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BusinessDay 07 Jan 2019

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usinessday market monitor<br />

NSE<br />

Bitcoin<br />

Everdon Bureau De Change<br />

FMDQ Close<br />

Biggest Gainer<br />

Okomuoil<br />

Biggest Loser<br />

Cap<br />

N80 4.99 pc N31.5 -7.35 pc<br />

30,638.90<br />

Foreign Reserve<br />

Cross Rates<br />

- $43.05bn<br />

- GBP-$:1.27 YUANY-N53.06<br />

Commodities<br />

Cocoa Gold Crude Oil<br />

US$2,358.00 $1,286.60 $57.02<br />

₦1,349,713.56 -0.74 pc<br />

Powered by<br />

$-N<br />

£-N<br />

€-N<br />

BUY SELL<br />

357.00 362.00<br />

453.00 466.00<br />

404.00 415.00<br />

FOREIGN EXCHANGE<br />

TREASURY BILLS<br />

Market Spot ($/N) 3M 6M<br />

I&E FX Window<br />

CBN Official Rate<br />

365.35 -0.21 0.00<br />

306.95 12.41 13.35<br />

5 Y<br />

-0.13<br />

15.13<br />

FGN BONDS<br />

10 Y<br />

-0.13<br />

15.54<br />

20 Y<br />

-0.30<br />

15.24<br />

Currency Futures NGUS MAR 27 <strong>2019</strong> NGUS JUN 26 <strong>2019</strong> NGUS DEC 24 <strong>2019</strong><br />

($/N)<br />

364.89 365.34 366.24<br />

NEWS YOU CAN TRUST I **MONDAY <strong>07</strong> JANUARY <strong>2019</strong> I VOL. 15, NO 218 I N300 g www.<br />

g<br />

@ g<br />

MARKETS<br />

Nigerian banks<br />

not using equity<br />

to create assets<br />

BALA AUGIE<br />

Nigeria’s problem with<br />

leverage is the exact opposite<br />

of what emerging<br />

markets usually face. There’s too<br />

little debt in the banking system,<br />

and too much equity.<br />

The average financial leverage-<br />

which simply divides assets<br />

by equity, - for 13 largest banks<br />

that have released third quarter<br />

results-is 6.18 times.<br />

That compares with South<br />

Africa; 12.60, Brazil; 11.20,<br />

Malaysia; 10.70, Singapore;<br />

11.30, Hong Kong; 11.70 and<br />

China; 15.30.<br />

The country’s lenders are<br />

holding too much equity, which<br />

Inside<br />

Continues on page 42<br />

A Fixed income guide for<br />

Nigeria in <strong>2019</strong> Pull-out<br />

BUA, CBMI sign agreement<br />

to build new 3m<br />

Kalambaina Cement II<br />

Plant in Sokoto P. A8<br />

OMS denies allegation of<br />

underhand dealings in<br />

Nigeria’s oil business P. A8<br />

The curious case of<br />

Nigeria’s missing voters<br />

TEMITAYO AYETOTO<br />

The first time Babatunde<br />

Adebayo wittingly<br />

exercised his<br />

franchise, 27 February<br />

1999, he was<br />

a 31-year-old man laying his<br />

hands on what he could to secure<br />

his future.<br />

INSIGHT<br />

Then, Olusegun Obasanjo<br />

the People’s Democratic Party<br />

(PDP) flag bearer was in a cutthroat<br />

race with Alliance for<br />

Democracy’s (AD) Olu Falae for<br />

the presidential seat.<br />

The election which retains<br />

its standing as one of the mostparticipated<br />

polls garnered<br />

30,280,052 votes in its entirety,<br />

bringing voters turnout to 52.3<br />

percent.<br />

Before riding to power on<br />

the back of 18,738,154 votes,<br />

Obasanjo at a party convention<br />

in the city of Jos made it clear<br />

in his acceptance speech as the<br />

presidential nominee, that Nigeria<br />

had no business with poverty.<br />

That with the vast potential in<br />

human and material resources,<br />

his administration would strive<br />

to eradicate poverty. “Nigerians<br />

should in the next four years,<br />

be assured of, of least, the basic<br />

Continues on page 42


2 BUSINESS DAY g<br />

www.<br />

g<br />

@ g<br />

Monday <strong>07</strong> <strong>Jan</strong>uary <strong>2019</strong><br />

NEWS<br />

Apapa: Tough times for businesses, residents as<br />

rush to return empty containers heightens gridlock<br />

AMAKA ANAGOR-EWUZIE<br />

There are indications that the<br />

coming weeks will be very<br />

tough for residents and businesses<br />

located in Apapa port<br />

city, following the rush by importers<br />

and their agents to return empty<br />

containers after discharging their<br />

imported goods.<br />

Usually, the first few weeks into<br />

the New Year is characterised by<br />

surge in business activities at ports<br />

following the rush by importers to<br />

clear backlog of containers and other<br />

spill over consignments from the<br />

ones that were not cleared during<br />

the festive period.<br />

By implications, motorists, port<br />

users and commuters are expected<br />

to experience man-hour loss on<br />

their daily transit to the port city as<br />

the traffic gridlock persists.<br />

Also, shippers may be forced to<br />

pay more to shipping companies as<br />

demurrage for the containers and<br />

storage charges to terminal operators<br />

for occupying space in the terminals<br />

as their cargoes spend longer<br />

time without clearing them from the<br />

ports, and offloading to return empty<br />

containers back to the ports.<br />

This is coming few days after<br />

businesses, residents and commuters<br />

enjoyed relief during the one<br />

week Christmas and New Year celebrations<br />

period, where driving into<br />

Apapa became fun and free of traffic.<br />

A recent <strong>BusinessDay</strong> visit to<br />

Apapa-Ijora-Wharf through Western<br />

Avenue, revealed that few days after<br />

the resumption of work from the<br />

Christmas and New Year holidays,<br />

that gridlock is returning to Apapa<br />

roads gradually.<br />

Tony Anakebe, managing director<br />

of Gold-Link Investment Ltd, a<br />

Lagos-based clearing and forwarding<br />

company, who confirmed that<br />

Apapa traffic situation is expected<br />

to worsen in the coming weeks, said<br />

that the number of trucks coming<br />

to the ports is expected to increase,<br />

thereby providing temporary inconveniences<br />

to Apapa road users.<br />

“The last quarter of every year<br />

usually marks the peak of importation<br />

activities at the ports. Judging<br />

from past experiences, the 2018<br />

importation peak season is over<br />

but the importers and their agents<br />

will continue to clear the spillover<br />

while those, who were able to clear<br />

their consignments during the<br />

festive season, would have been<br />

able to discharge the goods in their<br />

warehouses, and ready to return the<br />

empty containers,” Anakebe said.<br />

According to Anakebe, the situation<br />

means increased business<br />

activities as a result of the spillover<br />

from Christmas imports, before the<br />

volume would be expected to drop<br />

especially for the remaining part of<br />

the first quarter of this year.<br />

Jonathan Nicole, president, Shippers<br />

Association of Lagos State, said<br />

that the poor condition of the access<br />

roads into Apapa and Tin-Can Island<br />

ports, have been a major challenge to<br />

doing business at the ports.<br />

This, according to him, has been<br />

pushing up the cost of doing business<br />

for shippers and manufacturers,<br />

whose goods and raw materials<br />

spend days and weeks before getting<br />

to their warehouses.<br />

Emma Nwabunwanne, a Lagos<br />

based importer said: “If traffic returns,<br />

trucks coming to evacuate cargoes<br />

will find it difficult to access the ports<br />

because they will be trapped on<br />

the road. This will be dangerous for<br />

port business and for the economy<br />

because the situation could lead to<br />

port congestion. It could also compel<br />

shipping companies to impose congestion<br />

surcharge on Nigerian ports.”<br />

Consumer firms to sidestep FX<br />

losses from naira volatility in <strong>2019</strong><br />

BALA AUGIE<br />

Consumer firms are set to<br />

sidestep any loss due to<br />

naira volatility in <strong>2019</strong>.<br />

Also, experts added that<br />

some of these firms had embarked<br />

on backward integration to reduce<br />

reliance on imported raw materials,<br />

but there are downside<br />

risks for those<br />

that have not hedged<br />

against financial risk.<br />

“Not all firms have exposure to foreign<br />

exchange risk. A lot of them have<br />

reduced Foreign exchange borrowing<br />

in the last two years. We may not<br />

see the magnitude of the hit of 2016<br />

that nearly crippled businesses,” said<br />

Christian Orajekwe, equity research<br />

analyst at Cordros Capital Ltd.<br />

“Nestle has gone far in the area<br />

of backward integration as it sources<br />

material locally,” said Orajekwe.<br />

Foreign exchange losses for the 10<br />

largest consumer goods firms quoted<br />

on the floor of the Nigerian Stock<br />

Exchange (NSE) stood at N396.05<br />

million as at September 2018, this<br />

compares with N15.<strong>07</strong> billion and<br />

N39.88 billion incurred in the corresponding<br />

period of 2017 and 2016.<br />

The Naira traded at around<br />

N364.41 per dollar in the Investors<br />

and Exporters (I&E) window on Friday,<br />

Data from FMDQ shows.<br />

Firms have reduced burden on<br />

operating profit as combined interest<br />

expense fell by 49.08 percent to<br />

FINANCE<br />

N25.13 billion in September 2018<br />

from N49.37 billion in 2017.<br />

That compares with an 86.65<br />

percent increase in finance cost<br />

recorded in 2016 financial year.<br />

Oil prices have slumped in recent<br />

weeks, as concerns mount about a<br />

glut of crude supply and fears that<br />

global economic headwinds could<br />

lessen demand.<br />

After reaching a<br />

high of more than<br />

$86 a barrel in early October, which<br />

prompted warnings that it would<br />

climb further to $100, the oil price<br />

has since plunged by more than<br />

30 percent.<br />

Analysts at Vetiva Capital Ltd forecast<br />

a +50 basis points rise in benchmark<br />

borrowing costs and upend in<br />

money market rates in <strong>2019</strong> will dive<br />

a modest rise in finance expenses.<br />

“This comes in contrast to the<br />

notable moderation recorded in<br />

net finance costs in 2018, supported<br />

by declining market rates for most<br />

of the year and benefits from the<br />

significant deleveraging exercises in<br />

2017 to early 2018,” said analysts at<br />

Vetiva Capital.<br />

“In tune with this, most consumer<br />

goods companies will continue to<br />

enjoy relief from any debt burden<br />

despite the mild uptick in rates on<br />

borrowing,” summed analysts at<br />

Vetiva Capital.<br />

•Continues online at<br />

www.businessday.ng<br />

President Muhammadu Buhari (m), receives in audience Governor Ibikunle Amosun of Ogun State (r), and<br />

Adekunle Akinlade, Ogun State governorship candidate of Allied People Movement (APM), at the State House.<br />

Why Nigeria’s oil production<br />

cost of $22 per barrel is no cheer<br />

DIPO OLADEHINDE<br />

The New Year day news of<br />

Africa’s largest producing<br />

country reducing its cost<br />

of producing oil leaves<br />

little to cheer as further<br />

investigation shows it’s much cheaper<br />

to produce crude oil in war torn Iraq,<br />

Saudi Arabia and Iran than in Nigeria.<br />

At first glance it all seems like good<br />

news when group managing director<br />

of Nigerian National Petroleum<br />

Corporation (NNPC) Maikanti Baru<br />

said in 2018 Nigeria has been able<br />

to reduce production cost from $27<br />

barrel to $22 barrel while listing milestones<br />

achieved by his team in 2018.<br />

However at second glance, Nigeria’s<br />

cost of producing oil of $22 is<br />

still far higher than Iran and Iraq and<br />

OPEC’s kingpin Saudi Arabia.<br />

According to data from energy<br />

industry consultant Rystad Energy, on<br />

average it cost Saudi Arabia less than $9<br />

to produce a barrel of oil last year while<br />

other OPEC countries like Iran and Iraq<br />

can produce for around $10 per barrel.<br />

Drilling down into what makes<br />

Saudi oil so cheap; Rystad Energy<br />

explained that Saudi Arabia only<br />

spends $3.50 in capital to pull a barrel<br />

of oil out of the ground. This amount<br />

includes money invested in drilling<br />

new wells as well as the associated<br />

equipment while production cost<br />

and administrative and transport cost<br />

stood at $3 and $2.49 respectively.<br />

Luqman Agboola, head of energy<br />

and Infrastructure at Sofidam Capital<br />

said after making much money<br />

from crude oil in the past Nigeria got<br />

carried away with corruption, inefficiency<br />

and security challenges while<br />

other countries were consciously<br />

reducing cost of production.<br />

“One major factor affecting Nigeria’s<br />

situation is the Niger Delta security<br />

condition which naturally increases<br />

cost of producing a barrel by nothing<br />

less than $5,” Agboola told Business-<br />

Day by phone. “If we become very efficient<br />

Nigeria should be having a cost<br />

of production of between $12 and $15.”<br />

Agboola explained that the second<br />

factor affecting cost of production<br />

is the Terrain.<br />

“The likes of Iran, Saudi Arabia and<br />

Iraq produce in the desert which is<br />

naturally cheaper so they don’t need<br />

elaborate preparations to drill a well.”<br />

An oil expert who pleaded anonymity<br />

told <strong>BusinessDay</strong> that the<br />

main problem facing Nigeria are<br />

issues concerning multiple taxes,<br />

government policies and insecurity.<br />

“Even Ghana and Tunisia are producing<br />

at $15 and $10 respectively.”<br />

“Government needs to put the<br />

right fiscal policies in place and stop<br />

playing politics with the implementation<br />

just like the PIGB,” the expert<br />

told <strong>BusinessDay</strong>. “Until we get this<br />

out of the way we would not get a<br />

favourable pricing mechanism.”<br />

Rystad Energy explained that<br />

Saudi Arabia also has low capital costs<br />

due to the fact that the country’s oil is<br />

located near the surface of the desert<br />

and pooled in vast fields, so it doesn’t<br />

need to invest that much in drawing it<br />

out of the ground. Contrast this with<br />

countries that have large offshore production<br />

bases like Nigeria, Norway<br />

and the United Kingdom, which incur<br />

significantly higher CAPEX costs of<br />

around $13.76 to $22.67, respectively,<br />

due to the need to build large offshore<br />

production platforms.<br />

Agboola admitted that it’s a bit<br />

complex when calculating cost of<br />

production because factors such as<br />

production per day or capacity to produce<br />

per day are always considered,<br />

while the size of a country’s oil reserves<br />

cannot also be taken into isolation.<br />

“This is why we can easily see that<br />

a country with higher oil reserves<br />

have cheaper production costs,”<br />

Agboola said.<br />

•Continues online at<br />

www.businessday.ng<br />

Cautious trading intensifies on Customs Street<br />

IHEANYI NWACHUKWU<br />

In the absence of near-term positive<br />

catalysts that could entice<br />

bulls on Customs Street, the now<br />

amplified political worries ahead<br />

of February general election occupies<br />

topmost the mind of investors’.<br />

Rising from varied degrees of stock<br />

related bruises witnessed last year,<br />

some investors are now approaching<br />

the Nigerian Stock Exchange (NSE)<br />

with their eyes on this near-term concern<br />

while other discerning investors<br />

are taking advantage of low valuation<br />

of stocks and strong market fundamentals<br />

to beef up their portfolio.<br />

Analysts at Lagos-based Cordros<br />

Capital said their outlook for equities in<br />

the near-to-medium term is negative.<br />

“We guide investors to trade cautiously,<br />

amidst absence of a near term<br />

positive catalyst and political jitters<br />

ANALYSIS<br />

… Stock investors lose N300bn in first trading week into <strong>2019</strong><br />

… Early rally seen in J/Berger, Vitafoam, Union Bank, others<br />

ahead of the upcoming <strong>2019</strong> elections.<br />

However, macroeconomic fundamentals<br />

remain stable and supportive of recovery<br />

in the long term,” Cordros added.<br />

From a year-open high of N11.721<br />

trillion, the value of listed stocks<br />

moved lower on Friday <strong>Jan</strong>uary 4,<br />

<strong>2019</strong> at N11.425trillion; it implies<br />

investors have lost approximately<br />

N300billion in three days.<br />

Also, the NSE All Share Index has<br />

declined by 2.52percent this year to<br />

30,638.90 points. It opened the year<br />

<strong>2019</strong> at 31,430.50 points.<br />

“In the year ahead, we expect a<br />

subdued performance in the earlier<br />

part of the year (pre-election period)<br />

and depending on the outcome<br />

of the election and smoothness<br />

of transition period, we expect a<br />

post-election equity recovery,” said<br />

research analysts at United Capital<br />

Plc in their <strong>Jan</strong>uary 2 note.<br />

“With positive sentiment due to<br />

end-of-year activities over, we anticipate<br />

a resumption of investor apathy<br />

and foresee this driving the market in<br />

the coming weeks. Therefore, we expect<br />

another relatively quiet session<br />

on the NSE with continued negative<br />

trading”, Vetiva analysts said in their<br />

<strong>Jan</strong>uary 4 note to investors.<br />

Despite analysts maintaining their<br />

bearish short-term outlook for the<br />

stock market this year, some stocks<br />

still kicked-off the first trading week<br />

on a positive note. Some of the stocks<br />

that have achieved over 5 percent gain<br />

in their share price this year are Julius<br />

Berger Nigeria Plc (15.67percent);<br />

Union Bank of Nigeria Plc (7.14percent);<br />

Custodian Investment Plc<br />

(7.96percent); Cutix Plc (6.71percent);<br />

and Union Dicon Plc (8percent).<br />

•Continues online at<br />

www.businessday.ng


Monday <strong>07</strong> <strong>Jan</strong>uary <strong>2019</strong> C002D5556 BUSINESS DAY 3


4<br />

BUSINESS DAY<br />

C002D5556<br />

Monday <strong>07</strong> <strong>Jan</strong>uary <strong>2019</strong>


Monday <strong>07</strong> <strong>Jan</strong>uary <strong>2019</strong> C002D5556 BUSINESS DAY 5


6 BUSINESS DAY www.businessday.ng www.facebook.com/businessdayng @businessDayNG @Businessdayng Monday <strong>07</strong> <strong>Jan</strong>uary <strong>2019</strong><br />

NEWS<br />

<strong>2019</strong>: Ondo signage agency threatens to<br />

remove illegal posters, billboards<br />

YOMI AYELESO, Akure<br />

Ondo State Signage<br />

and Advertisement<br />

Agency (OSSAA)<br />

has threatened to<br />

remove all illegal posters,<br />

banners and billboards across<br />

the 18 local government areas<br />

of the state.<br />

OSAA in a statement by<br />

its chairman Akinwande Akinrodoye<br />

notes that the law<br />

establishing the agency prescribed<br />

that corporate organisations,<br />

political parties and<br />

individuals to obtain permit<br />

before erecting them.<br />

Akinrodoye urges all affected<br />

individuals or groups<br />

concerned to remove all<br />

the billboards, banners and<br />

posters, adding that law enforcement<br />

agencies would<br />

be moving across the state<br />

to ensure compliance.<br />

The OSAA boss reveals<br />

that the measure deployed is<br />

not in any way to intimidate<br />

political parties but to enhance<br />

internally generated<br />

revenue of the state.<br />

he statement read in part:<br />

“It has come to the atten-<br />

EU seeks to extend<br />

protective steel<br />

tariffs to 2021<br />

European Commission<br />

on Friday<br />

pressed ahead<br />

with protective<br />

steel tariffs aimed at<br />

shielding European manufacturers<br />

against a surge in<br />

imports from around the<br />

world, due in part to metals<br />

tariffs imposed by the<br />

United States.<br />

According to the findings<br />

of a commission investigation,<br />

in 2018, President<br />

Donald Trump imposed 25<br />

percent tariffs on steel imports,<br />

a move that has seen<br />

global manufacturers divert<br />

goods to the European<br />

market instead.<br />

“The EU’s steel manufacturing<br />

industry, which<br />

is still reeling from a global<br />

glut that brought down<br />

prices, has been faced with<br />

an increase in imports in<br />

recent years, a situation<br />

that has been aggravated<br />

by the U.S. decision to<br />

raise tariffs,’’ the commission<br />

found.<br />

Following Trump’s decision,<br />

the EU imposed<br />

provisional 25-per-cent<br />

tariffs on 23 categories of<br />

steel products in July, to be<br />

applied across the board<br />

once overall imports exceed<br />

the average of the<br />

previous three years.<br />

The commission has<br />

now proposed extending<br />

these measures for three<br />

years, until mid-July 2021.<br />

On Friday it notified the<br />

World Trade Organisation<br />

of the move, which still<br />

requires the backing of EU<br />

member states.<br />

tion of the state government<br />

that across the state there are<br />

many outdoor advertisement<br />

and signs without compliance<br />

with the provisions of<br />

the extant law on same, which<br />

is, OSSAA law.<br />

“The law empowers the<br />

agency to enter into any property<br />

or premises for the purposes<br />

of carrying out inspection<br />

necessary for the proper<br />

administration of the law.<br />

“Equally, owners and operators<br />

of existing outdoor<br />

structures are required to<br />

regularise their signage and<br />

advertisement structures<br />

with the agency and if not<br />

done, the agency shall with or<br />

without notice as it deems fit,<br />

direct the removal of same at<br />

the expense of the owner.<br />

“It is important to stress<br />

here that any person who violates<br />

any of the provisions of<br />

the signage & advertisement<br />

law or does anything in order<br />

to stultify the application of<br />

the law or continue to be in<br />

breach of the law by displaying<br />

or permitting the display<br />

of unauthorised outdoor<br />

structures”.<br />

Nigeria internet users jumped 14% in year to November 2018<br />

ENDURANCE OKAFOR<br />

Nigeria internet<br />

users rose 14<br />

percent in the<br />

year to November<br />

2018, according<br />

to figures available<br />

from the Nigeria Communications<br />

Commission (NCC),<br />

regulator of the industry.<br />

The number of internet<br />

subscribers in the country<br />

rose to 108.46 million last<br />

November, from 94.82 million<br />

a year earlier, according<br />

to NCC figures.<br />

Active subscribers for<br />

data (internet) services on<br />

each of the licensed service<br />

providers utilising the different<br />

technologies showed that<br />

MTN reported 41.68 million<br />

internet users, while Globacom<br />

has 27.76 million subscribers.<br />

Airtel and 9mobile<br />

(formerly Etisalat) have 28.96<br />

million and 10.6 million, respectively.<br />

Among the mobile network<br />

operators, MTN and<br />

Airtel recorded the highest<br />

month-on-month increases<br />

in internet subscription with<br />

1.7 percent and 1.5 percent<br />

increase respectively. For<br />

9mobile total internet subscription<br />

of 10.1 million<br />

in October remained unchanged<br />

in November.<br />

Omotola Abimbola, a research<br />

analyst at Ecobank,<br />

said the increase reflected<br />

smartphone penetration in<br />

the country. “Cheaper smartphones<br />

from Asia have been<br />

a boon to internet penetration<br />

in Africa in general and<br />

created a new and fast growing<br />

income line for telecommunications<br />

companies who<br />

are now recording doubledigit<br />

growth in data revenue,”<br />

Abimbola said.<br />

He said the increase in<br />

the number of internet users<br />

in Nigeria “could also be<br />

positive for the economy as<br />

internet penetration typically<br />

aids productivity and ecommerce.”<br />

FBNQuest, a subsidary<br />

of the FBN group, said in its<br />

GoodMorning Nigeria publication<br />

on Thursday, <strong>Jan</strong>uary<br />

3, <strong>2019</strong>, that the increase in<br />

Nigeria’s internet users could<br />

ECOWAS Court filed 60 cases in 2018 - official<br />

Over 60 cases were<br />

filed with ECO-<br />

WAS Community<br />

Court of Justice in<br />

2018, the highest number of<br />

cases filed in a single year in<br />

the Court’s history.<br />

This was contained in a<br />

statement by the President<br />

of the Court, Justice Edward<br />

Asante on Friday in Abuja.<br />

Asante, who spoke in a New<br />

Year message, said this was<br />

compared to the 47 cases<br />

filed in 2017 and 45 in 2016.<br />

The court’s president<br />

said that a total of 115 cases<br />

were pending, by the end<br />

of 2018, compared to 89 in<br />

2017 and 63 in 2016.<br />

He added that this represented<br />

an increase in the<br />

number of pending cases<br />

before the court, saying<br />

the number of judgments<br />

delivered by the court also<br />

increased to 31 in 2018,<br />

higher than the 19 delivered<br />

in 2017 and the 29 delivered<br />

in 2016.<br />

He also said there was an<br />

improvement in the number<br />

of court sessions held in<br />

2018, which increased to 85<br />

… analysts link subscription rate to phone penetration<br />

from 79 in 2017.<br />

“Although much lower<br />

than the 105 held in 2016,<br />

which was a historic high in<br />

the court’s history.”<br />

Asante further added<br />

that the new threshold was<br />

evidence of the “increasing<br />

confidence in the court” by<br />

citizens in addressing their<br />

human rights violation.<br />

He decried the decision<br />

to reduce the number<br />

of judges of the Court from<br />

seven to five at a time of<br />

increases in the number of<br />

cases pending before the<br />

have been due to the fact that<br />

“subscribers usually patronise<br />

dual-SIM mobile phones<br />

and stay connected via separate<br />

data packages on multiple<br />

networks, in order to<br />

“achieve uninterrupted internet<br />

access.”<br />

FBNQuest said the increase<br />

in internet users “implies<br />

a density of 58 percent<br />

in a population estimated at<br />

185 million, placing Nigeria<br />

well above the African average<br />

of around 16 percent as<br />

indicated by McKinsey.”<br />

Data compiled from the<br />

NCC website show that the<br />

contribution of the telecommunications<br />

industry to<br />

Nigeria’s Gross Domestic<br />

Product (GDP) rose by 0.98<br />

percentage points to 8.39<br />

percent in Q3 2018, from7.41<br />

percent in Q3 2017. However,<br />

last year’s third-quarter contribution<br />

was less than the<br />

10.43 percent contribution to<br />

the country’s GDP in the second<br />

quarter of the same year.<br />

Nigeria’s GDP grew by<br />

1.81 percent (year-on-year)<br />

court.<br />

He, however, pledged<br />

the commitment of the<br />

judges, who assumed duty<br />

in August 2018, to faithfully<br />

discharge their responsibilities.<br />

Asante added that they<br />

would ensure that justice<br />

was done in a timely manner<br />

in spite of the reduction<br />

as well as the insufficient<br />

facilities.<br />

“We have already lined<br />

up a host of cases to deliver<br />

judgments in <strong>Jan</strong>uary when<br />

the judges return from their<br />

in real terms in the third<br />

quarter of 2018, driven by the<br />

non- oil sector, the country’s<br />

statistical agency said.<br />

The non-oil sector contributed<br />

98.62 percent of the<br />

growth in that quarter, with<br />

the oil sector contributing<br />

the remaining 9.38 percent,<br />

the National Bureau of Statistics<br />

said in a report released<br />

recently.<br />

The number of active subscribers<br />

for telephony services<br />

on each of the licensed<br />

service providers utilising<br />

different technologies including<br />

GSM, CDMA, Fixed<br />

Wireless and landline, show<br />

that MTN had 66.97 million<br />

subscribers, which is 40 percent<br />

of the total market share,<br />

followed by Globacom with<br />

43.27 million (26 percent)<br />

and Airtel having 43.12 million<br />

(25 percent).<br />

9mobile, the telecommunication<br />

company, which<br />

has Teology as it highest bidder<br />

has a market share of 9<br />

percent with 15.36million active<br />

customers.<br />

Christmas vacation to demonstrate<br />

the resolve to make<br />

a difference,” he said.<br />

He further assured of the<br />

court’s determination to<br />

work with member states to<br />

resolve the issue of the enforcement<br />

of its decisions.<br />

He further said the court<br />

was considering options<br />

for engaging with member<br />

states and the relevant authorities<br />

to address the concerns<br />

to enable the court’s<br />

effectiveness towards regional<br />

integration, peace<br />

and security.


