatriotic (yeah yeah I know it's all about profits) but I wonder where you'll profit from when all your customers are impoverished 1 Like |
Re: Nigeria Was Right To Stand Up To JP Morgan by mikolo80: 1:39am On Sep 14, 2015 |
Bevista:if govt has to borrow, then they've screwed up |
Re: Nigeria Was Right To Stand Up To JP Morgan by Afroconnect: 1:40am On Sep 14, 2015 |
F-ck Jp morgan,these financial institutionss are greedy criminals,always exploiting dumb African nations. Good move by CBN boss. |
Re: Nigeria Was Right To Stand Up To JP Morgan by PassingShot(m): 5:41am On Sep 14, 2015 |
FreeGlobe:What is excuse in this one? Are you incapable of understanding the write-up? Btw, it's an analysis by a possibly more qualified person than PassingShot. Try to read it as many times as possible perhaps you will understand the points raised. 1 Like |
Re: Nigeria Was Right To Stand Up To JP Morgan by docadams: 5:58am On Sep 14, 2015 |
989900: Add to that the gains from curtailing corruption. These are what should really interest us instead of praising and defending the parasitic interests of multinationals like JP MORGAN. 2 Likes |
Re: Nigeria Was Right To Stand Up To JP Morgan by Nobody: 6:01am On Sep 14, 2015 |
micklplus: After claiming to know the answer, you came back to ask the questions you said you know the answers. Sorry you voted for a certificateless illiterate, I don't expect you to be sharper than he is. |
Re: Nigeria Was Right To Stand Up To JP Morgan by PassingShot(m): 6:18am On Sep 14, 2015 |
TonyeBarcanista:You have once again proved to lack the capacity to articulate your points. Making sweeping political statements where economic analysis is needed is a sign of someone lacking in-depth understanding of workings of the economy. So, stop hiding behind someone who has shown to have better grasp of the issue here. 4Play:What is the true value of the naira? Since no economy in reality floats its currency 100% (i.e, all economies, one way or the other engage in some intervention measures to value their currency), there is no incoherence in what the CBN is doing. Every central bank around the world has a mandate to step in at a pre-determined time to defend their national currency introducing some measures. It is a core mandate of all central banks. This issue has been flogged to death in my previous posts but just for emphasis I would reiterate some salient points. One needs to ask the fundamental question: what purpose does maintaining a higher exchange rate actually serve? 197 Naira to $1 allows us to buy foreign goods and services at a cheaper rate than would be the case at 240 Naira to $1 for instance. Hence, the CBN's policy makes it cheaper to import and one can say that the argument against devaluation is an argument for cheaper imports.Your argument would have been correct if Nigeria had immediate alternatives to importing. As things currently stand that we import far more in excess of what we produce/consume, allowing price of imported goods to skyrocket will not do the economy any good. It will immediately lead to hyper inflation, reduced productivity by industries and eventually to massive loss of jobs. I am sure if Naira exchanges for N400 to a dollar without any considerable increase in income, you will be one of those that will come online to shout about PMB's lacking in economic direction. This brings me to the practical issue: how would CBN intervention work in practice? The irony is that the CBN's intervention will be ineffective over the long run. If oil prices and, therefore, dollar revenue remain subdued, the Naira will continue facing downward pressure. The CBN's intervention will require either that it depletes the foreign reserves and or restrict access to the dollar. Because foreign reserves are insufficient, it is more likely to restrict access to forex. In doing so, we will see an exacerbation of the divergence between the official and parallel rates a la the Abacha era. During the Abacha era, the CBN's obstinate interventionism to stop the Naira from falling led to the official rate being 22 Naira to the dollar whilst the parallel rate was 85 Naira to the dollar. This nightmarish scenario is about to be repeated because of Nigerians odd proclivity of failing to learn from history.The CBN is already restricting access to the dollar for those who do not have genuine need for it (the looters and speculators). I agree the intervention cannot be for a long period. However, it is about the only thing the CBN can do for now to defend not only the naira but also save the economy. You must also agree that had the last regime been more judicious in managing the windfall from crude sales between 2010 and 2014 when crude averaged $100 per barrel, we would have been able to manage our situation better than now. So in practice the CBN's policy will not actually work and will prove a boon to round trippers and the highly connected. One can purchase $1m with 199m Naira at the official rate and sell the $1m at the parallel rate for 230m Naira. The beauty of Nigeria is that official policy is often designed to aid and abet corruption and nepotism.Where and how will the round trippers get the $1mn from? From the same CBN (or retail banks?) that is battling to save the naira? Even though I understand your point, the fact is the scenario you painted is almost impossible if CBN is resolute with it's conditions for accessing dollars. The most annoying thing is that the CBN's interventionist policy increases the chances of the Naira falling under further pressure! Remember that the Naira is under pressure due to a shortfall of foreign currency entering into the country due to a fall in dollar oil income. Foreign investment is a way to make up that shortfall but the net effect of the CBN's actions as epitomised by JP Morgan's decision is a reduction in foreign investment. It's no good claiming that this is only portfolio investment as this is highly correlated to FDI.It's a matter of cost benefit analysis at the long run. Better to lose $4bn from foreign investment now than to take actions that will most likely crash the economy. We still have FDI which is not subjected to JP Morgan's and the world Bank's manipulative and overtly skewed conditions. The FG can actually encourage and boost more local investments as we look more inward. This brings me to the political issue. I have to say that I read Passingshot's posts with amusement. He keeps harping on that if not for CBN intervention, the Naira will fall to 350 Naira to $1. Months ago and before Buhari became president, I told him that if he believed the gargantuan sums which it is claimed the GEJ regime stole - the $20bn within 18 months being the most famous - and that Buhari will prove an effective anti-corruption fighter, it will follow that Buhari will recover much of that money. In such a scenario, huge sums of money will be repatriated back to Nigeria and the Naira will not fall to 350 Naira to $1. This in a nutshell embodies the limits of propaganda and the sheer incoherence required to attempt to rationalise the dissonance between reality and propaganda.I still didn't see what amused you in my postulation. The president himself said about $150bn was stolen from Nigeria in the last decade alone. So, what amuses you about the $20bn that was claimed to have been stolen from NNPC? You should be knowledgeable enough to understand that to retrieve the stolen money is not going to be a stroll in the park. It will require enormous efforts and cooperation with the foreign countries involved and as such will take reasonable time. Or do you expect the money to have been retrieved just like that? And surely, when such money starts to trickle in, it will boost our economy one way or the other. 6 Likes 4 Shares |
Re: Nigeria Was Right To Stand Up To JP Morgan by eaglechild: 6:23am On Sep 14, 2015 |
MizMyColi:This is a question that all zombified Sai Buhari chanters will avoid like a plague. Initially when this issue came up they quickly rushed to open threads to blame GEJ claiming that the warning was issued in January. https://www.nairaland.com/2596304/buharis-administration-not-responsible-jp They were floored in that lame argument. Now they have started proclaiming that the delisting is the best thing to have ever happened to our economy. How pathetic and laughable. |
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