Monday <strong>07</strong> <strong>Jan</strong>uary <strong>2019</strong> C002D5556 BUSINESS DAY 7


8<br />

BUSINESS DAY<br />

C002D5556<br />

Monday <strong>07</strong> <strong>Jan</strong>uary <strong>2019</strong>


Monday <strong>07</strong> <strong>Jan</strong>uary <strong>2019</strong> C002D5556 BUSINESS DAY 9


Monday <strong>07</strong> <strong>Jan</strong>uary <strong>2019</strong><br />

10 BUSINESS DAY<br />

C002D5556<br />

comment<br />

Bashorun J.K Randle<br />

Randle is Chairman/Chief<br />

ExecutiveJK Randle Professional<br />

Services Chartered Accountants<br />

• Continued from last week<br />

At the IMF/World Bank<br />

meeting, the lingering<br />

matter of the unpaid gratuity<br />

and pension of retired<br />

partners of KPMG<br />

was listed under “AOB” (Any Other<br />

Business). Unfortunately, there was<br />

no time to do justice to the issue. It<br />

was “The Punch” newspaper which<br />

took the wind out of our sail with the<br />

following front-page report:<br />

“Nigeria servicing debt with<br />

more than 50% revenue – IMF”<br />

(Federal Government of Nigeria<br />

proposes to borrow N1.5 Trillion<br />

in <strong>2019</strong>)<br />

“The International Monetary<br />

Fund on Thursday painted the<br />

precarious situation of the nation’s<br />

economy in particular and Sub-<br />

Saharan Africa’s, in general, going<br />

by how much the country and the<br />

region spend on debt servicing.<br />

According to the Breton Woods<br />

financial institution, Nigeria spends<br />

more than 50 per cent of its revenues<br />

on servicing debts, a situation that<br />

does not give room for other necessary<br />

expenses.<br />

Speaking at the presentation of<br />

Benedict Elujoba<br />

Elujoba is of the Centre for Promotion<br />

of Enterprise and Business Best<br />

Practices<br />

Africa is a continent in dire<br />

need of growth. The continent’s<br />

GDP of $2.18trillion<br />

in 2017 as estimated by<br />

the International Monetary Fund<br />

is less than the GDP of Germany<br />

($3.677trillion), a country of fewer<br />

than 83 million citizens and a land<br />

mass that is only slightly larger than<br />

one-third of Nigeria’s.<br />

In the meantime, Africa’s output<br />

is generated by 1.3billion inhabitants.<br />

It can thus be easily averred<br />

that the continent’s poor economic<br />

state is a result of the extremely<br />

low levels of productivity that are<br />

pervasive in most African countries.<br />

A major factor for Africa’s low<br />

productivity and consequent deplorable<br />

economic conditions is the<br />

low level of industrialization across<br />

the continent and a seeming lack<br />

of urgency among African leaders,<br />

which is evidenced by a slow pace of<br />

adoption of technology and modern<br />

industrial practices and systems.<br />

In an op-ed published June 15,<br />

2018 by The East African, a Kenyan<br />

weekly journal, Mr Akinwunmi<br />

Adesina, president of the African<br />

Development Bank, opined that<br />

Africa’s manufacturing sector is the<br />

weakest link in its ongoing integration<br />

into the global economy. He<br />

stated that primary products or<br />

comment is free<br />

Send 800word comments to comment@businessdayonline.com<br />

XKPMG (In English, Latin and Greek)<br />

the Regional Economic Outlook<br />

for Sub-Saharan Africa – Capital<br />

Flows and the Future of Work in<br />

Abuja on Thursday, Senior Resident<br />

Representative and Mission Chief<br />

for Nigeria, African Department,<br />

Amine Mati, put Nigeria’s growth<br />

rate for 2018 at 1.9 per cent.<br />

Mati said that although Nigeria’s<br />

debt to Gross Domestic Product<br />

remained low at between 20 and 25<br />

per cent, the country spent a high<br />

proportion of its revenue on debt<br />

servicing as a result of low revenue<br />

generation.<br />

For Nigeria, he added, the debt<br />

servicing to revenue ratio was more<br />

than 50 per cent while for sub-<br />

Saharan Africa, the rate was about<br />

10 per cent; a figure he said was too<br />

high and reminiscent of what the<br />

region went through in the period<br />

following debt relief at the beginning<br />

of the 21st century.<br />

Mati said, “Security issues are<br />

exacting a significant human toll in<br />

a number of countries. Debt to GDP<br />

ratio is increasing in the past five<br />

years. Public debt is diverting more<br />

resources towards debt servicing.<br />

“The interest rate has gone up to<br />

where they used to be around the<br />

year 2000 before the debt relief. The<br />

adjustment has relied on spending<br />

compression rather than revenues<br />

mobilisation. Meeting the Sustainable<br />

Development Goals will<br />

require stronger growth and more<br />

financing.”<br />

The IMF top-notch said that the<br />

sub-region needed to create 20 million<br />

jobs every year and added that<br />

the situation was even more precarious<br />

with the Fourth Industrial<br />

Revolution lurking around.<br />

“Policies are needed today to<br />

create more jobs in the coming years.<br />

Twenty million jobs are required every<br />

year in Sub-Saharan Africa to meet<br />

the SDGs. Job creation is complicated<br />

by uncertainty to which technology<br />

replaces labour,” he said.<br />

Speaking at the event, Director<br />

General of the Debt Management<br />

Office, Patience Oniha, stated that it<br />

was important for the government to<br />

borrow especially given the nation’s<br />

low revenue generating capacity.<br />

She contended that without sufficient<br />

revenue and with the recession<br />

that the country found itself between<br />

2016 and 2017, the government had<br />

no option but to borrow and spend<br />

the country out of recession.<br />

Oniha said, “We are borrowing to<br />

be able to increase forex availability.<br />

The government needed to borrow<br />

in order to spend the country out of<br />

recession.”<br />

She disclosed that the government<br />

had proposed to borrow N1.5tn in<br />

the <strong>2019</strong> fiscal year, adding that borrowing<br />

had reduced as the nation<br />

was now out of recession.<br />

Justifying this viewpoint, Oniha<br />

said that in 2016, the Federal Government<br />

borrowed N2.5tn which was<br />

approved by the National Assembly<br />

while it proposed to borrow N1.64tn<br />

in the current financial year.<br />

In <strong>2019</strong>, she added, the proposed<br />

debt of N1.5tn had gone further<br />

down. She added that the government<br />

had taken steps to diversify the<br />

economy and increase tax collection<br />

which she said was lower than<br />

in most countries of the Economic<br />

Community of West African States.<br />

The DMO boss differed with the<br />

opinion of a questioner who argued<br />

that the infrastructure in the country<br />

had been decaying despite increased<br />

borrowing in the last three years.<br />

However, a Non-Governmental<br />

Organisation, Social Action, has<br />

berated the government for its inclination<br />

towards borrowing.<br />

In a statement made available<br />

to our correspondent in Abuja on<br />

Thursday, Head, National Advocacy<br />

Centre, Social Action, Nigeria, Vivian<br />

Bellonwu-Okafor, said that the inclination<br />

to borrow by the government<br />

showed cluelessness.<br />

Bellonwu-Okafor said the recent<br />

statement made by the Minister<br />

of Works, Power and Housing, BabatundeFashola<br />

that ‘those who<br />

complain that we (FG) borrow too<br />

much should tell us where else to<br />

find funds’ was not only unfortunate<br />

but also a glaring admission of<br />

cluelessness.<br />

She said, “While it is distressing<br />

to watch the country’s debt profile<br />

balloon into pre-2006 levels – before<br />

Stemming Africa’s industrialisation gap<br />

raw materials make up 62% of the<br />

continent’s total exports.<br />

According to him, it explains<br />

(among other things) why a region<br />

that produces about 75 per cent<br />

of the world’s cocoa accounts for<br />

just 5% per cent of the nearly $100<br />

billion annual chocolate market.<br />

According to the Economist<br />

Intelligence Unit, a British research<br />

group, Africa accounted for more<br />

than 3% of global manufacturing<br />

output in the 1970’s but this percentage<br />

has since halved. This is a<br />

clear indicator of the urgency the<br />

continent needs to catch up with<br />

the rest of the world.<br />

The United Nations, as part of its<br />

efforts to redress this situation set<br />

aside 20 November of every year as<br />

Africa Industrialisation Day.<br />

The year 2018 theme, “Promoting<br />

Regional Value Chain in Africa:<br />

A Pathway for Accelerating Africa’s<br />

Structural Transformation, Industrialisation<br />

and Pharmaceutical<br />

Production,’’ is very appropriate<br />

considering the low level of integration<br />

and economic cooperation<br />

within Africa’s regions or among<br />

its nations.<br />

Take Nigeria, Africa’s largest<br />

economy for instance, in 2017 only<br />

two of its top 15 export destinations<br />

were African countries (South Africa<br />

and Togo accounting for 4.5%<br />

and 2.4% of exports, respectively)<br />

The low level of industrialization<br />

is the reason much of Africa’s<br />

exports are still commodities (raw<br />

‘<br />

Security issues are<br />

exacting a significant<br />

human toll in a number<br />

of countries. Debt to GDP<br />

ratio is increasing in the<br />

past five years. Public<br />

debt is diverting more<br />

resources towards debt<br />

servicing<br />

’<br />

materials) with very little value-add<br />

as the continent is unable to compete<br />

with other more established<br />

economies on quality, cost and scale.<br />

Consequently, Africa accounts for a<br />

paltry 2.6% of total world exports and<br />

exports account for only 7.3% of the<br />

continent’s economic output.<br />

Many economic experts agree<br />

that a major reason for Africa’s slow<br />

industrialization is that its leaders<br />

have failed to pursue bold economic<br />

policies out of fear of antagonizing<br />

donors.<br />

In spite of suboptimal policy direction<br />

and implementation in many parts<br />

of the continent, some multinationals<br />

and other manufacturing concerns are<br />

leading the charge for industrialization<br />

and regional integration.<br />

Taking another look at Nigeria that<br />

has struggled to find ways to increase<br />

non-oil revenues to counter the fall in<br />

commodity prices in the near term<br />

and achieve sustainable growth in<br />

the long term, the annual report of<br />

the nation’s central bank for 2017<br />

revealed that the top three contributors<br />

to Nigeria’s non-oil exports in<br />

2017 were British American Tobacco<br />

Nigeria (BATN), Olam and Indorama<br />

Eleme Fertiliser Company.<br />

While BATN led the top 100 companies<br />

with $145.48million (about<br />

N52.37B) worth of exports, it also<br />

brings the added value of having<br />

exported manufactured goods as a<br />

result of its investments in processing<br />

and manufacturing (across Africa<br />

and particularly in Nigeria) and its<br />

integration of local farmers into its<br />

operations such that rather than<br />

tobacco leaves, cigarettes were<br />

exported to Liberia, Cameroon,<br />

Ghana, Niger and Cote D’Ivoire.<br />

Olam International was second<br />

with $110.892 million (about<br />

N39.92billion) worth of Sesame<br />

seeds and fermented cocoa<br />

beans while Indorama exported<br />

$69.815million (about<br />

N25.13billion) worth of granular<br />

urea in bulk to Uruguay Brazil and<br />

Argentina.<br />

Other companies that contributed<br />

to the volume of manufactured<br />

exports include De-united<br />

foods with $30.568million (about<br />

N11billion) on indomie and mini<br />

me exports as well as Dangote with<br />

$21.496million (about N7.74billion)<br />

from export of cement. Dangote<br />

also continues to improve Africa’s<br />

industrialization drive with the<br />

establishment of manufacturing<br />

plants in industries including flour,<br />

sugar and cement across African<br />

countries and notably the multibillion<br />

dollar refinery in Lagos, Nigeria.<br />

Data from the National Bureau of<br />

Statistics put Nigeria’s total exports<br />

for 2017 at N13.59trillion. Though<br />

an improvement on 2016 figure<br />

N8.53trillion, it still leaves a massive<br />

and daunting industrialization and<br />

productivity gap especially when it<br />

is noted that crude oil exports accounted<br />

for N11.03trillion (81.1%).<br />

In commemoration of Africa<br />

Industrialisation Day 2018, the<br />

the debt buyback deal when the<br />

Olusegun Obasanjo administration<br />

paid $12bn to eliminate over<br />

$30bn then owed to the Paris Club<br />

of creditors – it is disheartening that<br />

the Buhari government seems to<br />

be bereft of ideas on what to do to<br />

generate revenue without resorting<br />

to excessive borrowing.”<br />

Perhaps it was this precarious<br />

state of affairs as a prelude to anarchy<br />

and fragmentation that provoked<br />

the late Apostle HayfordAlile the<br />

pioneer Director-General and Chief<br />

Executive Officer of the Nigerian<br />

Stock Exchange to issue a “fatwah”<br />

on his 80th birthday (24th April,<br />

2018) interview which was published<br />

on the front page of the “Vanguard”<br />

newspaper of November 9, 2018.<br />

Headline: “If I were God, I’d cut<br />

Zimboda’s blessing”<br />

“God says I can’t come from<br />

heaven above to come and help you,<br />

but if He identifies you as a good<br />

instrument, He will pump his goodness<br />

through you to others.”<br />

It is always a huge task to ascertain<br />

who is on the side of the angels.<br />

A case in point is the fierce contest<br />

between XKPMG and KPMG over the<br />

sponsorship of “The Match”(Golf)<br />

Tournament. KPMG outbid XKPMG<br />

by depositing the princely sum of<br />

U.S. $9 million. Alas, according to the<br />

report by The Sunday Times, it was<br />

money down the drain. It would have<br />

been better spent on retired partners<br />

of KPMG who are still awaiting their<br />

gratuity and pension.<br />

Send reactions to:<br />

comment@businessdayonline.com<br />

UN Secretary-General Antonio<br />

Guterres, in a message, called for<br />

inclusive and sustainable industrial<br />

development in Africa, saying it is<br />

critical for achieving the 2030 Agenda<br />

for Sustainable Development.<br />

Meanwhile in Lagos, Governor<br />

Akinwunmi Ambode pledged to<br />

continue formulating and implementing<br />

policies and programmes<br />

that would consolidate the state’s<br />

position as the industrial and commercial<br />

hub of Nigeria. In his address<br />

delivered by Mrs Olayinka<br />

Oladunjoye, the State Commissioner<br />

for Commerce, Industry and<br />

Cooperatives, Ambode said that<br />

sundry projects in the areas of security,<br />

environment, infrastructural<br />

renewal and upgrade were designed<br />

to create an enabling environment<br />

that would promote industrialisation<br />

and sustain the state’s status<br />

as prime investment destination<br />

in Africa.<br />

His Edo State counterpart Governor<br />

Godwin Obaseki said that his<br />

administration’s commitment to<br />

the development of an industrial<br />

park, a modular refinery and the<br />

Benin River Port in the state, will<br />

help accelerate Africa’s industrialisation<br />

drive. It is hoped that governments<br />

at all levels across Africa will<br />

improve on policy formulation and<br />

implementation to urgently close<br />

the gap in Africa’s industrialization.<br />

Send reactions to:<br />

comment@businessdayonline.com


Monday <strong>07</strong> <strong>Jan</strong>uary <strong>2019</strong><br />

comment<br />

Patrick Atuanya<br />

Atuanya is the editor of<br />

<strong>BusinessDay</strong>. Email: patrick.atuanya@businessday.ng<br />

Twitter: @patrick_atuanya<br />

It’s the start of the New Year,<br />

Nigerian stock are still falling,<br />

the feel good vibe around<br />

this time of the year is yet to<br />

ebb and yet I’m still thinking<br />

about the announcement made late<br />

last year about a merger between<br />

Access Bank and Diamond bank,<br />

with the potential to shake up Nigeria’s<br />

financial services sector.<br />

Whenever I think of the Nigerian<br />

Banking sector one thought always<br />

gets me excited.<br />

This is the pre provision operating<br />

profits levels for the industry.<br />

The thinking goes that if only the<br />

banks can clean up their books there<br />

could be potential upside for investors<br />

in financials.<br />

However there is always the fear<br />

of falling into a ‘value trap’, or by<br />

definition a stock that appears to be<br />

cheap because the stock has been<br />

trading at low valuation metrics such<br />

as earnings multiple, or book valuefor<br />

an extended time period. The trap<br />

springs when investors buy into the<br />

company at low prices and the stock<br />

continues to languish or drop further.<br />

The recent Access Bank – Diamond<br />

Bank merger has made the<br />

new entity to emerge to become the<br />

largest lender in Nigeria by assets and<br />

other metrics. With its huge bad loan<br />

portfolio which would need writing<br />

off, there is some similarity the new<br />

entity bears with FBN Holdings<br />

which used to be the largest bank<br />

by assets and is also dealing with<br />

bad loans for which impairment<br />

charges of N76.1 billion was taken<br />

C002D5556<br />

Investors should instead be asking<br />

themselves what kind of Nigerian banking/<br />

financial services sector will emerge from 2020<br />

(just 1 year from now), and who will be in the<br />

dominant position then to drive profitability<br />

BUSINESS DAY<br />

11<br />

comment is free<br />

Send 800word comments to comment@businessdayonline.com<br />

Unlocking value in the Access Bank - Diamond merger<br />

in Q3, 2018.<br />

Naturally the question for investors<br />

would be, is this new entity a<br />

buy?<br />

I decided to run some numbers<br />

comparing all three banks (FBNH,<br />

Access and Diamond), separately<br />

and then the combined Access and<br />

Diamond to see where they stood<br />

as at Q3.<br />

Basically plugging in the same<br />

valuation for FBNH for the combined<br />

Access and Diamond gives<br />

a share price of N11.38 and market<br />

value of N403.9 bn. Note that FBNH<br />

bad loan portfolio (NPLs at 14%) is<br />

probably much worse that what it<br />

would be for the combined Access/<br />

The table below tells the tale:<br />

Fig 1<br />

‘<br />

Diamond entity.<br />

Access Bank has signaled they<br />

would write off all bad loans in Diamond<br />

and no legacy NPLs will be<br />

coming into the new entity.<br />

Positives for the merged (Access/<br />

’<br />

Diamond) entity<br />

Low valuation<br />

If you believe that Nigerian banks<br />

or at least the largest banks should<br />

trade close to their book value then<br />

you could argue that N20 per share<br />

is closer to fair value for the combined<br />

name. Currently Zenith Bank<br />

(another bank which we believe<br />

will be closer to the new combined<br />

Access/Diamond) is trading at 0.92x<br />

book value.<br />

Scale<br />

Total assets of over N6trillion,<br />

and 29 million customers should<br />

give the new Access – Diamond<br />

entity enough levers to pull to drive<br />

profitability.<br />

Mobile money<br />

The coming mobile money,<br />

digital financial inclusion is an opportunity<br />

for the new bank given<br />

Access adoption of technology and<br />

the CBNs mandate to Telcos to<br />

partner with banks. Together, the<br />

two companies will have 29 million<br />

customers, including more than 13<br />

million mobile customers, as well as<br />

3,100 ATMs, 15.9 million cards and<br />

around 32,000 PoS terminals. Given<br />

how ambitious the Access Bank team<br />

driving the merger is, a MTN/Access<br />

Bank-Diamond Bank mobile money<br />

roll out would not be out of place<br />

and the impact on the bottom-line<br />

could be huge.<br />

Backward looking negative<br />

Sentiment<br />

Most of the negative sentiment<br />

that has followed this merger announcement<br />

is backwards looking<br />

and in our opinion misses the point<br />

completely. Investors should instead<br />

be asking themselves what kind of<br />

Nigerian banking/financial services<br />

sector will emerge from 2020 (just 1<br />

year from now), and who will be in<br />

the dominant position then to drive<br />

profitability. We think Access – Diamond<br />

will be a major winner in the<br />

evolving financial services landscape.<br />

Nominal growth/unbanked<br />

population<br />

The Banking sector (assets) has<br />

grown at circa 10% per annum on average<br />

since 2010 in Naira terms. This<br />

should provide steady lift to profits<br />

assuming more financially excluded<br />

are gradually being lifted into the<br />

formal space using digital financial<br />

services DFS.<br />

Profit levers<br />

Looking at the table above, the<br />

combined Access/Diamond has a<br />

lot of profit levers to pull including<br />

operating expenses of N130 billion<br />

and Personnel expenses of N58 billion.<br />

We expect these to come down<br />

with direct impact on topline.<br />

Experience from Intercontinental<br />

acquisition<br />

We think the Access Bank team<br />

has learnt a lot from the experience<br />

of swallowing Intercontinental Bank.<br />

One sign of this is reports that the<br />

Diamond Bank LOGO will survive the<br />

merger. This is a symbolic but effective<br />

way to keep a lot of the Diamond<br />

Bank customers from porting. Access<br />

Bank has absorbed six institutions<br />

in the past 15 years. According to<br />

management, the same team who led<br />

the past successful integration will be<br />

responsible for delivering the merger<br />

with Diamond Bank and overseeing<br />

the transition to the enlarged entity.<br />

Unknowns<br />

We believe that any unknowns<br />

from this deal (still awaiting more<br />

clarity) will be an upside surprise for<br />

Access Bank + Diamond Bank.<br />

Risks<br />

The major risk to our assumptions<br />

are execution and possibility<br />

of another recession in Nigeria.<br />

Also interest expense should<br />

increase in the near term as Access<br />

plans a $250m Tier 2 capital raising<br />

exercise.<br />

Send reactions to:<br />

comment@businessdayonline.com<br />

Dapo Oguntade<br />

I<br />

watched with keen interest<br />

the Vice Presidential candidates’<br />

debate organised ahead<br />

of the forthcoming elections<br />

in Nigeria. Obviously, the current<br />

government, to be candid, has not<br />

performed to the level of my initial<br />

expectations when it came into office.<br />

This is not to say they have done<br />

nothing worthy of commendation.<br />

At least, some of our rail lines<br />

are working again. There are many<br />

other initiatives such as the N-power<br />

and soft loan programmes as well as<br />

the conscientious efforts to develop<br />

other infrastructure projects to which<br />

the government deserves some<br />

credit. If anything, the level of waste<br />

and profligacy of the penultimate<br />

Vice presidential debate: Beyond the political rhetoric<br />

government has been curtailed to<br />

a great extent. However, as many<br />

would agree, the process of change<br />

is moving at snail pace and while<br />

the good intentions of current actors<br />

cannot be denied, the speed we<br />

are running at is way too slow for<br />

(i) where Nigeria currently stands<br />

and where we want to be (ii) the<br />

rate of expansion of our burgeoning<br />

population now forecast to exceed<br />

250 million by 2030 and (iii) the<br />

speed at which the rest of the world<br />

is moving at.<br />

I am not a particularly strong<br />

supporter of some of the government’s<br />

policies including those on<br />

infrastructure. I ask myself if the<br />

government can really bankroll<br />

the infrastructural needs of Nigeria<br />

by taking on various loans from<br />

international finance institutions.<br />

The Vice President, Professor Yemi<br />

Osinbajo recently estimated Nigeria<br />

needs about $1 trillion to modernise<br />

its energy infrastructure alone. The<br />

country is estimated to require $450<br />

trillion to execute on the National Integrated<br />

Infrastructure Master Plan<br />

(NIIMP). In my own estimations,<br />

there is only so much government<br />

can do and given the requirements,<br />

Nigeria needs to be moving with<br />

urgency. I am aware some measures<br />

have been taken to create certain<br />

structures through the Nigeria Infrastructure<br />

Fund and the resuscitation<br />

of the Infrastructure Bank. But these<br />

measures are just not enough. If we<br />

are looking to attract capital, we need<br />

to create the right legal framework<br />

and other measures necessary to<br />

guarantee attractive returns on investment.<br />

However what we truly need is<br />

a holistic infrastructure development<br />

strategy with creative policies as to<br />

limit our dependence on foreign capital<br />

to finance our infrastructure needs.<br />

This is a long term plan which cannot<br />

be done overnight.<br />

Our policies on agriculture and<br />

development of local industries are<br />

not robust enough. Our agricultural<br />

policies are at best disjointed and we<br />

lack the necessary support industries<br />

such as steel and petrochemical industries,<br />

to mention a few, which are<br />

the essential requirements to drive a<br />

modern industrialised economy. It is<br />

only when the essential industries are<br />

in place, then the resulting multiplier<br />

effects could lead to the creation of an<br />

even larger service driven economy.<br />

However, this is a matter for another<br />

day.<br />

There is a glaring absence, at this<br />

time, of any holistic, strategic and<br />

interconnected national development<br />

plan which accounts for all<br />

elements of monetary, fiscal, trade,<br />

foreign exchange, industrial, and<br />

capital formation and labour policies.<br />

Not to forget the legal, regulatory,<br />

constitutional and institutional<br />

framework necessary to achieve our<br />

aspirations. If those policies exist<br />

today in some form – maybe the<br />

national industrial revolution plan<br />

- then execution is lacking. There is<br />

need for joint concerted effort across<br />

all sectors, government levels and the<br />

private sector.<br />

Why was I so keen on the debate?<br />

I was interested in knowing if there<br />

is truly an alternative in this election<br />

cycle. While I am mindful that perfection<br />

might just be a pipe dream or a<br />

mirage, it is important to at least assess<br />

and critically analyse our options<br />

albeit from the limited scope of a time<br />

bound debate. Given my doubts on<br />

what difference Atiku Abubakar can<br />

make as the President, I was more<br />

interested in knowing what his running<br />

mate, Peter Obi, could offer.<br />

I could hear a lot of numbers and<br />

statistics coming forth during the time<br />

he presented. However, beyond the<br />

numbers, which should be expected<br />

ahead of such a debate. I felt the comments<br />

shared were light on details<br />

and short of any concrete plan in<br />

place to make a change. It sounded<br />

all too familiar – back to 2015 again<br />

– the numbers game. The arguments<br />

in my mind felt somewhat peripheral,<br />

on-the-surface and lacking depth.<br />

Further, I thought the comments<br />

on fuel subsidy was being in some<br />

ways economical with the truth and<br />

maybe playing to the gallery. It is true<br />

a more efficient system will provide<br />

additional savings but that distracts<br />

from the substance of the matter.<br />

Can Nigerians really bear a situation<br />

where subsidies are taken away?<br />

Let’s be factual, our refineries are at<br />

present not working.<br />

Note: the rest of this article continues<br />

in the online edition of Business Day<br />

@https://businessdayonline.com/<br />

Send reactions to:<br />

comment@businessdayonline.com


Monday <strong>07</strong> <strong>Jan</strong>uary <strong>2019</strong><br />

12 BUSINESS DAY<br />

C002D5556<br />

Editorial<br />

Publisher/CEO<br />

Frank Aigbogun<br />

editor<br />

Patrick Atuanya<br />

DEPUTY EDITORS<br />

John Osadolor, Abuja<br />

Bill Okonedo<br />

EXECUTIVE DIRECTOR, OPERATIONS<br />

Fabian Akagha<br />

EXECUTIVE DIRECTOR, DIGITAL SERVICES<br />

Oghenevwoke Ighure<br />

GENERAL MANAGER, ADVERT<br />

Adeola Ajewole<br />

ADVERT MANAGER<br />

Ijeoma Ude<br />

FINANCE MANAGER<br />

Emeka Ifeanyi<br />

MANAGER, CONFERENCES & EVENTS<br />

Obiora Onyeaso<br />

SUBSCRIPTIONS MANAGER<br />

Patrick Ijegbai<br />

CIRCULATION MANAGER<br />

John Okpaire<br />

DIGITAL SALES MANAGER<br />

Linda Ochugbua<br />

GM, BUSINESS DEVELOPMENT (North)<br />

Bashir Ibrahim Hassan<br />

GM, BUSINESS DEVELOPMENT (South)<br />

Ignatius Chukwu<br />

HEAD, HUMAN RESOURCES<br />

Adeola Obisesan<br />

The illogic and irrationality of Operation Python Dance 3<br />

Against the backdrop<br />

of reported setbacks<br />

in its war with terrorists<br />

of Boko<br />

Haram and Islamic<br />

State West Africa, the Nigerian<br />

Army on <strong>Jan</strong>uary 1 commenced<br />

a nationwide troop deployment<br />

ostensibly to tackle “observed<br />

upsurge” in security challenges<br />

ahead of the February <strong>2019</strong> elections.<br />

Exercise Egwu Eke 111,<br />

the codename for the operation<br />

python dance, will supposedly<br />

enable the Army to identify and<br />

stop any attempts by groups and<br />

individuals to cause problems<br />

through stockpiling of arms<br />

and similar infractions. On the<br />

contrary, it is needless, illogical<br />

and lacks rationality.<br />

Chief of Army Staff, Lt General<br />

Tukur Burutai, said Egwu<br />

Eke 111 would run from <strong>Jan</strong>uary<br />

1 to February 28. It seeks to stop<br />

threats such as the formation<br />

of ethnic militia and violence<br />

induced by political activities.<br />

The Army now claims there is a<br />

proliferation of such activities<br />

and groups that its deployment<br />

would stop.<br />

It sent out troops to the five<br />

states of the South East in 2016<br />

and 2017, claiming a multiplicity<br />

of threats in the area during<br />

the Yuletide. OhanezeNdigbo<br />

and other groups in the region<br />

dismiss claims of any unrest<br />

or threats requiring military<br />

intervention. There is only an<br />

increase in population in the<br />

Yuletide as indigenes return<br />

home from all over the world to<br />

celebrate with their kin. Instead,<br />

the military invasion served as an<br />

excuse to brutalise the populace.<br />

The Nigerian Army now claims<br />

the threats are nationwide. “These<br />

challenges coupled with other<br />

security threats across the country<br />

such as terrorism, militancy,<br />

kidnapping and banditry portend<br />

that dissident group and criminal<br />

elements could cash in on the<br />

situation to perpetrate largescale<br />

violence before, during and<br />

after the <strong>2019</strong> general elections,”<br />

the Army Chief stated through a<br />

spokesman. He added, “Even in<br />

the desert of Borno, don’t forget,<br />

the Lake Chad basin is there,<br />

python can also dance within the<br />

desert.We have desert python.<br />

So, python will dance all over the<br />

country this time around.’’<br />

What is the situation across the<br />

country? Boko Haram and other<br />

insurgencies have grown in intensity,<br />

making Nigerialose men and<br />

equipment on a weekly basis. Men<br />

are refusing mobilisation, claiming<br />

that the enemy has better ammo<br />

and therefore too dangerous to<br />

tackle. Expectedly, both the Nigerian<br />

Army and the Nigeria Police<br />

deny this. Despite the denial, the<br />

Nigerian Police sacked more than<br />

100 of its men for refusing mobilisation<br />

to the warfront.<br />

Furthermore, the governors<br />

of Borno, Katsinaand Zamfara<br />

have cried out about insecurity in<br />

their domains. Gov Aminu Masari<br />

of Katsina State lamented: “Our<br />

state is currently under serious<br />

siege by armed robbers, kidnappers<br />

and armed bandits who<br />

arrest rural people at the grassroots<br />

at will and demand ransom<br />

which, if not paid, they kill their<br />

victims. Zamfara has been in a<br />

state of siege for longer.”<br />

Nationwide deployment of<br />

soldiers such as Operation Python<br />

Dance usually happens in a state<br />

of emergency. The Governor of<br />

Zamfara State has called for a<br />

state of emergency in his state<br />

given the terror of banditry and<br />

low-intensity war by cattle rustlers.<br />

Danger walks on both legs<br />

in that part of the country.<br />

Operation Python Dance 3<br />

is troubling on many grounds.<br />

It sends the wrong signals to<br />

citizens. It was a colossal failure<br />

in the South East, compelling the<br />

Nigerian Army to effect social<br />

responsibility actions that were<br />

also misunderstood. Now it is going<br />

nationwide.<br />

First, the rationale for this action<br />

defies logic and rationality.<br />

Internal security is the primary responsibility<br />

of the Nigerian Police,<br />

not of the Army. Banditry, kidnapping<br />

and cattle rustling are within<br />

the province of police duties. Only<br />

a busybody armed forces would<br />

reduce itself to undertaking tasks<br />

reserved for the Police and other<br />

paramilitary forces.<br />

While Section 217 c of the Constitution<br />

empowers the President<br />

to involve the Nigerian Army in<br />

“suppressing insurrection and<br />

acting in aid of civil authorities to<br />

restore order when called upon<br />

to do so by the President”, we are<br />

not aware of the conditions “prescribed<br />

by an Act of the National<br />

Assembly” as the law also requires.<br />

Nationwide deployment of soldiers<br />

sends the signal of a state of<br />

emergency or even a declaration<br />

of war. The measure comes at a<br />

time when the armed forces face<br />

increasing questions about the<br />

efficacy of their operations with<br />

the many strikes of the allegedly<br />

technically defeated Boko Haram.<br />

Is it realistic to open many war<br />

fronts simultaneously?<br />

More importantly, Operation<br />

Python Dance 3 continues the<br />

militarization of civilian space in a<br />

democracy. It is extremely disturbing<br />

to have soldiers line the streets<br />

and highways of Nigeria, starting<br />

from the South East when the country<br />

is not at war. The background<br />

of a coming election makes it even<br />

more curious and incongruous.<br />

Nigeria does not need military<br />

supervision of the elections. That<br />

era ended as long ago as 1998.<br />

There are enough structures, from<br />

the Independent National Electoral<br />

Commission through the<br />

Nigerian Police and paramilitary<br />

organs such as Civil Defence, to<br />

handle elections. The insertion of<br />

the military into a strictly civilian<br />

matter such as elections is neither<br />

logical nor warranted.<br />

We will not join the conspiracy<br />

theorists on the real intendment<br />

of military deployment and the<br />

expected beneficiaries. We call on<br />

the Nigerian Army and the Government<br />

to end Operation Python<br />

Dance 3 immediately and send<br />

the soldiers to where the nation<br />

needs them. They have no role to<br />

play in the forthcoming elections.<br />

EDITORIAL ADVISORY BOARD<br />

Dick Kramer - Chairman<br />

Imo Itsueli<br />

Mohammed Hayatudeen<br />

Afolabi Oladele<br />

Vincent Maduka<br />

Keith Richards<br />

Opeyemi Agbaje<br />

Amina Oyagbola<br />

Bolanle Onagoruwa<br />

Fola Laoye<br />

Chuka Mordi<br />

Mezuo Nwuneli<br />

Charles Anudu<br />

Tunji Adegbesan<br />

Eyo Ekpo<br />

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Monday <strong>07</strong> <strong>Jan</strong>uary <strong>2019</strong> C002D5556 BUSINESS DAY 13


14 BUSINESS DAY<br />

24th, five new opposition parties<br />

have been formed. They join an already<br />

crowded field. The new party<br />

leaders include disaffected ministers,<br />

two former army commanders<br />

and a rabble-rousing activist. All<br />

speak of replacing Mr Netanyahu.<br />

Not one of them has a real shot.<br />

Under Mr Netanyahu, Likud has<br />

never received more than a quarter<br />

of the national vote. Yet it has dominated<br />

Israeli politics with the help<br />

of smaller nationalist and religious<br />

parties. Moderates, meanwhile,<br />

spread their votes more evenly and<br />

widely. In this election they can<br />

choose between no fewer than six<br />

vaguely centrist parties, none of<br />

which gets more than 13% in the<br />

polls. Were they running as one they<br />

would probably gather 40% of the<br />

vote, overtaking Likud. But none of<br />

the party leaders is prepared to serve<br />

as number two.<br />

That is the case even though the<br />

leaders seem to have few discernible<br />

differences over policy—or much of<br />

an agenda at all. They offer no new<br />

solutions to Israel’s intractable conwww.businessday.ng<br />

https://www.facebook.com/businessdayng @Businessdayng<br />

Monday <strong>07</strong> <strong>Jan</strong>uary <strong>2019</strong><br />

In Association With<br />

The Trump Show, season two<br />

What to expect from the second half of Donald Trump’s first term<br />

Thus far the president has been lucky. It may not last<br />

DONALD TRUMP’S<br />

nerve-jangling presidential<br />

term began<br />

its second half with a<br />

federal-government<br />

shut down, seesawing markets and<br />

the ejection of reassuring cabinet<br />

members like Generals John Kelly<br />

and James Mattis. As Mr Trump’s opponents<br />

called this a disaster, his supporters<br />

lambasted their criticism as<br />

hysterical—wasn’t everybody saying<br />

a year ago that it was sinister to have<br />

so many generals in the cabinet?<br />

A calm assessment of the Trump<br />

era requires those who admire America<br />

to unplug themselves from the<br />

news cycle for a minute. As the next<br />

phase of the president’s four-year<br />

term begins, three questions need<br />

answering. How bad is it really? How<br />

bad could it get? And how should<br />

Americans, and foreign governments,<br />

prepare for the Trump Show’s<br />

second season?<br />

Mr Trump is so polarising that his<br />

critics brush off anything that might<br />

count as an achievement. Shortly<br />

before Christmas he signed a useful,<br />

bipartisan criminal-justice reform<br />

into law. Some of the regulatory<br />

changes to schools and companies<br />

have been helpful. In foreign affairs<br />

the attempt to change the terms<br />

of America’s economic relations<br />

with China is welcome, too. But<br />

any orthodox Republican president<br />

enjoying the backing of both houses<br />

of Congress might have achieved as<br />

much—or more.<br />

What marks out Mr Trump’s first<br />

two years is his irrepressible instinct<br />

to act as a wrecker. His destructive<br />

tactics were supposed to topple a<br />

self-serving Washington elite, but the<br />

president’s bullying, lying and sleaze<br />

have filled the swamp faster than it<br />

has drained. Where he has been at his<br />

most Trumpish—on immigration,<br />

North Korea, NATO—the knocking<br />

down has yet to lead to much renewal.<br />

Mr Trump came to office with a<br />

mandate to rewrite America’s immigration<br />

rules and make them meritbased,<br />

as in Canada. Yet because<br />

he and his staff are ham-fisted with<br />

Congress, that chance is now gone.<br />

Kim Jong Un still has his weapons<br />

programme and, having conceded<br />

nothing, now demands a reward<br />

from America. Europeans may pay<br />

ing criticised by pundits for failing<br />

to build a southern border-wall.<br />

The Afghanistan withdrawal was<br />

later walked back and the Syrian one<br />

blurred, with the result that nobody<br />

can say what America’s policy is<br />

(though the harm will remain). Now<br />

that his cabinet has lost its steadying<br />

generals, expect even more such<br />

destructive ambiguity.<br />

Moreover, when Mr Trump acts,<br />

he does not recognise boundaries,<br />

legal or ethical. He has already been<br />

implicated in two felonies and several<br />

of his former advisers are in or<br />

heading for prison. As his troubles<br />

mount, he will become less bound by<br />

institutional machinery. If Mr Mueller<br />

indicts a member of Mr Trump’s<br />

family, the president may instruct his<br />

attorney-general to end the whole<br />

thing and then make egregious use of<br />

his pardon powers. House Democrats<br />

might unearth documents suggesting<br />

that the Trump Organisation was used<br />

to launder Russian money. What then?<br />

Confusion, chaos and normbreaking<br />

are how Mr Trump operates.<br />

If the federal government really<br />

were a business, the turnover of senior<br />

jobs in the White House would<br />

have investors dumping the stock.<br />

Mr Trump’s interventions often accomplish<br />

the opposite of what he<br />

intends. His criticism of the Federal<br />

Reserve chairman, Jerome Powell,<br />

for being too hawkish will, if anything,<br />

only make an independentminded<br />

Fed more hawkish still. His<br />

own negotiators fear that he might<br />

undermine them if the mood takes<br />

him. Most of the senior staff who<br />

more into their defence budgets at<br />

the president’s urging. But America<br />

has spent half a century and billions<br />

of dollars building its relations with<br />

Europe. In just two years Mr Trump<br />

has taken a sledgehammer to them.<br />

The next two years could be<br />

worse. For a start, Mr Trump’s luck<br />

may be about to turn. In the first half<br />

of his term he has been fortunate.<br />

He was not faced by any shock of<br />

the sort his two predecessors had to<br />

deal with: 9/11, Afghanistan, Iraq,<br />

the financial crisis, Syria. Electoral<br />

triumph, a roaring economy and<br />

surging financial markets gave him<br />

an air of invulnerability.<br />

Even without a shock, the weather<br />

has changed. Although the economy<br />

is still fairly strong, the sugar-high<br />

from the tax cut is fading and growth<br />

is slowing in China and Europe.<br />

Markets, which Mr Trump heralds<br />

as a proxy for economic success, are<br />

volatile (see article). Republicans<br />

were trounced in the House in the<br />

mid-terms. The new Democratic majority<br />

will investigate the president’s<br />

conduct, and at some point Robert<br />

Mueller, the special counsel, will<br />

complete his report on links between<br />

Russia and the Trump campaign.<br />

Over the past two years, Mr<br />

Trump has shown that he reacts to<br />

any adversity by lashing out without<br />

regard to the consequences. Neither<br />

the magnitude nor target of his<br />

response need bear on the provocation.<br />

In the past few weeks he has<br />

announced troop withdrawals from<br />

Syria and Afghanistan. Seemingly,<br />

this was partly because he was behave<br />

left the administration have said<br />

that he is selfabsorbed, distracted and<br />

ill-informed. He demands absolute<br />

loyalty and, when he gets it, offers<br />

none in return.<br />

How should Congress and the<br />

world prepare for what is coming?<br />

Foreign allies should engage and<br />

hedge; work with Mr Trump when<br />

they can, but have a plan B in case he<br />

lets them down. Democrats in control<br />

of the House have a fine line to tread.<br />

Some are calling for Mr Trump to<br />

be impeached but, as of now, the<br />

Republican-controlled Senate will<br />

not convict him. As things stand, it<br />

would be better if the verdict comes<br />

at the ballot box. Instead, they must<br />

hold him to account, but not play into<br />

his desire that they serve as props in<br />

his permanent campaign.<br />

Many Republicans in the Senate<br />

find themselves in a now familiar<br />

dilemma. Speak out and risk losing<br />

their seats in a primary; stay silent<br />

and risk losing their party and their<br />

consciences. More should follow Mitt<br />

Romney, who marked his arrival in<br />

the Senate this week by criticising<br />

Mr Trump’s conduct. His return to<br />

politics is welcome, as is the vibrant<br />

opposition to Mr Trump by activists<br />

and civil society evident in the midterms.<br />

Assailed by his presidency,<br />

American democracy is fighting back.<br />

After two chaotic years, it is clear<br />

that the Trump Show is something<br />

to be endured. Perhaps the luck will<br />

hold and America and the world will<br />

muddle through. But luck is a slender<br />

hope on which to build prosperity<br />

and peace.<br />

Too many challengers<br />

Bruised, not broken<br />

Israel’s opposition<br />

could defeat Binyamin<br />

Netanyahu—if they united<br />

But nobody wants to be number two<br />

ACCORDING TO POLLS, most<br />

Israelis do not want Binyamin<br />

Netanyahu, their prime minister,<br />

to serve another term. Many are<br />

fed up with the corruption allegations<br />

that have been swirling around<br />

him for months. He may soon be<br />

indicted on charges of bribery and<br />

breach of trust. Yet Mr Netanyahu’s<br />

Likud party is still on track to win the<br />

next election, which he has called for<br />

April 9th (seven months earlier than<br />

originally scheduled), in part to head<br />

off the charges.<br />

Mr Netanyahu can boast of peace<br />

and prosperity on his watch, but if he<br />

remains prime minister it will be in<br />

large part because the opposition is<br />

hopelessly divided. Since the election<br />

was announced on December<br />

Continues on page 15


Monday <strong>07</strong> <strong>Jan</strong>uary <strong>2019</strong><br />

www.businessday.ng https://www.facebook.com/businessdayng @Businessdayng<br />

BUSINESS DAY<br />

15<br />

In Association With<br />

EUR not safe yet<br />

The euro still needs fixing<br />

How to make the single currency’s next 20 years better than the first 20<br />

THE BIRTH of the<br />

euro on <strong>Jan</strong>uary 1st<br />

1999 was at once<br />

unifying and divisive.<br />

It united Europe’s<br />

leaders, who hailed a<br />

new era of tighter integration,<br />

easier trade and faster growth,<br />

thinking they were building a<br />

currency to rival the dollar. But<br />

the euro divided economists,<br />

some of whom warned that<br />

binding Europe’s disparate<br />

economies to a single monetary<br />

policy was an act of historic folly.<br />

They preferred a comparison<br />

with emerging markets, whose<br />

dependence on distant central<br />

banks fosters frequent crises.<br />

Milton Friedman predicted<br />

that a downturn in the global<br />

economy could pull the new<br />

currency apart.<br />

For years the sovereign-debt<br />

crisis that engulfed Europe after<br />

2010 seemed close to fulfilling<br />

Friedman’s prediction. But<br />

the euro did not collapse. It<br />

stumbled on, often thanks to<br />

last-minute fixes by leaders<br />

who, though deeply divided,<br />

showed a steely commitment<br />

to saving the single currency.<br />

Public support for the project<br />

remains strong. Over three in<br />

five euro-zone residents say the<br />

single currency is good for their<br />

country. Three-quarters say it is<br />

good for the EU.<br />

However, that support does<br />

not reflect economic or policy<br />

success. Euro-zone countries<br />

have never looked as if they all<br />

belong in one currency union,<br />

stripped of independent monetary<br />

policies and the ability<br />

to devalue their exchange<br />

rates. Italy’s living standards are<br />

barely higher than they were in<br />

1999. Spain and Ireland have<br />

recently enjoyed decent growth<br />

following laudable structural<br />

reforms, but their adjustments<br />

have been long and hard, and<br />

remain incomplete. In Spain<br />

the youth unemployment rate<br />

is 35%. Wage growth is slow<br />

almost everywhere.<br />

The euro’s history is littered<br />

with errors by technocrats. The<br />

worst was to fail to recognise<br />

quickly in 2010 that Greece’s<br />

debts were unpayable and that<br />

its bondholders would have to<br />

bear losses. Greece has endured<br />

a prolonged depression and its<br />

economy is almost a quarter<br />

smaller than it was a decade ago.<br />

The European Central Bank has<br />

an ignominious history of setting<br />

monetary policy that is too<br />

restrictive for the euro zone as<br />

a whole, let alone its depressed<br />

areas. It was slow to react to the<br />

financial crash in 2008, arrogantly<br />

viewing it as an American<br />

problem. In 2011 it helped to tip<br />

Europe back into recession by<br />

raising interest rates too early.<br />

The ECB’s finest hour—Mario<br />

Draghi’s promise in 2012 to do<br />

“whatever it takes” to save the<br />

euro—was an impromptu act.<br />

Leaders may be committed to<br />

the euro, but they cannot agree<br />

on how to fix it (see Briefing).<br />

The crisis exposed the depth of<br />

the divide between creditor and<br />

debtor countries: northern voters<br />

simply will not pay for fecklessness<br />

elsewhere. Economic<br />

stagnation helped populists to<br />

power in Greece and Italy. Because<br />

reform has been slow, the<br />

crisis could flare up again. If so,<br />

Europe will have to withstand it<br />

in a political environment that is<br />

much more divided than it was<br />

in 2010.<br />

Technically, the path to a<br />

stable euro is clear. The first<br />

step is ensuring that banks and<br />

sovereigns are less liable to drag<br />

each other down in a crisis.<br />

Europe’s banks are parochial,<br />

preferring to hold the sovereign<br />

debt of their respective home<br />

countries. Instead, they should<br />

be encouraged to hold a new<br />

safe asset, composed of the debt<br />

of many member states. Otherwise,<br />

when a country gets into<br />

debt trouble, its banks will face<br />

a simultaneous crisis, damaging<br />

the economy. Similarly, sovereigns<br />

must be shielded from<br />

banking crises. A central fund<br />

to recapitalise distressed banks<br />

is already being beefed up, but<br />

deposit insurance should also<br />

be pooled. This has been more<br />

or less agreed on in principle,<br />

but countries disagree over the<br />

speed of the transition.<br />

Other necessary reforms are<br />

still more contentious. If the<br />

euro zone’s disparate economies<br />

are to see off local economic<br />

shocks, like collapsing<br />

housing bubbles, they need<br />

a replacement for their lost<br />

monetary independence. Were<br />

countries to run a tight ship<br />

during booms, in line with the<br />

EU’s rules, they would have<br />

more leeway for fiscal stimulus<br />

in crunches. But that advice is of<br />

no use to countries like Italy that<br />

are hemmed in by decades-old<br />

debts. Residents of indebted<br />

states cannot be expected to<br />

endure perpetual stagnation.<br />

Instead, the euro zone<br />

should have some centralised<br />

counter-cyclical fiscal policy,<br />

as Emmanuel Macron, France’s<br />

president, has called for. This<br />

does not mean letting countries<br />

off reform; it should not mean<br />

paying off their creditors. But it<br />

might include targeted investment<br />

spending, say, or shared<br />

unemployment insurance, to<br />

shield against deep economic<br />

downturns. The aim should<br />

be to avoid a repeat of the selfdefeating<br />

fiscal contractions<br />

after the latest crisis.<br />

This degree of risk-sharing<br />

may involve more transfers<br />

than northern voters can bear.<br />

But without it, the euro’s next<br />

20 years will be little better than<br />

the last 20. And when crisis<br />

strikes, Europe’s leaders may<br />

find that political will, however<br />

substantial it was last time, is<br />

not enough.<br />

Israel’s opposition could<br />

defeat Binyamin...<br />

Continued from page 14<br />

flict with the Palestinians. The most<br />

popular new party, Israel Resilience,<br />

is led by Benny Gantz (pictured), a<br />

decorated former general. He has so<br />

far refused interview requests, saying<br />

his party’s aim is “to strengthen<br />

the state of Israel as a Jewish and<br />

democratic state in the spirit of the<br />

Zionist vision”. Other party leaders<br />

offer similar bromides on the need<br />

for unity and re-ordering national<br />

priorities.<br />

The Labour Party has long dominated<br />

Israeli politics, espousing a<br />

socialist ideology. In recent years,<br />

though, it has tacked towards the<br />

centre and formed an alliance with<br />

Hatnuah, another centrist party,<br />

re-branding themselves the “Zionist<br />

Union”. On <strong>Jan</strong>uary 1st the allies<br />

split. Labour, which has had a series<br />

of lacklustre leaders, has lost most of<br />

its support. It has not led a government<br />

since 2001 and now attracts<br />

under 10% of the vote, according<br />

to polls.<br />

The other centrist parties are<br />

younger and built around ambitious<br />

leaders, such as Moshe Kahlon, the<br />

finance minister, who heads the Kulanu<br />

party, and Orly Levi-Abekasis,<br />

a three-term Knesset member, who<br />

leads the Gesher party. They hope to<br />

create their own power base. Many<br />

of Mr Netanyahu’s opponents seem<br />

to be waiting, not for the election,<br />

but for the legal system to bring<br />

him down. In the coming months<br />

the attorney-general is expected to<br />

hold pre-trial hearings over whether<br />

to charge the prime minister.<br />

Mr Netanyahu says he will not<br />

step down if indicted. An election<br />

victory would give him some political<br />

cover to stay on. But his opponents<br />

believe this is the beginning of<br />

the end of his time in office, which<br />

in July would surpass the record set<br />

by David Ben-Gurion, Israel’s first<br />

prime minister. Some on the right<br />

spy an opportunity. On December<br />

29th Naftali Bennett and Ayelet<br />

Shaked, the education and justice<br />

ministers, announced the formation<br />

of a new party, called the New<br />

Right, which will field religious and<br />

secular candidates. Mr Bennett, at<br />

least, thinks that Mr Netanyahu’s job<br />

is up for grabs.


16 BUSINESS DAY<br />

www.businessday.ng https://www.facebook.com/businessdayng @Businessdayng<br />

Monday <strong>07</strong> <strong>Jan</strong>uary <strong>2019</strong><br />

In Association With<br />

Blue Christmas<br />

On <strong>Jan</strong>uary 7th, Egypt’s Copts celebrate a sad Christmas<br />

The largest Christian community in the Arab world faces bombs, bullets and neglect<br />

SOMETIMES, THE simplest<br />

of gestures carries<br />

weight. In 2015 Abdel-<br />

Fattah al-Sisi became<br />

the first president of<br />

Egypt to attend a Christmas<br />

mass. He has done so each year<br />

since, and will probably do so<br />

again on <strong>Jan</strong>uary 7th, the date on<br />

which Egypt’s Coptic Christians<br />

celebrate the birth of Jesus. The<br />

long-persecuted Copts are glad<br />

that the Muslim president of their<br />

mostly Muslim homeland offers<br />

them this token of respect. But Mr<br />

Sisi has done little else to improve<br />

their plight.<br />

The Copts are the largest<br />

Christian community in the Arab<br />

world, numbering about 10m.<br />

Successive governments have<br />

ignored laws promising them<br />

equality. Copts are frozen out<br />

of senior government jobs, particularly<br />

in the security services.<br />

Textbooks gloss over the history<br />

of the church, one of the oldest<br />

branches of Christianity. After<br />

Mr Sisi’s coup against Muhammad<br />

Morsi, Egypt’s first elected<br />

president, in 2013, Copts suffered<br />

vicious attacks by Mr Morsi’s Islamist<br />

supporters.<br />

Even the Copts’ right to worship<br />

is circumscribed. For most<br />

of its modern history Egypt re-<br />

stricted church-building under<br />

decrees written by the Ottomans<br />

and the short-lived monarchy of<br />

1922-53. Security services had to<br />

approve new houses of worship.<br />

Permission was rarely granted.<br />

In 2011, the last year for which<br />

data are available, there was one<br />

church for every 2,780 Christians.<br />

Per person, Muslims had about<br />

four times as many mosques,<br />

which are not subject to onerous<br />

restrictions.<br />

In 2016, to great fanfare, Mr<br />

Sisi’s government passed a law<br />

to replace these antiquated regulations.<br />

It established a formal<br />

process for requesting construction<br />

permits and a committee to<br />

review them. If governors wish to<br />

refuse a new church, they must<br />

provide a written explanation<br />

within four months. But the law<br />

has done little to ease the burden,<br />

in part because the intelligence<br />

services still have an outsized role<br />

in the process. Since the law was<br />

passed just eight permits have<br />

been issued for new churches,<br />

a slower pace than before 2016.<br />

The 2,500 Copts in Kom el-<br />

Raheb, 200km south of Cairo,<br />

must drive 40 minutes to the<br />

nearest church. Since 2001 they<br />

have sought permission to open<br />

one in their village. In December<br />

they celebrated mass in a building<br />

owned by the archdiocese,<br />

which they hope will soon receive<br />

a licence. Muslim villagers attacked<br />

them, pelting their homes<br />

with stones. Police rarely bother<br />

to investigate such cases. Instead<br />

they round up both Christian<br />

and Muslim villagers until local<br />

leaders agree to a “reconciliation<br />

session”. After one such meeting<br />

in Kom el-Raheb, Copts agreed to<br />

suspend further prayers.<br />

The state views churches as a<br />

security issue—because terrorists<br />

attack them and the police fail<br />

to stop the attacks. Seven Copts<br />

were shot dead near a Minya<br />

monastery in November, on the<br />

same road where 28 Copts were<br />

killed the previous year. The jihadists<br />

of Islamic State claimed<br />

responsibility for both attacks. In<br />

December a policeman shot two<br />

men outside a church in Minya.<br />

The victims were not militants.<br />

They were local Copts, a father<br />

and son who had a dispute with<br />

the cop over a parking space.<br />

Even where Mr Sisi’s government<br />

has deployed more church<br />

guards, their presence may not<br />

be a comfort.<br />

Knocking Gnassingbé<br />

Togo’s president suffers an electoral setback<br />

Despite an opposition boycott, his party still lost seats<br />

IT IS NO mean feat for a ruling<br />

party to lose seats in an election<br />

boycotted by 14 opposition parties.<br />

Yet such is the depth of unhappiness<br />

with Faure Gnassingbé, the<br />

president of Togo, that his party’s<br />

majority shrank in parliamentary<br />

elections on December 20th, even<br />

though almost no one was standing<br />

against it.<br />

The opposition coalition<br />

shunned the vote, accusing the<br />

government of rigging the voters’<br />

register. It also complained that the<br />

police and army shot at protesters.<br />

On a video circulated on social<br />

media in December, a uniformed<br />

man in a pickup truck drove up to<br />

demonstrators and pointed a rifle<br />

at them. The gunman’s face was not<br />

visible, and no shots were seen fired<br />

on the video. But activists claimed<br />

that two people (one a 12-year-old)<br />

were shot dead by soldiers that day.<br />

Provisional results showed the<br />

ruling Union pour la République<br />

losing three of its 62 seats. The loss<br />

may be crucial. Mr Gnassingbé<br />

(pictured), who has run the country<br />

since 2005 following the death of<br />

his father (who had been in charge<br />

for 38 years) wants to be allowed to<br />

run again in 2020. Under pressure<br />

to stand down, he proposed a constitutional<br />

amendment that would<br />

limit presidents to only two terms,<br />

but insisted that the count should<br />

only start at the next election. That<br />

could allow him to remain in power<br />

until 2030.<br />

A referendum on his constitutional<br />

amendment was meant to be<br />

held on December 16th. But it was<br />

called off after a wave of opposition<br />

protests by activists demanding<br />

that the two-term limit be applied<br />

retroactively, which would bar Mr<br />

Gnassingbé from running again.<br />

Without a referendum Mr Gnassingbé<br />

may try to push his constitutional<br />

amendments through parliament.<br />

But to do so he would need to<br />

muster the support of allied parties<br />

to get a four-fifths majority (or 73 of<br />

91 votes). If the changes are rammed<br />

through parliament, or if another<br />

referendum is called, the result<br />

would probably be more protests.<br />

Politically speaking, no one expects<br />

to hear Faure’s requiem soon.


Monday <strong>07</strong> <strong>Jan</strong>uary <strong>2019</strong> g<br />

www.<br />

g<br />

@ g<br />

BUSINESS DAY 17<br />

CITYFile<br />

NSCDC official charged with<br />

murder in Lagos<br />

A<br />

Nigeria Security and Civil Defence<br />

Corps personnel, Kehinde Osho,<br />

who allegedly shot and killed a<br />

man, has been charged before an Ebute<br />

Meta Chief Magistrates’ Court in Lagos.<br />

Osho is facing a count charge of murder,<br />

but he pleaded not guilty. He was<br />

brought to the court on Friday.<br />

The prosecutor, Oladele Adebayo, had<br />

told the court that the accused committed<br />

the offence on November 18, 2018,<br />

at 9.00p.m., on Pipeline Way, Oke-Ado,<br />

Lagos.<br />

Adebayo said that the accused shot<br />

Taofeek Andulqadir, 31, with a gun on<br />

the head in contravention of Section 223<br />

of the Criminal Law of Lagos State, 2015.<br />

The chief magistrate O.O. Olatunji,<br />

however, granted the accused bail in the<br />

sum of N200,000 with two sureties in like<br />

sum, and ordered that the case file should<br />

be sent to the state Director of Public<br />

Prosecutions (DPP) for advice.<br />

He adjourned the case until February<br />

7, for mention.<br />

Obaseki settles medical<br />

bills of patients at UBTH<br />

Governor Godwin Obaseki of Edo<br />

has paid the medical bills of some<br />

patients at the University of Benin<br />

Teaching Hospital (UBTH) and the Central<br />

Hospital, in Benin, the state capital.<br />

Charles Idahosa, a former commissioner<br />

in the state, who disclosed this,<br />

said the governor also recently flew three<br />

patients from UBTH to Israel for Kidney<br />

transplant and the operations were successful.<br />

According to him, Obaseki delegated<br />

some doctors who visited the various<br />

hospitals in the state to recommend patients<br />

suffering from severe ailments and<br />

are unable to afford their medical bills for<br />

consideration by the state government.<br />

6 suspected cultists<br />

docked in Ogun<br />

Six suspected secret cult members are<br />

standing trial before an Ota Chief<br />

Magistrate Court in Ogun State.<br />

The accused are Olanilekan Abass, 22;<br />

Rasheed Nurudeen, 18; Rafiu Sholola,<br />

37; Fatai Abiodun, 30; Lateef Abiodun,<br />

30; and<br />

Atiba Olarigbigbe, 30.<br />

They are facing trial on a two-count<br />

charge of membership of unlawful society<br />

and conspiracy to which they pleaded<br />

not guilty.<br />

The accused, who were in court on<br />

Friday, and others still at large, allegedly<br />

committed the offences on December 26<br />

at 11.30 pm. in Owode-Ijako area of Ota.<br />

Police prosecutor, Abdulkareem Mustapha<br />

told the court that the accused and<br />

others belong to a society identified as<br />

“Aiye Confraternity”.<br />

The offences contravened Sections 3,<br />

5 and 516 of the Criminal Code, Laws of<br />

Ogun, 2006.<br />

Chief magistrate, Mathew Akinyemi,<br />

in his ruling, granted each of the accused<br />

bail of N300, 000 with two sureties in like<br />

sum and fixed further hearing on the case<br />

for February 11. NAN<br />

Where are the Trucks? The Ijora- Apapa Bridges in Lagos, dreaded for their notorious traffic jam look empty; sanity that motorists<br />

and residents wish will continue when activities return in full swing in Apapa, Lagos.<br />

Pic by Pius Okeosisi<br />

FG to reclaim land, communities<br />

ravaged by erosion<br />

JOSHUA BASSEY<br />

The Federal Government says it is<br />

working to reclaim all land lost<br />

to gully erosion and assist floodravaged<br />

communities regain<br />

their means of livelihood.<br />

The assurance was contained in a<br />

statement issued by the Federal Ministry<br />

of Science and Technology (FMST) at the<br />

weekend.<br />

Abdul Aminu, head, public relations<br />

unit of the ministry, in the statement<br />

quoted the minister of science and technology,<br />

Obgonnaya Onu, as giving the<br />

assurance at the launch of gully erosion<br />

control works at Okwohia, Obowo/Ihitte<br />

Uboma local government area of Imo.<br />

According to him, the intervention of<br />

Federal Government would usher a huge<br />

relief to the Okwohia community which<br />

had for long been devastated by ecological<br />

challenges.<br />

Onu said: “The approval of the project<br />

is a testimony to the present administration’s<br />

resolve to ensure that no part of<br />

the country will be allowed to suffer any<br />

neglect due to geographical location.<br />

“To further consolidate on the gains of<br />

this stride, the Federal Government’s execution<br />

of projects across the country also<br />

demonstrates the sincerity of purpose of<br />

APC-led administration toward promoting<br />

equity and fair play to all and sundry.”<br />

The minister believed that the project<br />

would improve the standard of living of<br />

the community and its environs. He said<br />

that the project would additionally reduce<br />

the danger posed to lives and property<br />

associated with erosion and persistent<br />

flooding experienced in recent times.<br />

He affirmed that Federal Government<br />

would continue to implement genuine<br />

government policies, agreements and<br />

contracts at both national and international<br />

levels that were aimed at laying<br />

solid foundation for virile and prosperous<br />

nation.<br />

The permanent secretary, Ecological<br />

fund Office, Habiba Lawal, said that the<br />

project was initiated through a request for<br />

an urgent intervention forwarded to the<br />

Ecological Fund Office.<br />

She explained that the request was<br />

forwarded by Benjamin Uwajumobi, who<br />

represents the Imo North District at the<br />

upper chamber of the National Assembly.<br />

Lawal, who was represented by Mathias<br />

Eluma, said that the launch and hand<br />

over of the project to the benefiting community<br />

would enable the people to take<br />

over and ensure its maintenance and<br />

sustainability.<br />

A’Ibom procures N5bn equipment for specialist hospital<br />

ANIEFIOK UDONQUAK, Uyo<br />

Akwa Ibom government has<br />

purchased medical equipment<br />

worth N5 billion for Ibom Specialist<br />

Hospital to boost healthcare<br />

delivery in the state.<br />

Dominic Ukpong, the commissioner<br />

for health, disclosed this when members<br />

of the Divine Mandate Campaign Team<br />

visited the paramount ruler of Eket, Etim<br />

Abia, on Friday in Eket.<br />

According to him, the state has been<br />

paying N400 million quarterly to offset<br />

bills for the medical equipment in the<br />

hospital. Ukpong, however, said that the<br />

hospital was not completed before it was<br />

inaugurated the previous administration.<br />

“We are paying the money now and the<br />

hospital had been inaugurated but not yet<br />

completed. It was supposed to be ground<br />

floor, first, second and third floors.<br />

“The previous administration did the<br />

ground and first floors and left the second<br />

and third floors uncompleted. It is not yet<br />

plastered but was inaugurated,” he said.<br />

He noted that Ibom Specialist Hospital<br />

was on August 8, 2018 given out to Clinotech<br />

Turnkey to manage for the state,<br />

adding that Governor Emmanuel was<br />

passionate about improving healthcare<br />

delivery in the state.<br />

He said some other hospitals in the<br />

state, such as Ituk Mbang, Immanuel<br />

hospital, Etinan General Hospital, Ikono<br />

Hospital and Awa Hospital had been<br />

rehabilitated, upgraded and equipped.<br />

“We are trying to train people who will<br />

manage the hospitals. We have gotten ambulance<br />

for emergency medical response<br />

such that if you are sick and you cannot<br />

leave your home, you will call a certain<br />

number and an ambulance will come and<br />

pick you up for treatment,” he said.


18 BUSINESS DAY www.businessday.ng www.facebook.com/businessdayng @businessDayNG @Businessdayng Monday <strong>07</strong> <strong>Jan</strong>uary <strong>2019</strong><br />

Live @ The Exchanges<br />

Top Gainers/Losers as at Friday 04 <strong>Jan</strong>uary <strong>2019</strong> Market Statistics as at Friday 04 <strong>Jan</strong>uary <strong>2019</strong><br />

GAINERS<br />

Company Opening Closing Change<br />

OKOMUOIL N76.2 N80 3.8<br />

NB N78.7 N79.5 0.8<br />

GUARANTY N32.95 N33.5 0.55<br />

STANBIC N46 N46.5 0.5<br />

UPL N1.97 N2.14 0.17<br />

LOSERS<br />

Company Opening Closing Change<br />

CAP N34 N31.5 -2.5<br />

BETAGLAS N68.3 N67 -1.3<br />

FO N30.7 N29.6 -1.1<br />

ZENITHBANK N22.7 N21.7 -1<br />

GLAXOSMITH N13.05 N12.2 -0.85<br />

ASI (Points) 30,638.90<br />

DEALS (Numbers) 4,082.00<br />

VOLUME (Numbers) 334,316,959.00<br />

VALUE (N billion) 1.771<br />

MARKET CAP (N Trn 11.425<br />

NSE-30 Index: Sterling Bank<br />

replaces Beta Glass<br />

Stories by<br />

Iheanyi Nwachukwu<br />

The Nigerian<br />

Stock Exchange<br />

(NSE) has reviewed<br />

the<br />

NSE-30 Index<br />

and the eight sectoral indices<br />

of the exchange, which<br />

are NSE Consumer Goods,<br />

NSE Banking, NSE Insurance,<br />

NSE Industrial, NSE<br />

Oil & Gas, NSE Pension,<br />

NSE Lotus Islamic and<br />

NSE Corporate Governance<br />

Indices.<br />

The composition of<br />

these indices became effective<br />

on <strong>Jan</strong>uary 1, <strong>2019</strong><br />

after the completion of the<br />

year-end review and index<br />

rebalancing exercise.<br />

This resulted to entry<br />

of some major companies<br />

and the exit of others from<br />

the various indices. On<br />

the NSE-30 Index, Sterling<br />

Bank Plc has replaced Beta<br />

Glass Company Plc. MRS<br />

Oil Nig Plc has replaced<br />

Eterna Plc in the NSE Oil/<br />

Gas Index.<br />

There were no changes<br />

in the NSE Consumer<br />

Goods Index and that of<br />

NSE Industrial Index, but<br />

in the NSE Banking Index,<br />

Jaiz Bank Plc replaced Diamond<br />

Bank Plc.<br />

In the NSE Insurance<br />

Index, Consolidated Hallmark<br />

Insurance Plc, Sovereign<br />

Trust Insurance<br />

Plc, Regency Assurance<br />

Plc replaced Continental<br />

Reinsurance Plc, Staco Insurance<br />

Plc, and Standard<br />

Alliance Insurance Plc.<br />

NSE Pension Index has<br />

new entrants like CCNN<br />

Plc, Beta Glass Co. Plc, Julius<br />

Berger Plc while<br />

Diamond Bank Plc, Continental<br />

Reinsurance Plc,<br />

Ecobank International Incorporated<br />

have exited.<br />

Jaiz Bank Plc has replaced<br />

Nigeria Aviation<br />

Handling Company Plc in<br />

the Lotus Islamic Index.<br />

Meanwhile, while there<br />

were no new entrants into<br />

the Corporate Governance<br />

Index, the likes of NEM<br />

Insurance Plc, Diamond<br />

Bank Plc, and Continental<br />

Reinsurance Plc have all<br />

exited the Index.<br />

The indices, which<br />

were developed using<br />

the market capitalization<br />

methodology, are rebalanced<br />

on a biannual basis,<br />

the first business day<br />

in <strong>Jan</strong>uary and in July. The<br />

Stocks are selected based<br />

on market capitalization<br />

and liquidity.<br />

The liquidity is based<br />

on the number of days the<br />

stock is traded during the<br />

preceding two quarters. To<br />

be included in the index,<br />

the stock must have traded<br />

Strong earnings put Vitafoam shares on high demand<br />

Impressive corporate<br />

earnings and expectation<br />

of high return<br />

on investment have<br />

put shares of Vitafoam<br />

Nigeria Plc on the league<br />

of the most sought after<br />

by discerning investors<br />

on The Nigerian Stock Exchange<br />

as they scramble<br />

to beef up their portfolio<br />

with the stock despite the<br />

bearish trend.<br />

Vitafoam’s impressive<br />

performance in<br />

the third quarter which<br />

ended on September<br />

30, 2018 indicated that<br />

the its net profit stood at<br />

N601.923million from a<br />

loss of N127.690million in<br />

the preceding year while<br />

its basic Earnings Per<br />

Share (EPS) hit N57 kobo<br />

in the review period as<br />

against a loss of N15 kobo<br />

in the preceding year.<br />

As a reward for its numerous<br />

shareholders, the<br />

company announced a<br />

dividend of 25 kobo per<br />

share. This is in addition<br />

to declaration of bonus<br />

share of one for five ordinary<br />

shares.<br />

The announcement of<br />

Vitafoam’s strong earnings<br />

prompted many investors<br />

to place buy order<br />

on the stock to take advantage<br />

of its current low<br />

price relative to the company’s<br />

intrinsic value on<br />

stock market.<br />

On Monday, December<br />

31st, 2018, the last<br />

trading day for the year,<br />

Vitafoam led the gainers’<br />

chart on The Exchange,<br />

followed by Stambic IBTC<br />

as Vitafoam’s share price<br />

appreciated by 10 percent,<br />

from N4 to N4. 40,<br />

following transaction of<br />

2, 687,190 shares, worth<br />

N11,823, 096 on the company’s<br />

shares.<br />

Market watchers were<br />

quick to commend the<br />

company’s performance,<br />

saying demand for its<br />

shares may continue despite<br />

the general lull in the<br />

market.<br />

Network Capital’s<br />

Managing Director and<br />

Chief Executive Officer,<br />

Oluropo Dada, promptly<br />

ascribed the rally created<br />

by Vitafoam’s result to the<br />

associated value for both<br />

existing and potential<br />

shareholders:<br />

“The Stock market is<br />

information - driven. It<br />

responds to every information<br />

from quoted companies,<br />

regardless of the<br />

type of information. This<br />

is the beauty of the market<br />

in aggregating investors’<br />

reaction to every bit of information<br />

or market hearsay.<br />

The 25k dividend and<br />

one for five bonus is the<br />

fundamental factor driving<br />

Vitafoam’s share price.<br />

This is real. Everyone<br />

knows that the company’s<br />

current performance is<br />

far better than that of last<br />

year”, Dada said.<br />

Vitafoam’s Group<br />

Managing Director and<br />

Chief Executive Officer,<br />

Vitafoam Nigeria Plc,<br />

Taiwo Adeniyi attributed<br />

the company’s recent opportunity<br />

performance to<br />

a range of factors including<br />

access to finance and<br />

availability of raw materials<br />

and putting customers<br />

at the center of all<br />

the company’s activities<br />

among others.<br />

“ We are enjoying Improved<br />

funding through<br />

Bank of Industry’s (BOI’s)<br />

intervention, deliberate<br />

cost management, improved<br />

efficiency, customer<br />

centric approach<br />

to selling, innnovative<br />

thinking, market differentiation,<br />

Government’s<br />

deliberate policy on forex<br />

trading and availability<br />

which has helped in<br />

sourcing of input materials<br />

at cheaper rates and<br />

for at least 70 percent of the<br />

number of trading days in<br />

the preceding two quarters.<br />

The Nigerian bourse<br />

began publishing the NSE<br />

30 Index in February 2009<br />

with index values available<br />

from <strong>Jan</strong>uary 1, 20<strong>07</strong>.<br />

On July 1, 2008, The<br />

NSE developed four sectoral<br />

indices and one index<br />

in 2013, with a base value<br />

of 1,000 points, designed<br />

to provide investable<br />

benchmarks to capture the<br />

performance of specific<br />

sectors. The Insurance and<br />

Consumer Goods sector<br />

index, comprises the<br />

15 most capitalized and<br />

liquid companies; Banking<br />

and Industrial Goods<br />

sector index, comprised<br />

of 10 most capitalised and<br />

liquid companies, while<br />

the Oil & Gas sector index,<br />

is composed of the seven<br />

most capitalized and liquid<br />

companies.<br />

also planning”, Adeniyi<br />

said.<br />

As part of its Corporate<br />

Social Responsibility<br />

(CSR), annually, Vitafoam<br />

donates its products to<br />

Lagos Island Marternity<br />

Hospital to ensue availability<br />

of good equipment<br />

and identify with the<br />

Baby of the year. Speaking<br />

at this year’s edition<br />

in Lagos, Adeniyi said it<br />

was consistent with the<br />

company’s CSR policy as<br />

its products cut across diverse<br />

age groups and status.<br />

“Vitafoam has been<br />

known over the years for<br />

good quality products. It<br />

believes in being part of<br />

the child’s life from cradle.<br />

We have always been<br />

known to provide for the<br />

home, every age set you<br />

find in the home. We have<br />

products that meets the<br />

needs of the baby up to<br />

when it becomes a toddler<br />

and then, when he eventually<br />

grows up to become<br />

an adult.<br />

Continental<br />

Reinsurance<br />

incorporates CIMA<br />

subsidiary, appoints<br />

Oumar BA as its CEO<br />

Continental Reinsurance<br />

Plc has<br />

completed the<br />

incorporation<br />

of a subsidiary office in<br />

Douala, Cameroon. This<br />

status is a key milestone<br />

in its strategy of operating<br />

through a network of wellcapitalized<br />

subsidiaries<br />

across Africa.<br />

“This development reinforces<br />

our commitment<br />

to the CIMA region and<br />

our valued partners,” said<br />

Oyetunji, Group Managing<br />

Director of Continental Reinsurance<br />

Plc. “We already<br />

have a strong local team on<br />

the ground, and our goal is<br />

to utilize our new status to<br />

maximize value.”<br />

The move is in line with<br />

the new CIMA Code in<br />

the Francophone region<br />

which requires a reinsurance<br />

company based<br />

in a Member State to be<br />

established as a limited<br />

liability company and further<br />

permits a reinsurance<br />

company with its head office<br />

in a Member State to<br />

install a branch in another<br />

Member State.<br />

The Company started<br />

its operations in Douala<br />

in 2004 as a branch office<br />

and later opened its Abidjan<br />

office in 2012 to diversify<br />

its activities in the<br />

CIMA region.<br />

Oyetunji added: “At the<br />

same time, we are delighted<br />

to announce that we<br />

have appointed Oumar<br />

BA as the Chief Executive<br />

Officer of the newly established<br />

subsidiary, effective<br />

immediately. Given<br />

our new status, we believe<br />

he will be able to leverage<br />

on his expertise and track<br />

record to capitalize on the<br />

current demand for localized<br />

service and we look<br />

forward to Oumar helping<br />

us develop that further in<br />

the CIMA region.”<br />

Oumar brings over two<br />

decades of experience<br />

to the Company. Most<br />

previously, he served at<br />

Swiss Re as Regional Manager<br />

(West Africa – Anglophone).<br />

Prior to that, he<br />

held roles as Senior Client<br />

Manager (Swiss Re Africa /<br />

Swiss Re Zurich), Property<br />

Underwriter (Swiss Re Africa<br />

/ Johannesburg) and<br />

also worked with Salama<br />

Assurances (Senegal).


Monday <strong>07</strong> <strong>Jan</strong>uary <strong>2019</strong><br />

www.businessday.ng<br />

COMPANIES<br />

& MARKETS<br />

COMPANY NEWS ANALYSIS AND INSIGHT<br />

facebook.com/businessdayng<br />

@Businessdayng<br />

@Businessdayng<br />

BUSINESS DAY<br />

19<br />

Equity funds count losses as<br />

stock market rout takes toll<br />

Pg. 20<br />

ANALYSIS<br />

Companies face higher borrowing costs in <strong>2019</strong><br />

LOLADE AKINMURELE<br />

Again, the private<br />

sector is at risk<br />

of being crowded<br />

out by government<br />

borrowing in <strong>2019</strong> in<br />

bad news for an economy<br />

still sruggling to find its<br />

feet after a scathing recession.<br />

Expectations for a<br />

higher yield environment<br />

this year implies higher<br />

borrowing costs for corporates.<br />

The yield expectations<br />

are being driven by rising<br />

interest rates in developed<br />

markets which could force<br />

the hand of the Central<br />

Bank of Nigeria (CBN) to<br />

raise interest rates in order<br />

to compete favourably<br />

for capital.<br />

Yields are also tipped to<br />

rise if the federal government<br />

fails to meet its revenue<br />

target for the third<br />

straight year as that will<br />

widen the budget financing<br />

gap which would in<br />

turn boost local bond supply<br />

and bid yields higher.<br />

The Federal government’s<br />

<strong>2019</strong> budget has a<br />

N2.3 trillion deficit and is<br />

predicated on revenues of<br />

N7 trillion.<br />

Both scenarios are<br />

threatened by disappointing<br />

revenues which naturally<br />

feeds into a wider<br />

deficit that will leave the<br />

government with limited<br />

options than to borrow.<br />

Capital expenditure<br />

bore the brunt of disappointing<br />

revenues in the<br />

past two years but <strong>2019</strong><br />

will give the government<br />

less wriggle room given<br />

L-R: Aniekan Joseph, Area Sales Manager, Lagos; Dr. Soji Adetona, Consultant Pathologist; Olanrewaju Bolawe, Medical Scientist, all of SYNLAB<br />

Nigeria (formerly PathCare) at the recently held Health Writers Association of Nigeria (HEWAN) Awards and Symposium, where SYNLAB Nigeria<br />

was awarded “Best Laboratory of the Year”.<br />

the spike in recurrent expenditure<br />

which cannot<br />

be easily made away with<br />

like capital spending.<br />

Non-debt recurrent expenditure<br />

alone will hit<br />

N4 trillion this year. If<br />

government revenue is to<br />

perform as it did in 2017<br />

or 2018 where only 50 percent<br />

of the target was met,<br />

then worker salaries, overhead<br />

costs and statutory<br />

transfers will be higher<br />

than total revenue, before<br />

considering capital expenditure<br />

and debt servicing.<br />

The total non-debt recurrent<br />

expenditure will<br />

equate to 128 percent of<br />

the government’s projected<br />

N3.5 trillion revenue<br />

for the year. N3.5 trillion is<br />

half of the N7 trillion <strong>2019</strong><br />

revenue projection.<br />

What that implies<br />

is that the government<br />

would have to borrow<br />

just to maintain an over<br />

bloated bureaucracy. Add<br />

capital expenditure as well<br />

as debt servicing obligations<br />

and the government<br />

will need to borrow even<br />

more, thereby crowding<br />

out the private sector.<br />

After a record breaking<br />

2017 for government<br />

bond yields which peaked<br />

at 18 percent, 2018 saw<br />

yields fall to 14 percent<br />

on average amid lower<br />

inflation rate and reduced<br />

bond supply from the federal<br />

government which<br />

tweaked its debt strategy<br />

to borrow less domestically<br />

in favour of external<br />

debt.<br />

However, there are<br />

signs of a higher yield<br />

environment in <strong>2019</strong> and<br />

those signs started flashing<br />

as early as late 2018.<br />

Rising global interest<br />

rates which sparked selloffs<br />

in emerging markets<br />

and political uncertainty<br />

that coloured the second<br />

half of the year, saw the<br />

Central Bank of Nigeria<br />

push yields higher in the<br />

fourth quarter of 2018 using<br />

Open Market Operations<br />

(OMO) auctions, to<br />

attract foreign portfolio<br />

investors and tame inflation<br />

ahead of the system<br />

liquidity that accompanies<br />

campaign spending<br />

in an election year.<br />

The OMO auctions<br />

laid down a marker for<br />

fixed income yields, with<br />

one-year government<br />

Treasury Bills rising as<br />

high as 17 percent while<br />

average bond yields rose<br />

nearly 200 basis points to<br />

15 percent.<br />

The aggressive monetary<br />

tightening adopted<br />

by the CBN is expected to<br />

continue this year on the<br />

back of higher inflation<br />

expectations and rising<br />

interest rates in the<br />

United States and other<br />

developed markets.<br />

The price stability<br />

mandate of the CBN<br />

means if inflation rises,<br />

interest rates are likely<br />

to be raised. The apex<br />

bank relied heavily on<br />

raising interest rates in<br />

the latter part of 2016<br />

when inflation soared to<br />

a high of 18 percent. The<br />

CBN hiked benchmark<br />

rates to 14 percent from<br />

11 percent over that period<br />

and that’s where it<br />

has stayed for nearly two<br />

years now.<br />

The outlook for higher<br />

interest rates in the United<br />

States and sustained<br />

foreign capital outflow<br />

this year will only pile<br />

more pressure to the CBN<br />

to tighten even further.<br />

The consensus forecast<br />

for interest rates in<br />

<strong>2019</strong> is a 50-basis hike to<br />

14.5 percent. The Monetary<br />

Policy Committee<br />

is scheduled to hold their<br />

first meeting of <strong>2019</strong> this<br />

<strong>Jan</strong>uary.<br />

The IMF tips the Nigerian<br />

economy to expand<br />

2.3 percent this year.<br />

Although still in a<br />

tepid posture, the economy<br />

is gradually recovering<br />

from recession. The<br />

economy expanded by<br />

1.81 percent in the third<br />

quarter of 2018, up from<br />

1.5 percent in previous<br />

quarter, but still below<br />

1.91 percent recorded<br />

in the first quarter. The<br />

country’s growth rate still<br />

falls short of population<br />

growth rate of 2.6 percent,<br />

implying that the economy<br />

needs stimulus policies to<br />

make growth sustainable<br />

and inclusive.<br />

MARKETS<br />

Vitafoam recommends N260.51m dividend, approves bonus issues for shareholders<br />

OLUWASEGUN OLAKOYENIKAN<br />

The Board of Vitafoam<br />

Nigeria Plc,<br />

one of Nigeria’s<br />

leading manufacturers<br />

of foam and<br />

flexible/rigid polyurethane<br />

products, has recommended<br />

a dividend of N260.51 million<br />

to the company’s shareholders.<br />

In a notice filed at the Nigerian<br />

Stock Exchange (NSE)<br />

Friday by the foam maker, the<br />

recommendation was made<br />

at a meeting of its Board of<br />

Directors held on December<br />

18, 2018.<br />

The dividend represents<br />

25 kobo per share for the<br />

financial year ended September<br />

30, 2018 and it is subject<br />

to shareholders’ approval at<br />

Vitafoam’s Annual General<br />

Meeting scheduled to hold on<br />

March 7, <strong>2019</strong> in Lagos, and<br />

withholding tax, according to<br />

the firm.<br />

“If approved at the Annual<br />

General Meeting, the<br />

dividend will be paid on 8th<br />

March, <strong>2019</strong>, to members<br />

whose names appear in the<br />

Register of members at the<br />

close of business on Friday,<br />

15th February, <strong>2019</strong>,” Vitafoam<br />

said.<br />

Besides, the Board also<br />

approved a bonus issue of 1<br />

new share for every 5 existing<br />

ordinary shares to shareholders<br />

whose names appear on<br />

the register of members at the<br />

close of business on Friday,<br />

February 15, 2018.<br />

Vitafoam explained that<br />

“the new shares shall rank<br />

equally in all respects with<br />

the existing ordinary shares<br />

except that they shall not rank<br />

for the dividend recommendation<br />

of the year ended 30th<br />

September, 2018.”<br />

This implies Vitafoam’s<br />

outstanding shares in the<br />

market would increase from<br />

its current 1.04 billion shares,<br />

a development that would<br />

have resultant effect on the<br />

firm’s earnings per share<br />

which stood at 57 kobo in<br />

2018, according to Aluko Paul,<br />

a research analyst at MBC<br />

Securities Limited.<br />

Vitafoam posted 46.67<br />

percent return to emerge<br />

the seventh-best performing<br />

stock on the floor of NSE in<br />

2018. This was triggered by<br />

a 10 percent gain to N4.40<br />

recorded by the consumer<br />

goods firm on Monday,<br />

December 31, 2018 after it<br />

declared a whooping profit of<br />

N601.92 million for the year<br />

ended September 30, 2018.<br />

The stock rallied to N4.99<br />

on Thursday, <strong>Jan</strong>uary 3, it<br />

highest in over two years. Part<br />

of the gains was however reversed<br />

Friday, <strong>Jan</strong>uary 4 after it<br />

shed 9.82 percent to N4.50 per<br />

share on profit-taking activity.<br />

In spite of this, Paul said<br />

“in the coming days, we<br />

might see more activities on<br />

the stock as it has not been<br />

very liquid in the past and we<br />

expect long-term investors to<br />

key into it at this price which<br />

Edited by LOLADE AKINMURELE (loladeakinmurele@gmail.com) Graphics: CHINEDUM ONYEMA<br />

might likely push up.”<br />

<strong>BusinessDay</strong> check shows<br />

that Vitafoam recorded<br />

unimpressive financial performance<br />

in 2016 and 2017,<br />

posting a loss of N127.69<br />

million in 2017 down from a<br />

loss after tax of N32.03 million<br />

in 2016.<br />

However, the company<br />

bounced back in 2018 with a<br />

ballooned profit of N601.92<br />

million despite paying<br />

N191.03 million as tax. Also,<br />

revenue surged 10.38 percent<br />

to N19.53 billion as against<br />

N17.69 billion recorded in the<br />

previous year.


20<br />

MARKETS<br />

BUSINESS DAY<br />

COMPANIES & MARKETS<br />

Equity funds count losses as stock market rout takes toll<br />

ENDURANCE OKAFOR<br />

<strong>BusinessDay</strong> yearto-date<br />

analysis of<br />

the performance<br />

of 10 equity funds<br />

in Nigeria between <strong>Jan</strong>uary<br />

and November 2nd 2018,<br />

shows United Capital Equity<br />

Fund topping the losers<br />

chart with - 26.04 percent<br />

decrease in its unit price, for<br />

the period, according to SEC<br />

Nigeria data.<br />

Other top losers include;<br />

Meristem Equity Market<br />

Fund (- 25.96%), AXA Mansard<br />

Equity Income Fund<br />

(14.85%), Stanbic IBTC Aggressive<br />

Fund (Sub Fund)<br />

with -14.14 percent return<br />

and Stanbic IBTC Nigerian<br />

Equity Fund (12.94 percent).<br />

Meanwhile the benchmark<br />

of the Nigerian Stock<br />

Exchange (NSE) All Share<br />

Index return for the period<br />

stood at – 17.47 percent.<br />

Responding to the analysis,<br />

Johnson Chuckwu, MD<br />

of Cowry Asset said the<br />

stocks that the mutual funds<br />

invested in suffered losses<br />

beyond the market return.<br />

”The stocks that gained<br />

in 2018 are those that are<br />

not qualified as investment<br />

instruments by mutual funds<br />

and this stocks are called<br />

outliners and they moderated<br />

the loss in the All Share<br />

Index and also because the<br />

stocks the mutual funds<br />

invested in recorded losses,<br />

the return on investments<br />

therefore is definitely going<br />

to be worst that the bench-<br />

mark NSE return,” Chuckwu<br />

told <strong>BusinessDay</strong>.<br />

In 2018, Nigeria equities<br />

lost 18 percent as foreign<br />

capital fled emerging markets<br />

on the back of rising<br />

interest rates in the United<br />

States and slower global<br />

growth concerns.<br />

Other equity funds that<br />

outperformed the benchmark<br />

although reported<br />

negative return include;<br />

FBN Nigeria Smart Beta<br />

Equity Fund (-12.64%) ARM<br />

Aggressive Growth Fund<br />

(-11.42%), Legacy Equity<br />

Fund (-7.46%), Paramount<br />

Equity Fund (-7.24%) and<br />

Frontier Fund (-6.61%).<br />

Omotola Abimbola, a<br />

research analyst at Ecobank,<br />

said “delivering a positive<br />

return in an equity portfolio<br />

in a year the market was<br />

down double digits would<br />

have meant outperforming<br />

the benchmark by over 15<br />

percentage point, and that’s<br />

a tall order.”<br />

Another analyst who<br />

spoke to <strong>BusinessDay</strong> on<br />

the condition of anonymity<br />

said any fund manager<br />

that underperforms the entire<br />

market index can be<br />

rated as being very weak<br />

because there is no fund<br />

that includes all stocks on<br />

the exchange in its funds or<br />

investment portfolio.<br />

“Ordinarily, any good<br />

fund manager should outperform<br />

the market index<br />

because it is a basket of<br />

good performers and the<br />

lagers will weigh down the<br />

entire market index because<br />

C002D5556<br />

a portfolio investor will first<br />

identify the instrument that<br />

qualifies for investment in<br />

their portfolio, that is those<br />

instruments that have very<br />

good fundamentals,” the<br />

stock market expert said.<br />

From a high position of<br />

third best performing market<br />

in 2017 with 42 percent rally,<br />

Nigeria bourse All Share<br />

Index dropped 0.24 percent<br />

in December 2018 pushing<br />

year to day return to -20.<strong>07</strong><br />

percent. This earned the<br />

NSE the sixth worst performing<br />

market in the world.<br />

Rafiq Raji, chief economist<br />

at Macroafricaintel said<br />

“equities performed poorly<br />

both globally and domestically<br />

in 2018.”<br />

As at the close of the<br />

market yesterday, Nigerian<br />

equities fell by 1.15 percent<br />

led by declines in cement,<br />

banks and brewers.<br />

An equity fund is a mutual<br />

fund that invests principally<br />

in stocks. It can be<br />

actively or passively (index<br />

fund) managed. Equity<br />

funds are also known<br />

as stock funds. Stock mutual<br />

funds are principally categorized<br />

according to company<br />

size, the investment style of<br />

the holdings in the portfolio<br />

and geography.<br />

The sizes of an equity<br />

fund is determined by a market<br />

capitalization, while the<br />

investment style, reflected<br />

in the fund’s stock holdings,<br />

is also used to categorize<br />

equity mutual funds.<br />

A further analysis by<br />

<strong>BusinessDay</strong> revealed that<br />

Monday <strong>07</strong> <strong>Jan</strong>uary <strong>2019</strong><br />

L-R: Mo Abudu, CEO EbonyLife Tv / executive producer the movie ‘Chief Daddy’; Jimi Agbaje, Peoples Democratic Party, Lagos State Governorship<br />

Candidate, his wife, Abiola, during the Grand Premiere of the Movie ‘’Chief Daddy’’ held at Oriental Hotel, Lekki, Lagos<br />

the Net Asset Value (NAV)<br />

of the Equity Based Funds<br />

declined by 14.66 percent<br />

from 14.32 billion in <strong>Jan</strong>uary<br />

5th 2018 to 12.22 billion<br />

in November 2 2018, data<br />

on available on SEC website<br />

showed.<br />

“Valuations during the<br />

period were not really reflective<br />

of fundamentals<br />

as a significant number of<br />

listed firms actually produced<br />

decent earnings, Raji<br />

mentioned.<br />

COMPANY RELEASE BANKING BANKING<br />

MRS Oil gets Directors’<br />

approval for<br />

relocation of corporate<br />

headquarters to Apapa<br />

ADAMS SEGUN<br />

MRS, an indigenous<br />

downstream<br />

oil<br />

company has<br />

notified investors<br />

and the general public of<br />

its Board’s approval to relocate<br />

its corporate headquarters.<br />

The statement which<br />

was signed by the company<br />

secretary, advised the Nigerian<br />

stock Exchange that it has<br />

received the green light to<br />

move its base from the current<br />

address at Onikan in Lagos, to<br />

Apapa, which is located close<br />

to the city’s lagoon and famous<br />

for its sea ports and terminals.<br />

‘’MRS Oil Nigeria Plc.<br />

hereby notifies The Nigerian<br />

Stock Exchange that its Board<br />

of Directors has approved the<br />

relocation of the Company’s<br />

Head Office from No. 8,Macarthy<br />

Street, Onikan, Lagos to<br />

No. 2, Tin Can Island, Apapa,<br />

Lagos. Dealing Members and<br />

the general public are hereby<br />

notified’’ the statement read.<br />

Afemai MFB raises share capital to N500m<br />

IDRIS UMAR MOMOH, Benin<br />

Afemai Microfinance<br />

Bank’s shareholders<br />

have approved<br />

a fivefold increase<br />

of the mortgage bank’s share<br />

capital to N500 million from<br />

N100 million.<br />

The shareholders gave<br />

the approval during the<br />

bank’s 23rd annual general<br />

meeting which took place at<br />

its corporate headquarters<br />

in Jattu-Uzuaire in Etsako<br />

West local government area.<br />

The capital raise comes<br />

on the heels of the new Central<br />

Bank of Nigeria (CBN)<br />

newly revised recapitalization’s<br />

guidelines.<br />

Under the new guidelines<br />

state Microfinance banks<br />

require a minimum capital<br />

of N1 billion, N200 million<br />

for Unit Microfinance banks<br />

and N5 billion for National<br />

Microfinance banks.<br />

Pius Akpaibor, chairman,<br />

board of directors of the<br />

financial institution, in his<br />

welcome address said, the<br />

bank needed to inject fresh<br />

fund of N900 million to be<br />

able to sustain the bank’s<br />

current status as a State<br />

Microfinance Bank latest by<br />

April 1, <strong>2019</strong>.<br />

“As a first step we intend<br />

to raise the authorized<br />

capital from N100 million<br />

to N500 million. To sustain<br />

your bank’s current status<br />

as a State Microfinance<br />

bank, fresh funds to the<br />

tune of N900 million will be<br />

injected into it. This is no<br />

mean requirement which<br />

should be met in the next 16<br />

months- latest April 1, <strong>2019</strong>”,<br />

he said.<br />

Afemai’s total assets<br />

increased 4.9 percent<br />

to N562.11 million from<br />

N535.74 million in 2017.<br />

The bank’s gross earnings<br />

grew from N150.79<br />

million to N162. 10million,<br />

representing a 7.50 percent<br />

increase.<br />

However, profit before<br />

tax decreased from N28.66<br />

million to N8.84 million<br />

representing 69.16 percent<br />

while profit after tax also<br />

decreased from N27.74 million<br />

in 2016 to N7.74 million<br />

in 2017, representing a 73.<strong>07</strong><br />

percent decline.<br />

Akpaibor said that clients’<br />

deposit increased by<br />

6.98 percent from N295.53<br />

million to N316.15 million in<br />

the year under review.<br />

The board chairman also<br />

explained that the shareholders’<br />

funds grew from<br />

N224.79 million to N232.25<br />

million, representing a<br />

growth of 3.32 percent, capital<br />

adequacy ratio was 50.43<br />

percent while the liquidity<br />

ratio was 44.12 percent,<br />

which are both above the<br />

statutory minimum of 10<br />

percent and 20 percent respectively.<br />

He posited that the<br />

bank’s loans and advances<br />

decreased 2 percent from<br />

N385.23 million to N377.14<br />

million.<br />

Akpaibor said that the<br />

bank plans to establish a<br />

branch in Benin-City in<br />

addition to those already<br />

established in Afuze, Igarra<br />

and Okpilla.<br />

GTB announces closed period ahead<br />

audited financial statement release<br />

SEGUN ADAMS<br />

In two news releases sent<br />

to the Nigerian Stock Exchange<br />

<strong>Jan</strong>uary 4, <strong>2019</strong>,<br />

Guaranty Trust Bank Plc.<br />

(GTB) a tier- one lender announced<br />

its closed period<br />

ahead of the release of its full<br />

year audited financial report.<br />

‘’Pursuant to the postlisting<br />

requirements of the<br />

Nigerian Stock Exchange for<br />

quoted companies, we hereby<br />

inform you of the scheduled<br />

commencement of the<br />

closed period for trading in<br />

the Bank’s shares on <strong>Jan</strong>uary<br />

8, <strong>2019</strong> in respect of the<br />

Audited Financial Statement<br />

for the year ended December<br />

31, 2018’’<br />

The tier-one bank also<br />

notified the public of its Board<br />

Meeting to consider the financial<br />

reports ahead its release.<br />

‘’The Board of Directors<br />

of our Bank is scheduled to<br />

meet on Wednesday, <strong>Jan</strong>uary<br />

30, <strong>2019</strong>, to consider the<br />

Audited Financial Statements<br />

for the year ended December<br />

31, 2018. Issues relating to full<br />

year dividend may also be discussed<br />

at the meeting’’<br />

The Bank gave the assurance<br />

that conclusions reached<br />

would be related to the public<br />

in due course.<br />

‘’We shall notify you of the<br />

decisions reached after the approval<br />

of the CBN is obtained.’’<br />

the statement read.<br />

GTB closed 1.67 percent<br />

higher, gaining 55k to close at<br />

N33.50 per share at the end of<br />

the first trading week in <strong>2019</strong>.<br />

The performance is against<br />

the backdrop of a bearish run<br />

in 2018, which saw the bank’s<br />

share price alongside many<br />

other stocks shed value as<br />

the market fell 18 percent in<br />

the year.<br />

Experts expect the performance<br />

of GTB to surpass its<br />

previous earnings guidance<br />

on PAT as N189.6 billion has<br />

been estimated to be reported<br />

for full year 2018 compared<br />

to N174.3 billion, it’s most<br />

recent.


Monday <strong>07</strong> <strong>Jan</strong>uary <strong>2019</strong> www.businessday.ng facebook.com/businessdayng @Businessdayng @Businessdayng<br />

BUSINESS DAY 21<br />

COMPANIES & MARKETS<br />

Business Event<br />

L-R: Tobi Oyewole, corporate social responsibility analyst, The Nigerian Stock Exchange (NSE); Temitayo<br />

Ade-Peters, team lead, CSR, NSE, presenting Cheque and Food items donated by Employees of The NSE to<br />

Chioma Ohakwe representing the Staff and students of Bethesda Home for the Blind as part of NSE Employee<br />

Give-Back Initiative aimed at extending a hand of care to the less privileged during festive seasons in Lagos<br />

L-R: Sunday Okereke, regional sales manager, East, PZ Cussons Consumer; Mercy Johnson-Okojie, celebrity<br />

brand influencer; P. O. Konyeha, active distributor, Port Harcourt Territory; Ahusimere Ejiroghene, brand manager,<br />

Morning Fresh, PZ Cussons Consumer, and Sunday Ekpo, area sales manager, PZ Cussons Consumer, at the<br />

official Morning Fresh trade launch in Port Harcourt, recently.<br />

L-R: Elizabeth Omolade, Ibe New President of the Club; Tajudeen Adegboyega Akande, Chairman of the<br />

occasion and President Lagos Country Club; Dupe Dada District Governor of the Association of Lions Clubs<br />

International, 404B2, Nigeria, and Asiwaju Olasunkade Azeez, a one time President of llupeju Lions Club under<br />

the district and the Vice Chairman, Badminton Section, during the formal presentation of new President and<br />

other Officers of Ikeja Metro Lions Club at Ikeja recently.<br />

L-R: Chuks Enwereji, Vice-chairman IADC Nigeria; Marvelyn Ehika, Treasurer IADC Nigeria; Juliet Adesunloye,<br />

Administrator IADC Nigeria; Ote Enaibe, chairman IADC Nigeria, at the Annual General Meeting held on the<br />

7th of December 2018 at VCP hotel, Victoria Island Lagos.


22<br />

BUSINESS DAY<br />

C002D5556<br />

Monday <strong>07</strong> <strong>Jan</strong>uary <strong>2019</strong>


Monday <strong>07</strong> <strong>Jan</strong>uary <strong>2019</strong><br />

www.businessday.ng www.facebook.com/businessdayng @businessDayNG @Businessdayng<br />

BUSINESS DAY<br />

23<br />

Access Bank Rateswatch<br />

KEY MACROECONOMIC INDICATORS<br />

Indicators Current Figures Comments<br />

GDP Growth (%) 1.81 Q3 2018 — Higher by 0.31% compared to 1.50% in Q2 2018<br />

Broad Money Supply (M2) (N’ trillion) 31.79 Decreased by 0.0<strong>07</strong>% in Nov’ 2018 from N32.03 trillion in Oct’ 2018<br />

Credit to Private Sector (N’ trillion) 23.08 Decreased by 0.002% in Nov’ 2018 from N23.14 trillion in Oct’ 2018<br />

Currency in Circulation (N’ trillion) 2.1 Increased by 0.<strong>07</strong>4% in Nov’ 2018 from N1.93 trillion in Oct’ 2018<br />

Inflation rate (%) (y-o-y) 11.28 Increased to 11.28% in November 2018 from 11.26% in October’ 2018<br />

Monetary Policy Rate (%) 14 Raised to 14% in July ’2016 from 12%<br />

Interest Rate (Asymmetrical Corridor) 14 (+2/-5) Lending rate changed to 16% & Deposit rate 9%<br />

External Reserves (US$ million) 43.08 <strong>Jan</strong>uary 2, 2018 figure — an increase of 1.76% from December start<br />

Oil Price (US$/Barrel) 52.42 <strong>Jan</strong>uary 4, <strong>2019</strong> figure— no change from the prior week<br />

Oil Production mbpd (OPEC) 1.736 November 2018 figure — a decrease of 1.64% from October 2018 figure<br />

STOCK MARKET<br />

Indicators Friday Friday Change(%)<br />

04/01/19 28/12/18<br />

NSE ASI 30,638.90 31,037.72 (1.28)<br />

Market Cap(N’tr) 11.43 11.34 0.78<br />

Volume (bn) 0.33 0.20 70.39<br />

Value (N’bn) 1.77 6.54 (72.94)<br />

MONEY MARKET<br />

NIBOR<br />

Tenor Friday Rate Friday Rate Change<br />

(%) (%) (Basis Point)<br />

04/01/19 28/12/18<br />

OBB 20.0000 17.1667 283<br />

O/N 23.7500 18.4167 533<br />

CALL 15.2857 15.0000 29<br />

30 Days 15.8389 12.7500 309<br />

90 Days 13.8439 12.6250 122<br />

FOREIGN EXCHANGE MARKET<br />

Market Friday Friday<br />

1 Month<br />

(N/$) (N/$) Rate (N/$)<br />

04/01/18 28/12/18 04/12/18<br />

Official (N) 306.95 3<strong>07</strong>.00 306.85<br />

Inter-Bank (N) 364.50 364.33 359.47<br />

BDC (N) 364.50 364.50 364.50<br />

Parallel (N) 361.00 364.00 370.00<br />

BOND MARKET<br />

AVERAGE YIELDS<br />

Tenor Friday Friday<br />

Change<br />

(%) (%) (Basis Point)<br />

04/01/18 28/12/18<br />

3-Year 0.00 0.00 0<br />

5-Year 15.40 15.32 8<br />

7-Year 15.54 15.58 (4)<br />

10-Year 15.39 15.19 21<br />

20-Year 15.49 15.34 15<br />

Disclaimer<br />

This report is based on information obtained from various sources believed to be<br />

reliable and no representation is made that it is accurate or complete. Reasonable care<br />

has been taken in preparing this document. Access Bank Plc shall not take responsibility<br />

or liability for errors or fact or for any opinion expressed herein .This document is for<br />

information purposes and private circulation only and may not be reproduced,<br />

distributed or published by any recipient for any purpose without prior express consent<br />

of Access Bank Plc.<br />

Sources: CBN, Financial Market Dealers Association of Nigeria, NSE and<br />

Access Bank Economic Intelligence Group computation.<br />

COMMODITIES MARKET<br />

Indicators 04/01/19 1-week YTD<br />

Change Change<br />

(%) (%)<br />

Energy<br />

Crude Oil $/bbl) 52.42 0.00 (18.68)<br />

Natural Gas ($/MMBtu) 3.01 (9.88) (1.51)<br />

Agriculture<br />

Cocoa ($/MT) 2,378.00 (0.71)<br />

22.83<br />

Coffee ($/lb.) 102.55 0.98 (21.24)<br />

Cotton ($/lb.) 71.48 (1.01) (7.77)<br />

Sugar ($/lb.) 11.83 (3.19) (22.83)<br />

Wheat ($/bu.) 518.00 1.<strong>07</strong> 19.49<br />

Metals<br />

Gold ($/t oz.) 1,291.10 1.00 (2.01)<br />

Silver ($/t oz.) 15.71 2.35 (8.61)<br />

Copper ($/lb.) 262.15 (2.18) (20.03)<br />

NIGERIAN INTERBANK TREASURY BILLS TRUE YIELDS<br />

Tenor Friday Friday Change<br />

(%) (%) (Basis Point)<br />

04/01/19 28/12/18<br />

1 Mnth 14.94 14.95 (1)<br />

3 Mnths 12.62 14.49 (187)<br />

6 Mnths 13.52 13.46 7<br />

9 Mnths 16.54 16.55 (1)<br />

12 Mnths 17.29 17.31 (3)<br />

ACCESS BANK NIGERIAN GOV’T BOND INDEX<br />

Indicators Friday Friday Change<br />

(%) (%) (Basis Point)<br />

04/01/19 28/12/18<br />

Index 2,704.19 2,716.56 (0.46)<br />

Mkt Cap Gross (N'tr) 8.49 8.52 (0.46)<br />

Mkt Cap Net (N'tr) 5.27 5.29 (0.52)<br />

YTD return (%) 10.09 10.59 (0.50)<br />

YTD return (%)(US $) -45.73 -45.25 (0.48)<br />

TREASURY BILLS (MATURITIES)<br />

Tenor Amount Rate (%) Date<br />

(N' million)<br />

91 Day 10,000.00 11.1939 2-<strong>Jan</strong>-<strong>2019</strong><br />

182 Day 20,000.00 14.0155 2-<strong>Jan</strong>-<strong>2019</strong><br />

364 Day 44,837.72 16.9512 2-<strong>Jan</strong>-<strong>2019</strong><br />

Market Analysis and Outlook: <strong>Jan</strong>uary 4th – <strong>Jan</strong>uary 11th, <strong>2019</strong><br />

Global Economy<br />

In the US, the Purchasing Managers Index (PMI)<br />

came in 53.8 in December 2018, a decline from<br />

55.3 reported the previous month. IHS Markit<br />

which measures this index reported that it is the<br />

weakest pace of expansion in the manufacturing<br />

sector since September 2017. This came on the<br />

back of weaker overall rise in new orders which led<br />

to a drop in business confidence among<br />

manufacturing firms in December. The level of<br />

optimism was strong, but well below the long-run<br />

series average. Positive sentiment was<br />

diminished by concerns surrounding the<br />

longevity of new business growth. In a separate<br />

development, the Ministry of Development,<br />

Industry and Foreign trade revealed that Brazil<br />

trade surplus expanded to $6.64 billion in<br />

December 2018 from $5 billion in December<br />

2017. It is the largest trade surplus since June<br />

2017. Exports jumped to 11.1% from a year ago<br />

to $19.56 billion in December, while imports<br />

advanced at a softer pace of 2.5% to $12.92<br />

billion. Among major trading partners, exports<br />

rose to China (46.5%), ASEAN countries (43.3%),<br />

the EU (18.2%) and the US (6.2%), but fell to<br />

Argentina (-55.2 %). Imports increased from the<br />

US (27%) and Argentina (29.3%), but fell from<br />

China (-3.6%), ASEAN countries (-17.1%) and the<br />

EU (-16%).<br />

Local Economy<br />

In a recent circular published, the Central Bank of<br />

Nigeria announced the development of the<br />

Consumer Complaints Management System<br />

(CCMS). The apex bank stated that this is an<br />

automated system aimed at easing complaints<br />

management and thus bolster public confidence<br />

in the financial system. Banks and other financial<br />

institutions have been instructed to assign<br />

tracking numbers for every complaints received<br />

from customers, issue an acknowledgement<br />

which shall contain the assigned tracking number<br />

to the customer and commence upload of<br />

complaints to the CCMS on a daily basis. This will<br />

take effect from 2nd of <strong>Jan</strong>uary <strong>2019</strong>. Failure to<br />

comply, it said, will attract sanctions on the erring<br />

institution. In a separate development, the<br />

Manufacturing Purchasing Managers' Index<br />

stood at 61.1 index points in December 2018, the<br />

latest PMI report of the Central Bank of Nigeria<br />

(CBN) showed. This indicates an expansion in the<br />

manufacturing sector for the twenty-first<br />

consecutive month. The index grew at a slightly<br />

slower pace when compared to the previous<br />

month (57.9 points). Thirteen of the fourteen<br />

sub-sectors surveyed reported growth during<br />

the month. However, the Primary metal<br />

subsectors declined in the month under review.<br />

Elsewhere, recently published data by the<br />

National Bureau of Statistics (NBS), revealed that<br />

the Federation Accounts Allocation Committee<br />

(FAAC) disbursed the sum of N788.14 billion<br />

among Federal, States and Local Governments in<br />

November 2018 from the revenue generated in<br />

October 2018. The amount distributed was from<br />

the statutory account, value added tax (VAT) and<br />

exchange gain allocation, comprising of<br />

N682.16billion, N105.17 billion and N806.39<br />

billion, respectively. A breakdown of the sum<br />

disbursed among the three tiers, revealed that<br />

the Federal Government received N299.19<br />

billion, states received N194.92 billion and the<br />

local governments received N146.69 billion. The<br />

oil producing states received N58.19 billion as the<br />

13% derivation fund and N70 billion was<br />

transferred to Excess Crude Account (ECA).<br />

Revenue generating agencies such as Nigeria<br />

Customs Service (NCS), Federal Inland Revenue<br />

Service (FIRS) and Department of Petroleum<br />

Resources (DPR) received N4.99 billion, N7.59<br />

billion and N5.82 billion respectively as cost of<br />

revenue collections.<br />

Stock Market<br />

Indicators at the stock market sustained the<br />

bullish momentum seen at the close of last year in<br />

the fist week of the New Year. Market<br />

capitalization increased by N90 billion to end the<br />

week at N11.43 trillion as investors took position<br />

in bellwether counters. This week, we expect<br />

market volatility to continue as investors and<br />

fund managers rebalance their portfolios, while<br />

watching the political space and ahead of full year<br />

company earnings position and post-election<br />

market dynamics.<br />

Money Market<br />

Money market rates ticked up across all<br />

placement tenors following retail Secondary<br />

Market Intervention Sales (SMIS) auction by the<br />

Central Bank of Nigeria CBN. Short-dated<br />

placements such as Open Buy Back (OBB) and<br />

Over Night (O/N) rates rose to 20% and 23.75%<br />

from 17.17% and 18.42% respectively the<br />

previous week. The 30-day and 90-day NIBOR<br />

edged up to 15.84% and 13.84% the prior week<br />

from 12.75% and 12.63% respectively. This<br />

week, we expect rates to taper on the back of<br />

Open Market Operation (OMO) maturity of N375<br />

billion hitting the system.<br />

Foreign Exchange Market<br />

Last week, the local unit strengthened slightly<br />

against the green back in most segments<br />

supported by intervention of the Central Bank of<br />

Nigeria (CBN). At the Official market, the naira<br />

appreciated by 0.02% to close at N306.95/$.<br />

Also, the naira strengthened at the parallel<br />

market segment by 0.82% to close N361 to a<br />

dollar last week from N364 the week earlier. This<br />

week, we expect the naira to continue trading<br />

within current rates in all markets as the CBN<br />

continues to supply FX.<br />

Bond Market<br />

Bond yields inched higher across most maturities<br />

owing to sell-off on the MAR 2024 and FEB 2028<br />

maturities. Specifically, yields on the 5-, 10- and<br />

20-year bonds finished at 15.40%, 15.39%, and<br />

15.49% respectively from 15.32%, 15.19% and<br />

15.34% in that order the previous week. The<br />

Access Bank bond index fell by 12.37points to<br />

close at 2,704.19 points from 2,716.56 in the prior<br />

week. This week, the bond space may see similar<br />

sentiments should weak demand persist at the<br />

long end of the curve.<br />

Commodities Market<br />

Oil prices dipped last week on concerns that an<br />

economic slowdown in <strong>2019</strong> will cut into fuel<br />

demand just as crude supplies are surging. U.S.<br />

crude production stood at a record 11.7 million<br />

barrels per day (bpd) in late 2018, making America<br />

t h e w o r l d ’ s b i g g e s t o i l p r o d u c e r . T h e<br />

Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries<br />

(OPEC) basket price, lost 97 cents to close at<br />

$52.95 a barrel, a 2% loss from the previous week.<br />

In contrast, precious metals continued its upward<br />

trajectory as prices increased for the third<br />

consecutive week. Worries about a global<br />

economic slowdown and volatility in equities<br />

boosted safe-haven buying. Gold prices notched<br />

up 1% to $1,291.10 per ounce last week, while<br />

silver prices closed 36 cents, or 2.3%, higher at<br />

$15.71 per ounce. This week, oil prices might<br />

likely go upwards boosted by optimism over trade<br />

talks between the U.S.A and China expected to<br />

hold during the week. We expect precious metals<br />

prices to remain supported by safe-haven<br />

demand as the US government shutdown<br />

persists.<br />

MONTHLY MACRO ECONOMIC FORECASTS<br />

Variables <strong>Jan</strong>’19 Feb’19 Mar’19<br />

Exchange Rate<br />

(NAFEX) (N/$) 364 364 365<br />

Inflation Rate (%) 11.30 11.61 11.45<br />

Crude Oil Price<br />

(US$/Barrel) 57 58.00 62.00<br />

For enquiries, contact: Rotimi Peters (Team Lead, Economic Intelligence) (01) 2712123 rotimi.peters@accessbankplc.com


24<br />

BUSINESS DAY<br />

C002D5556<br />

Monday <strong>07</strong> <strong>Jan</strong>uary <strong>2019</strong>


Monday <strong>07</strong> <strong>Jan</strong>uary <strong>2019</strong> C002D5556 BUSINESS DAY 25


26 BUSINESS DAY<br />

C002D5556 Monday <strong>07</strong> <strong>Jan</strong>uary <strong>2019</strong><br />

real sector watch<br />

Key issues facing manufacturers in <strong>2019</strong><br />

ODINAKA ANUDU<br />

Every year has<br />

its own package<br />

and <strong>2019</strong> is no<br />

exception. This<br />

year, like other<br />

years, will likely see Nigerian<br />

manufacturers battling with<br />

policy to infrastructure challenges.<br />

One major issue that confronts<br />

Nigerian manufacturers<br />

this year is election. The<br />

Manufacturers Association<br />

of Nigeria (MAN) has recognised<br />

this point by tying the<br />

performance of the economy<br />

in <strong>2019</strong> to the conduct of<br />

the election.<br />

“Being an election year,<br />

performance of the economy<br />

in <strong>2019</strong> would to a<br />

large extent depend on the<br />

transparency and credibility<br />

of the election,” MAN said<br />

while analysing the <strong>2019</strong><br />

budget.<br />

More than this, there will<br />

be implications no matter<br />

who wins the presidential<br />

election. If the incumbent<br />

President Muhammadu Buhari<br />

wins a second term,<br />

there will likely be policy<br />

consistency. However, there<br />

may also be lethargy that<br />

follows politicians that win<br />

their second term. Again,<br />

there may not be significant<br />

changes in the sector because<br />

there is currently more<br />

attention to agriculture than<br />

the value chain where light<br />

manufacturing belongs.<br />

Should the opposition<br />

win, there will likely be policy<br />

inconsistency, as the<br />

new government will do<br />

away with certain policies<br />

they are not comfortable<br />

with. This has consistently<br />

been a challenge over the<br />

years and remains one big<br />

reason why manufacturing<br />

is always a troubled sector.<br />

Two, constituting a government<br />

and appointment of<br />

ministers may take time. The<br />

new appointees will spend<br />

some time to get themselves<br />

attuned to the new realities<br />

in their ministries.<br />

Analysts expect that challenges<br />

will continue to hit<br />

the automotive industry<br />

because the current National<br />

Automotive Policy is encouraging<br />

the importation<br />

of rickety cars.<br />

The 2013 National Automotive<br />

Policy imposes 35<br />

percent levy and 35 percent<br />

duty on imported vehicles,<br />

amounting to a total of 70<br />

percent.<br />

Even with 70 percent fees<br />

paid on imported vehicles,<br />

importers of damaged or ‘accidented’<br />

vehicles officially<br />

enjoy a rebate of 30 percent.<br />

What this has done is to encourage<br />

the importation of<br />

rickety vehicles, which make<br />

up 70 percent of imported<br />

cars today.<br />

Today, the age of most<br />

imported used cars in Nigeria<br />

is 15 years, whereas that<br />

of Algeria, Angola, Chad,<br />

Mauritius and Seychelles<br />

is three, according to a research<br />

done by PwC.<br />

The prohibitive levy and<br />

duty paid on imported cars<br />

have encouraged smuggling<br />

of vehicles into Nigeria. Officially,<br />

market for cars in<br />

the country is just 6,999 as<br />

against 555,716 in South<br />

Africa; 181,001 in Egypt;<br />

168,913 in Morocco, and<br />

94,408 in Algeria.<br />

“There is no market for<br />

even the investors,” said<br />

Thomas Pelletier Thomas<br />

Pelletier, managing director,<br />

CFAO Nigeria.<br />

Next is cost of production,<br />

which will continue<br />

to rise. New state governors<br />

could come up with<br />

their revenue strategies<br />

to increase the Internally<br />

Generated Revenue (IGR),<br />

and they may impose more<br />

taxes, levies and fees on<br />

businesses.<br />

Tax experts told <strong>BusinessDay</strong><br />

that the number of<br />

taxes payable by businesses<br />

across the country is now 54<br />

as against 37 in 2014.<br />

They project that this may<br />

rise further, considering that<br />

oil price is trending around<br />

$55 and may fall more, thereby<br />

reducing federal allocations<br />

to states and pushing<br />

states into desperate revenue<br />

drive. This is not an alarm<br />

but a possibility.<br />

Vivian Chigozie-Nmonwu,<br />

tax expert and lead partner<br />

at Vi-M Professional<br />

Solution, said these taxes<br />

need to be amalgamated into<br />

one or a few, since the whole<br />

tax cycle is a multiple chain<br />

of taxes on the same income<br />

stream.<br />

Forty percent of manufacturing<br />

expenditure goes<br />

to alternative energy. Manufacturers<br />

have spent N212.85<br />

billion on alternative energy<br />

sources between the second<br />

half of 2016 and the first half<br />

of 2018. This is over 100 percent<br />

higher than what was<br />

incurred in the previous four<br />

halves.<br />

There is no possibility that<br />

power supply will be readily<br />

available for manufacturers<br />

no matter who wins. This<br />

means that production costs<br />

will continue to remain the<br />

way they are or rise.<br />

Firms bringing in raw materials<br />

into Apapa ports and<br />

those exporting commodities<br />

abroad may continue to<br />

battle with rising dwell time,<br />

which results in high demurrage<br />

charges except a new<br />

government does something<br />

meaningful.Only 10 percent<br />

of cargoes are cleared within<br />

the set timeline of 48 hours<br />

now while the majority of<br />

cargoes take between five<br />

and 14 days to clear, according<br />

to a maritime report<br />

conducted by the Lagos<br />

Chamber of Commerce and<br />

Industry (LCCI).The report<br />

notes that some cargoes<br />

take as many as 20 days to<br />

be cleared at the ports.<br />

Manufacturers could also<br />

embark on job cut in order<br />

to protect slim margins as<br />

they can no longer pass cost<br />

onto consumers already distressed<br />

following constantly<br />

falling disposable income.<br />

“We will see some layoffs<br />

but it will be worse for companies<br />

at the lower segment<br />

that do not have a large<br />

market share or competitive<br />

advantage,” said Christian<br />

Orajekwe, equity research<br />

analyst at Cordros Capital<br />

Ltd.<br />

Manufacturers were unable<br />

to sell goods worth<br />

N149.23 billion in the first<br />

half of 2018 after producing<br />

goods worth N4.6 trillion.<br />

Incidentally, they are<br />

selling to a population<br />

whose disposable income<br />

and spending are shrinking.<br />

Real household consumption<br />

and government<br />

consumption expenditures<br />

declined in 2017 (at –0.99<br />

percent) while national disposable<br />

income fell by 1.52<br />

percent, according to the<br />

National Bureau of Statistics<br />

(NBS).<br />

According to a recent<br />

World Bank data, 92.10 percent<br />

of Nigerians live at below<br />

$5.50 a day. Nigeria, with<br />

a population of 180 million<br />

people, has 87 million people,<br />

nearly half its population,<br />

in extreme poverty as<br />

high inflation environment<br />

continues to erode discretionary<br />

income.<br />

Job layoffs due to mounting<br />

wage bills and macroeconomic<br />

headwinds are a<br />

double whammy for a country<br />

where the vast majority<br />

of people are wallowing in<br />

abject poverty.<br />

More so, the country’s<br />

manufacturers will likely<br />

continue to face high logistics<br />

costs as roads remain<br />

in decrepit conditions and<br />

railways are still work in<br />

progress.<br />

Manufacturers told <strong>BusinessDay</strong><br />

that logistics costs<br />

have risen by 50 to 100 percent<br />

in the last two years,<br />

owing to poor state of roads<br />

and lack of a good transport<br />

system.<br />

There is yet no respite in<br />

sight for low-cost-seeking<br />

manufacturers who would<br />

have seen their logistics<br />

costs fall, had GE not exited<br />

a railway contract linking<br />

Apapa ports to Lagos mainland.<br />

Manufacturers may not<br />

finding borrowing easy as<br />

interest rate charged them<br />

by banks in the first half<br />

of 2018 stood at 22.9 percent,<br />

0.25 percentage point<br />

higher than 22.65 percent<br />

recorded in the same half<br />

of 2017.<br />

Nigeria’s monetary policy<br />

rate (MPR), which is a<br />

benchmark interest rate in<br />

the country, is 14 percent.<br />

Deposit money banks lend<br />

as high as 30 to 35 percent,<br />

according to <strong>BusinessDay</strong><br />

checks.<br />

The monetary policy<br />

committee (MPC) of the<br />

South Africa’s Reserve Bank<br />

met in March this year and<br />

cut interest rates by 25 basis<br />

points.<br />

The current repo rate<br />

(central bank lending rate to<br />

commercial banks) in South<br />

Africa is now 6.5 percent,<br />

and the prime lending rate<br />

(lending rate to customers)<br />

is 10 percent.<br />

The Reserve Bank’s MPC<br />

had earlier cut the repo<br />

rate in July 2017 by 25 basis<br />

points from 7 percent to 6.75<br />

percent.<br />

Similarly, Kenya Central<br />

Bank’s monetary policy<br />

committee cut the determining<br />

bank rate in late<br />

July to 9 per cent from 9.5<br />

per cent.<br />

<strong>BusinessDay</strong> gathered<br />

that Kenyans now borrow<br />

at an interest of 13 per cent<br />

(as against from 13.5 percent<br />

earlier) in line with the<br />

interest rate capping rule<br />

that limits lending rates to<br />

4 percentage points above<br />

the CBR.<br />

Zambia is one of the<br />

emerging countries in SSA<br />

and its central bank cut<br />

benchmark lending rate<br />

by 50 basis points to 9.75<br />

percent in February this<br />

year, citing lower consumer<br />

inflation and weaker economic<br />

growth, according to<br />

Reuters.<br />

In October 2017, the central<br />

of Ethiopia raised its<br />

benchmark interest rate to<br />

7 percent from 5 percent.<br />

But these things are not<br />

happening in Africa’s most<br />

populous country, with 37<br />

million small and medium<br />

businesses.<br />

Babatunde Paul Ruwase,<br />

president of the LCCI, said<br />

the current state of the economy<br />

shows the government<br />

must prioritise stimulation<br />

of investment and growth.<br />

“The proposition is that<br />

low interest rate will stimulate<br />

investment, impact<br />

positively on growth, create<br />

more jobs, increase income,<br />

and boost output.<br />

This would ultimately have<br />

a moderating effect on inflation,”<br />

Ruwase said.


Monday <strong>07</strong> <strong>Jan</strong>uary <strong>2019</strong> BUSINESS DAY 27<br />

C002D5556<br />

real sector watch<br />

No new grounds were explored<br />

in <strong>2019</strong> budget—MAN<br />

ODINAKA ANUDU<br />

The proposed <strong>2019</strong><br />

budget appears<br />

to be an extension<br />

of 2018, as<br />

no new grounds<br />

were explored, the Manufacturers<br />

Association of Nigeria<br />

(MAN) has said.<br />

The body said there is a<br />

need to properly align the<br />

assumptions of the budget<br />

with economic realities.<br />

It, however, said some of<br />

the provisions of the budget<br />

would be very important in<br />

supporting economic activities<br />

in the coming year, adding<br />

that huge emphasis on<br />

infrastructure development,<br />

especially power, road and<br />

rail, is encouraging.<br />

“As the budget stands,<br />

MAN opines that a lot of<br />

work still needs to be done<br />

while hoping that it will be<br />

passed with dispatch,” MAN<br />

said, in its analysis of the<br />

<strong>2019</strong> budget.<br />

“In broad terms, the<br />

manufacturing sector could<br />

be in for a tough operating<br />

environment in <strong>2019</strong>, seeing<br />

that the needed supporting<br />

policies and infrastructure<br />

have not been given sufficient<br />

priority. MAN is, however,<br />

hopeful that the capital<br />

expenditure component of<br />

the budget will be conscientiously<br />

implemented.”<br />

The body said the N80.29<br />

billion allocation to agriculture<br />

and rural development,<br />

Oluwatoyin Akomolafe, national president, Nigerian-American Chamber of Commerce (2nd L); Oba Otudeko, chairman, Honeywell<br />

Group (R); W. Stuart Symington, U.S. ambassador to Nigeria (L); Olusegun Osunkeye, former chairman, Nestle Nigeria Plc at the<br />

NACC 2018 Annual Dinner & Presidential Inauguration held in Lagos recently<br />

which is 32.5 percent lower<br />

than N118.98 billion allocation<br />

of 2018, should have<br />

been higher.<br />

“Agriculture development<br />

is very critical to the<br />

growth and development<br />

of any country. Agriculture<br />

is critical to industry rawmaterials<br />

supply and food<br />

security in the country. It is,<br />

therefore, important to pay<br />

significant attention to the<br />

agricultural development<br />

through better budget allocation<br />

while leveraging on<br />

backward integration.”<br />

MAN said without a<br />

better agriculture performance,<br />

it will be very difficult<br />

to achieve the economic<br />

growth and inflationary assumptions<br />

made in the <strong>2019</strong><br />

budget.<br />

It, however, commended<br />

the N15.66 billion allocation<br />

for the promotion and<br />

development of agriculture<br />

value chain across more<br />

than 30 different commodities<br />

and N2.69 billion for extension<br />

services, including<br />

other projects identified in<br />

the budget, as commendable.<br />

The body said the N80.22<br />

billion allocation for counterpart<br />

funding for railway<br />

projects (Lagos-Kano; Calabar-Lagos;<br />

Ajaokuta-Itakpe-<br />

Aladja; Port Harcourt-Maiduguri,<br />

among others) and<br />

the N27.12 billion allocation<br />

for rehabilitation of rail<br />

tracts and general maintenance/running<br />

of the rails<br />

system are critical.<br />

“Global evidence has<br />

shown that no country in<br />

the world had ever fully<br />

industrialised without a robust<br />

railway system. However,<br />

no mention is made<br />

of the need to dredge the<br />

various ports outside Lagos<br />

State to decongest Tin Can<br />

and Wharf ports and reduce<br />

the cost of moving goods<br />

from ports to the factories.”<br />

MAN said while recognising<br />

and deeply appreciating<br />

government’s efforts at<br />

carrying the private sector<br />

along on the issue of African<br />

Continental Free Trade<br />

Area (AfCTA), it is important<br />

to pay adequate and<br />

unwavering attention to the<br />

emerging issues on AfCFTA<br />

in <strong>2019</strong> and ensure that Nigeria’s<br />

economic interests,<br />

especially the private sector,<br />

are not only projected.<br />

“As a necessary part of<br />

the readiness assessment<br />

and the resulting action<br />

plan, government should<br />

put in place the necessary<br />

framework to protect and<br />

boost the capacity of the<br />

manufacturing sector to<br />

thrive in the continental<br />

free trade area.”<br />

While also acknowledging<br />

government’s recognition<br />

of the need to develop<br />

a digital economy and 4th<br />

Industrial Revolution in order<br />

to enhance productivity,<br />

MAN said safety nets were<br />

not captured in the budget<br />

and neither was a statement<br />

directed at it during the<br />

president’s budget speech.<br />

“Nigeria’s production<br />

base faces future risks due<br />

to its weak performance<br />

in developing productivity<br />

drivers such as innovation<br />

and human capital, and this<br />

calls for closer examination<br />

and immediate action,”<br />

MAN added.<br />

“As articulated in a World<br />

Bank report on innovation<br />

policy, governments should<br />

instead be like a good gardener<br />

— one that prepares<br />

the ground by building up<br />

human resources, fertilises<br />

the soil by boosting R&D,<br />

waters the plants through<br />

providing financial support<br />

for innovation, and removes<br />

weeds and pests by removing<br />

obstacles to innovation,”<br />

MAN stated.<br />

Why manufacturing sector needs policy consistency<br />

ODINAKA ANUDU<br />

Nigeria’s manufacturing<br />

sector<br />

needs an urgent<br />

attention from<br />

whoever will become the<br />

next president. The reasons<br />

are obvious.<br />

First, former President<br />

Goodluck Jonathan introduced<br />

Automotive Policy in<br />

2013 with a target to produce<br />

50,000 cars annually at N1.5<br />

million each, while creating<br />

700,000 jobs.<br />

Five years down the line,<br />

prices of new cars have risen<br />

by over 200 percent as nairadollar<br />

exchange rate doubles<br />

by more than 100 percent<br />

since 2013.<br />

The federal government<br />

imposed 35 percent levy and<br />

another 35 percent duty on<br />

imported cars, hiking cost of<br />

imported cars.<br />

While the National Automotive<br />

Design and Development<br />

Council (NADDC),<br />

the body responsible for<br />

implementation of the auto<br />

policy, has issued 54 licenses<br />

to intending car assemblers,<br />

the policy seems to have<br />

raised car smuggling from<br />

Benin Republic into Nigeria.<br />

The combined capacity<br />

of the 54 assembly plants is<br />

410,000 vehicles, while annual<br />

car importation into the<br />

country is between 250,000<br />

and 300,000 vehicles.<br />

“We are driving a policy<br />

that is encouraging companies<br />

to continue assembling<br />

combustion engine<br />

cars when the Original<br />

equipment manufacturers<br />

(OEMs), who own these combustion<br />

engines themselves,<br />

have already announced<br />

they will phase them out.<br />

Are we sure we are not setting<br />

ourselves up to being a<br />

dumping ground?” Bambo<br />

Adebowale, chairman, Lagos<br />

Chamber of Commerce and<br />

Industry (LCCI) Automobile<br />

and Allied Products Sectoral<br />

Group, asked.<br />

Adebowale explained that<br />

even with Automotive Policy,<br />

car import has not slowed<br />

down, wondering how the<br />

car assemblers will be able to<br />

compete with up to 300,000<br />

cheap vehicles imported into<br />

the country.<br />

“If we want to develop a<br />

market for these 410,000 capacity<br />

plants and we import<br />

about 250,000 and 300,000<br />

used vehicles, how are they<br />

going to support vehicles being<br />

assembled, since the ones<br />

being assembled will be more<br />

expensive?” he asked.<br />

Also, the president is expected<br />

to proffer solutions<br />

to Ajaokuta Steel, which has<br />

gulped $8 billion public funds,<br />

according to government<br />

records. The Senate has approved<br />

$1 billion for the revivification<br />

of the plant but this<br />

remains a waste of resources,<br />

according to analysts.<br />

Since 1994, successive<br />

governments have claimed<br />

that the complex is 98 percent<br />

completed. Muhammadu<br />

Buhari’s government<br />

budgeted N3.9 billion in<br />

2016 and N4.27 billion in<br />

2017 for the resuscitation of<br />

the steel, despite an earlier<br />

business case in the last administration<br />

showing that<br />

the complex could only work<br />

if properly privatised.<br />

<strong>BusinessDay</strong> checks show<br />

that Ajaokuta Complex has<br />

the capacity to produce one<br />

million metric tonnes of steel,<br />

one million metric tonnes of<br />

coal , manganese and limestone,<br />

among others.<br />

Due to lack of operations<br />

at Ajaokuta Steel, Nigeria<br />

today imports steel valued at<br />

$3.3 billion every year.<br />

Frank Udemba Jacobs,<br />

immediate past president of<br />

the Manufacturers Association<br />

of Nigeria (MAN), said<br />

recently that over 50 percent<br />

of raw materials used in the<br />

sector would have been locally<br />

available had Ajaokuta<br />

been working.<br />

Up till now, the Aluminium<br />

Smelter Company, located in<br />

Akwa Ibom State, is not in<br />

operation due to the tussle<br />

between Bancorp Financial<br />

Investment Group Divino<br />

Corporation (BFIG), a consortium<br />

of U.S.-based Nigerian<br />

investors led by Reuben Jaja,<br />

and the United Company<br />

RUSAL, a Russian firm.<br />

Kayode Fayemi, former<br />

minister of solid minerals<br />

development, had stated<br />

that the government was<br />

resolving this crisis, but long<br />

after his departure, the plant<br />

is still under lock and key.<br />

“We need that resolved.<br />

Aluminium Smelter Company<br />

needs to be re-started<br />

so that we can get ingots for<br />

local roofing sheets manufacturers,”<br />

Oluyinka Kufile,<br />

chairman, Basic Metal, Iron<br />

and Steel Group of the Manufacturers<br />

Association of Nigeria<br />

(MAN), told Business-<br />

Day earlier in an interview.


28 BUSINESS DAY C002D5556 Monday <strong>07</strong> <strong>Jan</strong>uary <strong>2019</strong><br />

Kingsley Moghalu has most coherent economic<br />

vision for Nigeria — PwC chief economist<br />

DIPO OLADEHINDE<br />

Ahead of <strong>2019</strong> elections,<br />

Andrew<br />

Nevin, Nigeria’s<br />

chief economist for<br />

Pricewaterhouse-<br />

Coopers (PwC), has chosen<br />

Young Progressive Party (YPP)<br />

presidential candidate Kingsley<br />

Moghalu as the candidate with<br />

the most credible economic<br />

plan.<br />

Nevin said the economic<br />

manifesto of YPP presidential<br />

candidate Kingsley Moghalu is<br />

superior because of its detailed<br />

look at the range of capitalist<br />

models, arguing precisely what<br />

will work in Nigeria.<br />

“Dr K (referring to Kingsley<br />

Moghalu) has the most incisive<br />

analysis of the unsustainable fiscal<br />

regime and is willing to face<br />

up to our looming debt crisis,”<br />

Nevin said on his LinkedIn page.<br />

The chief economist at PwC<br />

noted that Moghalu rightly<br />

recognises that there is a need<br />

for rural Nigeria to prosper if<br />

the country is going to succeed.<br />

“Fifty-three percent of Nigerians<br />

live in rural areas and it is not<br />

sufficient for just Lagos do to<br />

well or even Lagos, Kano, Port<br />

Harcourt, and Kaduna we need<br />

all of Nigeria to do well.”<br />

“Dr K faces up squarely to<br />

the federal/state restructuring<br />

issue - he is courageous enough<br />

to say not only do we need restructuring,<br />

but also that at least<br />

30 of 36 states are economically<br />

unviable, so only a restructuring<br />

JOSHUA BASSEY<br />

Olusegun Oshinowo,<br />

former director-general<br />

of the Nigeria<br />

Employers’ Consultative<br />

Association (NECA), says<br />

whoever becomes the next president<br />

must pay a closer attention<br />

to infrastructure in order to attract<br />

new investments.<br />

Oshinowo pointed out that the<br />

Nigerian economy is bleeding<br />

from over-regulation, as multiple<br />

regulatory agencies created by<br />

the government— most of which<br />

have duplicated functions— see<br />

themselves as existing only for<br />

revenue drive.<br />

He said rather than support<br />

and aide enterprise, the agencies<br />

have become a cog in the<br />

Kingsley Moghalu<br />

that reduces the economic units<br />

(back to 6 in Dr K’s case) can<br />

work for us,” Nevin said.<br />

Nevin noted that the five<br />

critical policies from the YPP<br />

manifesto that will have a particularly<br />

positive impact on<br />

reversing the country’s decline<br />

include: Partial privatisation<br />

of the NNPC, with a listing on<br />

the NSE, abolition of the Land<br />

Use Act, elimination of the fuel<br />

subsidy, engagement of the Diaspora,<br />

and real restructuring.<br />

Before arriving at the conclusion,<br />

Andrew Nevin reviewed<br />

the economic plans of four<br />

presidential candidates comprising<br />

of ruling All Progressives<br />

Congress (APC) by incumbent,<br />

President Muhammed Buhari<br />

using Economic, Recovery and<br />

Growth (ERGP), People’s Democratic<br />

Party (PDP) by former<br />

vice president Atiku Abubakar<br />

using Let’s Get Nigeria Working<br />

Again, Allied Congress Party<br />

of Nigeria (ACPN) under Obi<br />

Ezekwesili using Project Rescue<br />

Nigeria plan and Young Progressive<br />

Party (YPP) by its presidential<br />

candidate Kingsley Moghalu<br />

using Build, Innovate, and Grow<br />

- My Vision for our Country.<br />

“So of the manifestos of the<br />

APC, PDP, ACPN, and YPP, only<br />

the YPP’s Manifesto has the coherence<br />

and boldness to reverse<br />

our current economic path,”<br />

Nevin said.<br />

Nevin noted that the analysis<br />

was purely from a purely<br />

economic perspective (not a<br />

political perspective) and do<br />

not consider other critical issues<br />

Nigeria faces (corruption and<br />

security being the most important),<br />

noting that the views he<br />

expressed do not represent the<br />

views of any organisation associated<br />

with him.<br />

“Let me say on a positive note<br />

that all candidates recognise<br />

that we cannot continue to get<br />

poorer and poorer, as they have<br />

put considerable effort in their<br />

economic policies. All at least<br />

state that we need to have a vibrant<br />

private sector if we are to<br />

succeed, ” Nevin said.<br />

Nevin urged all Nigerians to<br />

exercise their hard-won democratic<br />

rights, noting that what<br />

the nation has accomplished<br />

during the short time since the<br />

military rule has been astonishing<br />

and wonderful.<br />

“Let me re-iterate again that<br />

these are my personal views<br />

and do not represent any of the<br />

organisation with which I am<br />

affiliated,” Nevin said.<br />

Next president must focus on infrastructure to attract investments— Oshinowo<br />

wheel of economic growth, as<br />

businesses in many respects are<br />

hounded, thereby discouraging<br />

investments.<br />

The consequence of this, according<br />

to Oshinowo, is that<br />

business expansion is hampered<br />

by negative impact on employment<br />

generation.<br />

The DG spoke during a valedictory<br />

press conference, saying<br />

in other climes regulatory<br />

agencies play critical roles in the<br />

encouragement of growth and<br />

sustenance of enterprise. Oshinowo<br />

retired from NECA last<br />

month after 19 years of service in<br />

the association.<br />

“Unlike in other environment<br />

where regulation is used to encourage<br />

and aide the growth of<br />

enterprise, regulatory agencies<br />

in Nigeria have actually become<br />

killers of businesses” said Oshinowo.<br />

The former DG also made<br />

a case for the restructuring of<br />

Nigeria to allow states take full<br />

responsibility for their resources<br />

and manage same to create<br />

wealth for their citizens.<br />

According to him, the continued<br />

dependence of the federating<br />

states on the monthly federal<br />

allocations makes nonsense of<br />

the idea of a federal structure<br />

that Nigeria had set out to operate.<br />

“Nigeria must restructure to<br />

allow states take responsibility<br />

for certain aspects of this<br />

economy. Even if you have zerolevel<br />

corruption, best economic<br />

policies, if you don’t restructure<br />

to allow state create wealth for<br />

the people, those policies won’t<br />

work.”<br />

Oshinowo said that a situation<br />

where only Lagos and Abuja are<br />

the centres of attraction is not<br />

good for the country.<br />

“Today, it is only Lagos and<br />

Abuja that things seem to be happening.<br />

There are no economic<br />

opportunities for the citizens in<br />

other states. So, what you find is<br />

a situation where Nigerians are<br />

moving out of those states to Lagos<br />

to find means of livelihood.<br />

This is not good for the economy.<br />

The federating states must be<br />

able to create opportunities to<br />

engage their citizens and fight<br />

poverty.”<br />

Citing the gridlock around<br />

the ports and Apapa, Oshinowo<br />

said there was the strong need<br />

for government to take the issue<br />

of infrastructure more seriously.<br />

“Any president in the <strong>2019</strong><br />

must focus on infrastructure<br />

development to attract new investments<br />

and strengthen the<br />

economy,” said Oshinowo.<br />

Timothy Olawale, the DG<br />

designate who takes over from<br />

<strong>Jan</strong>uary <strong>2019</strong>, said he would<br />

build on the successes recorded<br />

by his predecessor.<br />

Olawale said the association<br />

under his leadership would continue<br />

to pursue his core mandate<br />

of protecting the interests and<br />

rights of member companies as<br />

well as sustain its human capacity<br />

building programme, weaved<br />

into a five-year strategic plan<br />

which starts from <strong>2019</strong> to 2023.


Monday <strong>07</strong> <strong>Jan</strong>uary <strong>2019</strong><br />

g<br />

www.<br />

g<br />

@<br />

g<br />

BUSINESS DAY<br />

29<br />

Why the electorate need to turn<br />

out and vote with conscience<br />

AMAKA ANAGOR-EWUZIE<br />

Repeated tales of pain<br />

about the state of the<br />

nation have become<br />

the order of day with<br />

Nigerians. This indicates<br />

that many Nigerians are hard<br />

hit by the poor state of the economy<br />

and lack of respite in sight.<br />

For them, the government of<br />

the day has done little or nothing<br />

to improve the standard of living<br />

of the poor masses. The economic<br />

hardship is characterised by<br />

prevailing national poverty and<br />

a high rate of unemployment. As<br />

companies’ profit margins continue<br />

to shrink, majority resort<br />

to staff lay-offs to cut cost and<br />

manage margins.<br />

Basic necessities are beyond<br />

the reach of many Nigerians<br />

as the cost of foreign exchange,<br />

especially the rate of the naira<br />

to the dollar skyrocketed from<br />

N200 per dollar in 2015 to over<br />

N360 per dollar in 2018. This not<br />

only fueled inflation, but also<br />

reduced the purchasing power<br />

of Nigerians, whose monthly<br />

expenditure increased without<br />

corresponding increase in income<br />

earned.<br />

In all of this, one thing is certain,<br />

and this is the fact that the<br />

electorate are the real kingmakers<br />

because they are the people<br />

that choose who will lead them<br />

at different levels of government.<br />

Therefore, if an elected government<br />

fails to enthrone good governance<br />

while in power, it means<br />

that the electorate also failed to<br />

choose the right leader.<br />

Abraham Lincoln, former<br />

American President, who<br />

preached the importance of<br />

government of, for, and by the<br />

people, said that voters played<br />

the most important role in making<br />

sure the government reflects<br />

their desires and function according<br />

to the guidelines of the<br />

constitution.<br />

This is why the right to vote<br />

should not by any means be<br />

taken for granted. The outcome<br />

of elections plays a very important<br />

role in the voters’ personal<br />

freedoms, taxes, and other aspects<br />

of daily life that people<br />

take for granted. Because of the<br />

far reaching impact election can<br />

have, it is the civic responsibility<br />

of citizens to not only cast their<br />

votes if they want a say in how<br />

their futures play out, but to also<br />

vote in the right person.<br />

According to the Electoral<br />

Act 2010, the most important responsibility<br />

as citizens involves<br />

registering to vote and voting<br />

during elections. “A person shall<br />

be qualified to be registered as<br />

a voter if such a person – (a) is<br />

a citizen of Nigeria; (b) has attained<br />

the age of 18 years; (c)<br />

is ordinarily resident, works<br />

in, originates from the Local<br />

Government Area Council, or<br />

Ward, covered by the registration<br />

centre; (d) presents himself<br />

to the Registration Officer of the<br />

Commission for registration as<br />

a voter; and (e) is not subject to<br />

any legal incapacity to vote under<br />

any law, rule or regulation in<br />

force in Nigeria.”<br />

Alarmingly, many Nigerians<br />

today have failed to acknowledge<br />

their role in shaping the<br />

government. Many dismiss the<br />

responsibility of voting during<br />

elections by not caring about the<br />

issues on the ballot.<br />

However, by failing to use<br />

their privilege to vote, people<br />

essentially allow other voters to<br />

make decisions for them, to let<br />

their voices be heard over voters<br />

who make no effort to go to the<br />

polls. This is why the electorate<br />

need to vote.<br />

Meanwhile, some Nigerians<br />

go to the polling centre without<br />

a clear decision of whom to vote<br />

for. This group of people ends<br />

up mortgaging their future by<br />

collecting inducement such as<br />

money and gift items from politicians<br />

in order to vote.<br />

As Nigeria moves closer to the<br />

next general elections slated for<br />

the first quarter of <strong>2019</strong>, there is<br />

need for every Nigerian up to the<br />

eligible voting age, to note that<br />

exercising their right to vote is<br />

essential to being a good citizen.<br />

The past four years in Nigeria<br />

have been lived in lamentation<br />

but to put an end to this and avoid<br />

reoccurrence, Nigerians must join<br />

forces to enthrone ‘real change’.<br />

They must show interest in the<br />

electoral process starting from<br />

party primaries, through campaigns<br />

and voting at the elections.<br />

In doing this, there is need to<br />

get it right by coming out enmass<br />

to vote for the right candidates<br />

with the pedigree required to turn<br />

Nigerian economy in the right<br />

direction. We need to enthrone<br />

the right economic managers in<br />

accordance to their competences<br />

and capabilities, if Nigeria will<br />

grow in the next four years.<br />

NEWS<br />

Police Recruitment: 232,000 excess applicants<br />

underscore Nigeria’s unemployment problem<br />

MICHEAL ANI<br />

The recent announcement<br />

by the Nigeria Police on the<br />

excessive turn out of people<br />

applying for recruitment<br />

into the law enforcement agency, affirms<br />

the critical state of the nation’s<br />

unemployment crisis, analysts say.<br />

As at 1:00pm, 2nd <strong>Jan</strong> 2018, the<br />

Police Service Commission (PSC)<br />

said it had received applications<br />

from 242,455 persons in its on-going<br />

recruitment exercise, even though it<br />

plans to enlist only 10,000 of these<br />

numbers into the Nigeria Police<br />

Force.<br />

This figure shows an excess of<br />

more than 232,000 applicants vowing<br />

for the positions, a number<br />

analysts say is a tip of an iceberg<br />

of how Nigerians jostle for jobs as<br />

falling infrastructural development<br />

and slowdown in economic activities<br />

have forced companies turn off the<br />

tap of recruitment.<br />

This number of applications that<br />

the police received as at that date<br />

implies that for each successful applicant,<br />

24 others will be rejected.<br />

That is, assuming that the applications<br />

stop at this number, which is<br />

unlikely.<br />

Data from the National Bureau of<br />

Statistics (NBS) has shown that the<br />

rate of unemployment has been on<br />

a consistent increase in the past three<br />

years, settling as high as 23.1 percent<br />

in the third quarter of 2018 from 18.8<br />

percent recorded in the same quarter<br />

of the previous year.<br />

In nominal terms, a total of 20.9<br />

million Nigerians are unemployed,<br />

signalling that about 3.1 million<br />

people have entered into the unemployment<br />

trap in less than a year. The<br />

NBS had earlier in Q4 2017 reported<br />

the number to be 17.8 million.<br />

“I am not surprised at the statistics<br />

released by the Nigerian police<br />

with regards to the number of<br />

participants that signified interest<br />

as against those that are required<br />

as it is an indication of the massive<br />

unemployment in the society,” says<br />

Timothy Olawale, Director-General,<br />

Nigerian Employers Consultative<br />

association.<br />

“There is no way that the government<br />

despite all its efforts in creating<br />

jobs, is going to succeed if the focus<br />

is on white-collar job creation alone,<br />

which is what they are throwing up,”<br />

Olawale said.<br />

An average university student in<br />

Nigeria spends about 4 years in the<br />

university, if and only if the Academic<br />

Staff Union of Universities and /<br />

or the Non Academic staff union<br />

does not embark upon any strike<br />

whatsoever.<br />

For about two months now,<br />

teachers in public universities in<br />

Nigeria have been on an indefinite<br />

strike designed to compel the<br />

federal government to meet their<br />

complaints on issues including poor<br />

funding, poor remuneration and<br />

low infrastructural developments<br />

in school.<br />

“It is not as if there are no jobs in<br />

the country, but the skills required to<br />

match these jobs are not there. That<br />

is why we say the government should<br />

identify what those skills are and<br />

make concerted efforts to develop<br />

capacity in those skills; that way our<br />

youth will fit into those jobs that are<br />

available,” Olawale said.<br />

“Furthermore, there is the need<br />

to imbibe in our youths the entrepreneurial<br />

spirit so that they can be<br />

self-employed,” he added.<br />

President Muhammadu Buhari,<br />

in November last year, announced<br />

the approval of a new salary package<br />

for police personnel “with a view<br />

to restoring its lost primacy in the<br />

internal security framework of the<br />

country”.<br />

A statement by the PSC’s acting<br />

Head, Press and Public Relations,<br />

Aaron Kaase, shows that of the total<br />

applicants, Niger State led with 15,<br />

633 applications, followed by Kano<br />

State with 15, <strong>07</strong>9, Katsina State, 14,<br />

582, Bauchi State, 12, 652, Kaduna<br />

State, 13, 882 and Adamawa State<br />

with 11, 449 applicants.<br />

Bayelsa State had the lowest applications<br />

of 1, 258, followed by Lagos<br />

State, 1, 358, Ebonyi State, 1, 659 and<br />

Anambra State, 1,618.<br />

CBN makes first New Year entry<br />

into forex market with $210m<br />

... as external reserves decline to $43.05bn<br />

HOPE MOSES-ASHIKE<br />

The Central Bank of Nigeria<br />

(CBN) on Friday, <strong>Jan</strong>uary 4,<br />

<strong>2019</strong>, made its first intervention<br />

in the inter-bank sector<br />

of the foreign exchange market for<br />

<strong>2019</strong> with a total sum of $210 million<br />

injected into the wholesale segment<br />

and other sectors of the market.<br />

A breakdown of the figures obtained<br />

from the CBN on Friday<br />

showed that customers in the Wholesale<br />

sector of the market received the<br />

sum of $100 million with the Small<br />

and Medium Enterprises (SMEs) and<br />

invisibles sectors each getting $55 million<br />

to meet the needs of customers.<br />

The dollar supply has helped<br />

to boost liquidity in the market<br />

strengthened the value of the local<br />

currency. Consequently, naira<br />

gained N1.00k on Friday to close at<br />

N361 per dollar at the parallel market<br />

from N362 traded the previous day.<br />

However, naira depreciated marginally<br />

by N0.05k to close at N365.35k<br />

on Friday from N365.30k per dollar<br />

traded on Thursday, data from<br />

FMDQ indicated.<br />

External reserves last week declined<br />

to $43.0 billion as at Friday, <strong>Jan</strong>uary 4,<br />

<strong>2019</strong> from $43.28 billion as at December<br />

24, 2018, data from CBN revealed.<br />

Isaac Okorafor, CBN’s director in<br />

charge of corporate communications,<br />

said the CBN continued from where it<br />

stopped in 2018 in order to maintain the<br />

stability being enjoyed in the market.<br />

While noting that the Bank had<br />

made commendable effort in keeping<br />

the exchange rates at the current<br />

levels, Okorafor re-echoed the<br />

Bank’s Governor, Godwin Emefiele<br />

saying that the current capital flow<br />

reversals from the emerging markets<br />

were expected to bring out pressures<br />

on the market rates.<br />

He, however, assured that, in spite<br />

of the anticipated pressures, coupled<br />

with the forthcoming elections, the<br />

Bank was committed to maintaining<br />

the current exchange rate policy,<br />

given the level of reserves.<br />

Quoting the Governor, Okorafor<br />

said that the CBN was determined to<br />

sustain a stable exchange rate as it continues<br />

to put in place relevant measures<br />

to shore up the country’s reserves.<br />

Meanwhile, one United States<br />

Dollar (US$1) exchanged for N357<br />

in the Bureau De Change (BDC)<br />

segment of the market on Friday,<br />

<strong>Jan</strong>uary 4, <strong>2019</strong>.<br />

“We expect activity level to improve<br />

as Christmas festivities wrap<br />

up; and further anticipate that the<br />

central bank will continue in its<br />

pursuit to stabilize the value of the<br />

Naira should any market volatility<br />

occur, possibly owing to pre-election<br />

uncertainties”, analysts at Afrinvest<br />

Securities limited said.


www.businessday.ng www.facebook.com/businessdayng @businessDayNG @Businessdayng Monday <strong>07</strong> <strong>Jan</strong>uary <strong>2019</strong><br />

30 BUSINESS DAY<br />

This is M NEY<br />

• Savings<br />

• Travel<br />

• Debt & Borrowing<br />

• Utilities<br />

A daily guide to your Personal Finance<br />

• Managing your Tax<br />

The Solid<br />

Wealth<br />

Messenger<br />

Grace Agada<br />

To the average<br />

Nigerian, the<br />

problems of<br />

wealthy children<br />

are unimaginable.<br />

A wealthy child’s life is<br />

supposed to be perfect. But<br />

within the quiet, peaceful,<br />

luxurious and rich neighborhood<br />

of the wealthy<br />

are children who suffer the<br />

most from the two most<br />

common stigma of wealth;<br />

Anxiety and depression.<br />

Although these children<br />

are surrounded with wealth<br />

and the good things of life,<br />

they often fight many internal<br />

battles, one of which is<br />

the unreasonable expectation<br />

they are made to live<br />

up to. Not only do regular<br />

people expect so much<br />

from them, their own parents<br />

and extended family<br />

members also do so. They<br />

are, thus, under immense<br />

pressure to make decisions<br />

that make the family name<br />

‘look good’. A closer look<br />

at these wealthy children<br />

will reveal the pain, confusion,<br />

internal struggles and<br />

doubt they deal with on a<br />

day-to-day basis. They usually<br />

cannot disclose these<br />

internal battles to their parents<br />

or friends because no<br />

one expects them to have<br />

Objectives<br />

• Solid wealth<br />

• Groomed Heirs<br />

• Undying legacy and<br />

Name<br />

• Rich relationships<br />

• Personal<br />

development<br />

• Healthcare Planning<br />

• Giving.<br />

The internal battles wealthy children fight<br />

that their parents don’t know about<br />

any cause to worry – especially<br />

after being given so<br />

much.<br />

However, the worries<br />

of these wealthy children<br />

have nothing to do with<br />

having a roof over their<br />

heads or worrying about<br />

the source of their next<br />

meals. Their worries are<br />

emotional and because<br />

they belong to a world<br />

that is supposed to be perfect,<br />

they deny themselves<br />

peace and happiness in order<br />

to please everyone.<br />

Three things have been<br />

found to be major contributors<br />

to the stress and<br />

internal struggles of the<br />

wealthy child:<br />

The first is their expectation<br />

of themselves.<br />

Being born into wealth<br />

places a natural demand<br />

on you to do more than<br />

others. This demand requires<br />

that you use the<br />

resources at your disposal<br />

to better yourself and<br />

do greater things in the<br />

world. Unfortunately, the<br />

capacity to be better, successful<br />

and attain wealth<br />

does not come naturally<br />

to an individual who is<br />

born into wealth. These<br />

children go to the most<br />

prestigious schools where<br />

they are taught everything<br />

but wealth, money<br />

and how to succeed.<br />

Their parents who should<br />

also help sometimes have<br />

no idea how to go about it<br />

or are preoccupied with<br />

making more money. The<br />

discussion about money<br />

and wealth in most<br />

wealthy homes has become<br />

a taboo almost as<br />

much as the topic of sex.<br />

As such, the weight of<br />

wanting to succeed without<br />

the corresponding<br />

help and education weigh<br />

these children down and<br />

reduces their overall selfesteem.<br />

The children of the<br />

wealthy suffer in their<br />

own ways. They might not<br />

be in need of money, but<br />

they are burdened from<br />

the weight of their internal<br />

mind battles.<br />

The second cause of<br />

internal battle for wealthy<br />

children is their parent’s<br />

expectations. The pressure<br />

to make their parents<br />

proud of them, the<br />

constant war and emotional<br />

divide over family<br />

business succession, the<br />

conditional inheritance<br />

hinging on special kind<br />

of relationships, parental<br />

approval over certain key<br />

life decisions and having<br />

to constantly live in the<br />

shadow of their successful<br />

parents are all borne out of<br />

this same heavy parental<br />

expectation. Worse of all<br />

is that these expectations<br />

show up late in their lives<br />

when the cost of changing<br />

their life’s direction becomes<br />

too disruptive and<br />

painful. Below are some of<br />

the raw feedbacks we got<br />

from children born into<br />

wealthy homes;<br />

“When you are born into<br />

a wealthy family, your parents<br />

will forever lord over<br />

you. However, if you could<br />

prove yourself, by succeeding<br />

outside the family<br />

business, you will be able<br />

to call the shots. My dad<br />

uses his money to manipulate<br />

us. He has the money;<br />

he makes the rules and he<br />

‘<br />

When you are born into a<br />

wealthy family, your parents<br />

will forever lord over you.<br />

However, if you could prove<br />

yourself, by succeeding outside<br />

the family business, you will be<br />

able to call the shots<br />

made that very clear.”<br />

“I think my parents<br />

genuinely view me as an<br />

investment and it’s pretty<br />

flawed. I have to be who<br />

my father wants me to be,<br />

‘<br />

because he’s put so much<br />

money towards crafting me<br />

into that person. I might as<br />

well be broke and free“<br />

“I desperately want the<br />

label of my family name to<br />

come off. I do not want my<br />

family labels to define who<br />

I am. I want to live life on<br />

my own terms. I think that<br />

one of the ways to find happiness<br />

in life is to figure out<br />

your own goals, and forget<br />

about the goals your parents<br />

set for you“<br />

The third source of<br />

stress for wealthy children<br />

comes from the society at<br />

large. It is almost like being<br />

wealthy attracts a lot of<br />

hate from the society. People<br />

are constantly trying to<br />

get at you and take advantage<br />

of you.<br />

“You are hated by the<br />

media. Somehow, you<br />

don’t deserve your money;<br />

you didn’t work hard for it,<br />

you need to give more, or<br />

you are to be blamed for<br />

income inequality. If you<br />

post anything you have on<br />

social media, you are bragging.<br />

They have never been<br />

such an organized attempt<br />

to vilify and defame the<br />

wealthy kid like it is today.<br />

The key question for<br />

parents is, ‘what are your<br />

children not telling you<br />

that they are telling a total<br />

stranger?’ This is where<br />

the need for a wealth advisor<br />

comes in. Perhaps the<br />

most important role of a<br />

wealth advisor is to serve<br />

as a catalyst for starting<br />

these very vital conversations<br />

about you, money,<br />

your wealth and how your<br />

children feel about it. The<br />

focus is to address the fundamental<br />

issues and not<br />

the symptoms. Your children<br />

need help and you<br />

should get them the help<br />

that they need because<br />

the preservation of your<br />

wealth depends on it.<br />

We have compiled 38 of<br />

the most insightful feedback<br />

we have gotten from<br />

children born into wealthy<br />

homes concerning their<br />

fears, concerns and the internal<br />

battles.<br />

If you are interested in<br />

getting a free copy, kindly<br />

send an SMS “Send me the<br />

Wealthy kid Infographic”<br />

to 08101860042.<br />

Keep preparing your<br />

children for success.<br />

Grace Agada is a Senior<br />

Wealth Advisor and<br />

Author with extensive<br />

experience in wealth<br />

creation, wealth<br />

preservation and wealth<br />

transfer.


Monday <strong>07</strong> <strong>Jan</strong>uary 2018 www.businessday.ng https://www.facebook.com/businessdayng @Businessdayng<br />

BUSINESS DAY 31<br />

Stocks Currencies Commodities Rates + Bonds Economics Funds Week Ahead Watchlist P.E<br />

economy<br />

Consumer firms to maintain dividend<br />

payment momentum despite tough 2018<br />

… Paid N78.33 billion in 2017<br />

….Dangote Sugar, Nascon records higher yields compared to peers<br />

BALA AUGIE<br />

Investors in consumer<br />

goods firms shouldn’t<br />

fret as the companies are<br />

set to maintain dividend<br />

payment momentum<br />

even as tough and unpredictable<br />

environment undermined<br />

profit while share prices were<br />

beaten down last year.<br />

Eight largest consumer<br />

good firms quoted on the floor<br />

of the bourse paid N78.33 billion<br />

for the year financial year<br />

ended December 2017.<br />

Analysts are of the view<br />

that payout ratio will not reduce<br />

even though some have<br />

embarked on aggressive expansion<br />

plans with a view to<br />

increasing the share of the<br />

market.<br />

“It was a tough year for<br />

firms but not significant as to<br />

force them to reduce payout.<br />

I don’t think the numbers are<br />

that bad,” said Christian Orajekwe,<br />

equity research analyst<br />

at Cordros Capital.<br />

“In 2016 we saw a reduction<br />

in payout ratio of Unilever<br />

but 2018 is not as tough for<br />

them like the recession period.<br />

This is because a lot them have<br />

reduced dollar denominated<br />

debts and foreign exchange<br />

losses,” said Orajekwe.<br />

Nigerian Breweries, with<br />

a track record of 100 percent<br />

payout, paid total dividend of<br />

Analysts forecast top 10 NSE companies to earn N1 trn in profits this year<br />

IFEANYI JOHN<br />

The top 10 largest companies<br />

by market capitalization<br />

listed on the<br />

Nigerian Stock Exchange<br />

are set to earn a combined<br />

N1.021 trillion in profits by<br />

year end 2018 according to<br />

data compiled by Business-<br />

Day.<br />

“The outlook for business<br />

is more positive this year<br />

than in previous years. This<br />

year, the economy is going to<br />

grow at its fastest rate since<br />

2015 so it’s not such a big sur-<br />

N29.89 billion for 2017 financial<br />

year. Nestle Nigeria Plc<br />

paid a final dividend of N21.79<br />

billion for 2017 financial year.<br />

Dangote Sugar Refinery<br />

paid total dividend of N15<br />

billion for 2017 financial year.<br />

Dwindling purchasing<br />

power among consumers,<br />

insecurity in the northern<br />

part of the country, decrepit<br />

infrastructure, high incidence<br />

of smuggling, counterfeiting locally<br />

manufactured products,<br />

and the menacing grid lock at<br />

the Apapa Ports have made it<br />

difficult for manufacturers to<br />

bolster margins.<br />

Nigeria’s economy remains<br />

fragile as GDP grew by 1.80<br />

percent in the third quarter<br />

of 2018, a downturn from 1.95<br />

percent and 2.10 percent in the<br />

first quarter and fourth quarter<br />

of 2018 and 2017.<br />

While inflation for month<br />

of November 2018 is in double<br />

digits, below the central bank’s<br />

target range of 6 percent and 9<br />

percent.<br />

“Some of the firms that are<br />

still investing heavily on new<br />

projects will maintain a 50 percent<br />

and 60 percent pay-out.<br />

For instance Dangote Sugar<br />

is investing in the Sugar for<br />

Nigeria Master Plan,” said Ifedayo<br />

Olowoporoku, consumer<br />

goods analysts with Vetiva<br />

Capital Management Ltd.<br />

Nacon Allied’s and Danogte<br />

Sugar’s dividend yields of 8.33<br />

percent and 12 percent are the<br />

highest among peers. This is<br />

because their stocks are trading<br />

below intrinsic value, which<br />

makes it very attractive to investors.<br />

Nascon and Dangote<br />

Sugar are trading at a price to<br />

earnings ratio of 9.39 times and<br />

5.83 times, which is lower than<br />

the consumer goods index P/E<br />

ratio of 19.58 times.<br />

Analysts at Vetiva Capital<br />

Management Ltd see Investors<br />

remaining wary of downside<br />

factors affecting Nigerian<br />

Breweries and Guinness in<br />

<strong>2019</strong>; albeit they do not expect<br />

the stocks, particularly Nigeria<br />

Breweries, to fall below multi-<br />

prise that we are seeing these<br />

companies hit the N1 trillion<br />

mark in profits. The economic<br />

recovery has remained fragile<br />

but with oil prices recovering<br />

from its lows, exchange rate<br />

becoming stable and treasury<br />

yields rising, it is only<br />

expected that companies<br />

will have a strong financial<br />

performance this year,” said<br />

Tochukwu Okafor, lecturer in<br />

Banking and Finance department<br />

at Covenant University.<br />

<strong>BusinessDay</strong> analysis of<br />

the consensus projected profits<br />

to be earned after taxes by<br />

year lows seen in 2018.<br />

“Taking from our 2.5% point<br />

estimate return for the NSE in<br />

<strong>2019</strong>, we predict a -5% to 0%<br />

return for the CNS sector. The<br />

Consumer Goods sector currently<br />

trades at a P/E of 19.58<br />

(ASI: 9.27x) with dividend<br />

yield of 3.5% (ASI: 5.4%),” said<br />

at Vetiva<br />

the ten companies showed<br />

Dangote Cement (N158b as at<br />

Q3) leading the pack in terms<br />

of profits.<br />

Africa’s largest cement<br />

maker was closely followed<br />

by the usual suspects, Zenith<br />

Bank (N144b as at Q3)<br />

and GTBank (N142b as at<br />

Q3). These three firms accounted<br />

for 56 percent of the<br />

total profits earned by the<br />

ten largest companies on the<br />

local bourse as at Q3 with a<br />

combined profit of N444.63<br />

Continues on page 32<br />

SHORT TAKES<br />

N22.429 Trillion<br />

Nigeria’s total public<br />

debt stock comprising<br />

external and domestic<br />

debts of the Federal<br />

Government, 36 States<br />

and the Federal Capital<br />

Territory (FCT) stood<br />

at N22.429 trillion (or<br />

US$ 73.213 billion) in<br />

the third quarter of<br />

2018, up from N22.38<br />

trillion (or US$ 73.208<br />

billion) recorded in the<br />

previous quarter.<br />

<strong>BusinessDay</strong> MARKETS INTELLIGENCE (Team lead: BALA AUGIE - Analyst: Dipo Oladehinde, ENDURANCE OKAFOR, BUNMI BAILEY Graphics: samuel iduh )<br />

BMI provides in-depth analysis and data on industries, companies, stocks, currencies, fixed income/credit, economics, regulation and factors that influence investor’s decision-making<br />

Email the BMI team patrick.atuanya@businessdayonline.com<br />

0.52%<br />

Nigeria’s all-product<br />

terms of trade<br />

for the third quarter<br />

of 2018 grew<br />

slightly by 0.52% as<br />

the index averaged<br />

99.92 in the quarter.<br />

All-product<br />

terms of trade<br />

settled at 98.85,<br />

99.64 and 99.37 in<br />

July, August and<br />

September of the<br />

quarter respectively.<br />

2.54%<br />

Value-added tax<br />

(VAT) generated in<br />

the third quarter of<br />

2018 expanded by<br />

2.54% to N273.50<br />

billion compared<br />

to N266.73 billion<br />

recorded in previous<br />

quarter. Other manufacturing<br />

generated<br />

the highest amount<br />

for the quarter with<br />

N31.483 billion,<br />

while the mining<br />

sector generated the<br />

lowest amount of<br />

VAT at N52.701 million.


www.businessday.ng Monday <strong>07</strong> <strong>Jan</strong>uary 2018<br />

32 BUSINESS DAY<br />

https://www.facebook.com/businessdayng @Businessdayng<br />

IFEANYI JOHN<br />

On a recent Monday, Nigeria<br />

woke up to the news that<br />

Access Bank had agreed to<br />

acquire all issued share capital of<br />

Diamond Bank in a deal that will<br />

see Diamond bank shareholders a<br />

consideration of N3.13 per share and<br />

puts the total value on the acquisition<br />

at around N72 billion.<br />

Significant as it seems, the entire<br />

value of the transaction is less than the<br />

annualized 2018 profit of Access Bank<br />

which analysts expect to be around<br />

N83.9 billion. This puts the Diamond<br />

bank acquisition cost at only about<br />

85.8 percent of the annualized 2018<br />

profit for the year.<br />

At completion of the merger between<br />

the two banks, Access bank will<br />

snatch the crown from Zenith bank<br />

as the largest bank in Nigeria by asset<br />

in <strong>2019</strong> but will likely (for now) fail to<br />

steal the pride from Zenith bank as the<br />

most profitable bank in Nigeria based<br />

on analyst’s expectation.<br />

The average return on asset for<br />

Access Bank between 2013 and 2017<br />

was 2.03 percent. Assuming the acquisition<br />

of Diamond bank and the<br />

expected write-offs in bad debt from<br />

the legacy bank does not hurt their<br />

ROA performance in <strong>2019</strong>, the expected<br />

profit for the year in <strong>2019</strong> may<br />

likely be around N121.8 billion on an<br />

asset base of N6 trillion which is a 97<br />

percent increase from the reported<br />

2017 profit after tax but will be around<br />

N56 billion lower than the expected<br />

The percentage share of capital<br />

expenditure to Nigeria’s total<br />

budget has been increasing<br />

at a faster pace than recurrent expenditure<br />

since the inception of the<br />

present administration, but in the<br />

proposed <strong>2019</strong> budget, the trend<br />

was reversed.<br />

President Muhammadu Buhari<br />

presented a N8.83 trillion budget<br />

estimates for the <strong>2019</strong> fiscal year<br />

before a joint session of the National<br />

Assembly on December 19,<br />

with N4.04 trillion proposed for recurrent<br />

expenditure and N2.03 trillion<br />

earmarked for capital projects.<br />

Capital expenditure (CAPEX)<br />

as a percentage of total budgets<br />

increased to 26.29 percent in 2016<br />

from 15.61 percent in 2015; It<br />

moved to 29.17 percent in 2017 and<br />

31.47 percent in 2018, but fell to 23<br />

percent in <strong>2019</strong>.<br />

Recurrent expenditure as a<br />

percent to total budget fell to 43.73<br />

percent in 2016 from 57.46 percent<br />

in 2015 while dipped to 40.19 and<br />

and 38.49 percent in 2018, but<br />

increased to 45.70 percent in <strong>2019</strong>.<br />

Should federal government capitulate<br />

to Labour demand kick in<br />

soon, personnel cost will be spike,<br />

further raising concerns whether<br />

policy holders can sustain the new<br />

wage bill amid falling oil prices.<br />

The planned spending for the<br />

<strong>2019</strong> budget is N294 billion lower<br />

than N9.12 trillion approved by the<br />

lawmakers in the 2018 budget. This<br />

may not be unconnected to falling<br />

government revenue largely driven<br />

by low production and prices of<br />

Markets Intelligence<br />

Bank size wars: Zenith, GTB to remain more profitable than Access in <strong>2019</strong><br />

… Access set to amass almost twice total assets of GTB after Diamond bank merger<br />

… Analysts predict Access will be third most profitable bank next year behind Zenith, GTBank<br />

This chart show capex to budget ratio is rising<br />

OLUWASEGUN OLAKOYENIKAN<br />

2018 profit after tax of Zenith Bank<br />

and GTBank who are both expected<br />

to deliver PAT around N192.2 billion<br />

and N189.6 billion respectively.<br />

The ability for these two banks to<br />

remain significantly more profitable<br />

than Access bank despite a smaller<br />

asset base is down to “cost efficiency”.<br />

The cost to income ratio for GTBank<br />

and Zenith bank last year was 38.1<br />

percent and 52.7 percent respectively<br />

versus Access bank who reported cost<br />

to income ratio of 62.1 percent.<br />

“It is very unlikely that the synergy<br />

from the merger will start to show in<br />

<strong>2019</strong> immediately after the merger, to<br />

think that you can benefit from cost<br />

management so early on is far too<br />

optimistic,” said Maju Eldad, Lecturer<br />

in Economics department at Federal<br />

University of Kashere, Gombe.<br />

“I believe Access bank took the<br />

right decision to acquire Diamond<br />

crude oil which accounts for more<br />

than 90 percent of Nigerian government<br />

earnings.<br />

<strong>BusinessDay</strong> analysis reveals<br />

that despite a 3.18 percent reduction<br />

in the total expenditure<br />

for the next fiscal year, recurrent<br />

expenditure was raised by 15 percent<br />

from N3.51 trillion in 2018<br />

even as capital expenditure was<br />

cut down by 29.27 percent from<br />

N2.87 trillion.<br />

Prior to this present dispensation<br />

of government, the administration<br />

of former President Goodluck<br />

Jonathan budgeted a paltry<br />

sum of N701 billion for capital<br />

expenditure in the 2015 budget,<br />

this accounted for 15.61 percent<br />

of the entire N4.49 trillion budget<br />

estimates for the year, according to<br />

data from the Budget Office of the<br />

Federation.<br />

Recurrent expenditure however<br />

bank. It was significantly undervalued<br />

and presented a big growth opportunity<br />

for Access bank who will<br />

now become Nigeria’s largest bank.<br />

I think this merger will help produce<br />

significant gains for their shareholders<br />

in terms of profitability and cost<br />

efficiency over time. It won’t be unlikely<br />

that other Tier 1 banks will be<br />

looking to acquire either a struggling<br />

Tier 3 bank or a significantly undervalued<br />

Tier 2 bank now that Access<br />

has shown the easy road to growth,”<br />

Eldad added.<br />

By this acquisition Access bank<br />

will become the largest bank in Nigeria<br />

with an asset base of N6 trillion.<br />

Behind them will be Zenith bank<br />

(N5.6 trillion), First bank (N5.3 trillion),<br />

UBA (N4.5 trillion) and GTBank<br />

(N3.4 trillion). Each of these banks is<br />

expected to earn above N56 billion in<br />

2018 full year profit after tax.<br />

got N2.58 trillion, this represented<br />

57.46 percent of the total budget.<br />

This development was reversed<br />

in 2016 upon the emergence of<br />

President Buhari-led government<br />

that pledged to focus on security,<br />

while it would implement policies<br />

to attract investment and spur<br />

competition in critical sectors of<br />

the economy for growth and job<br />

creation.<br />

In achieving this, the 2016 Budget<br />

tagged “Budget of Change”<br />

allocated N1.59 trillion for capital<br />

expenditure, about 126.82 percent<br />

increase when compared with the<br />

previous year, while recurrent expenditure<br />

was elevated slightly by<br />

2.71 percent to N2.65 trillion.<br />

This brings the percentage share<br />

of capital expenditure and recurrent<br />

expenditure to the aggregate<br />

budget in 2016 to 26.24 percent and<br />

43.73 percent respectively.<br />

Powell stokes market rally with<br />

promise of ‘patience’ on rate rises<br />

Fed chair signals cautious approach to tightening despite very strong US jobs<br />

Federal Reserve chair Jay Powell<br />

offered an upbeat assessment of<br />

US economic prospects following<br />

a strong jobs report on Friday, easing<br />

fears of a <strong>2019</strong> downturn that had<br />

spooked investors in recent weeks.<br />

Mr Powell said markets had moved<br />

“well ahead of the data” in pricing in<br />

risks to the US economy, following a<br />

sharp sell-off on Thursday and deep<br />

losses for equity investors during<br />

December.<br />

“US data seem to be on track to<br />

sustain good momentum into the<br />

new year,” the Fed chairman told a<br />

conference in Atlanta. Along with his<br />

comforting words about the health of<br />

the world’s largest economy, Mr Powell<br />

said the Fed would take a “patient”<br />

approach to monetary policy tightening,<br />

contributing to a rally which sent<br />

the S&P 500 up by more than 3 per<br />

cent in New York.<br />

Mr Powell’s reassurance countered<br />

fears about the impact of US-China<br />

trade tensions and waning corporate<br />

profits on the American outlook, highlighted<br />

by a shock profit warning by<br />

Apple on Wednesday. Markets have<br />

also been hit by signs that the global<br />

economy is set for a slowdown.<br />

The comments also offered some<br />

breathing room to the Trump administration<br />

as it grapples with new<br />

Democratic opposition in the House<br />

of Representatives, a government<br />

shutdown and internal turmoil that<br />

included the departure of John Kelly<br />

as chief of staff and Jim Mattis as defence<br />

secretary.<br />

On Thursday, Kevin Hassett, chairman<br />

of the White House council of<br />

economic advisers, stoked fears of a<br />

slowdown when he warned that “a<br />

heck of a lot” of US companies with<br />

sales in China were on track to see<br />

lower profits. But speaking on Bloomberg<br />

TV, Larry Kudlow, Mr Trump’s<br />

economic aide, dismissed that view.<br />

“It’s a little easy and inaccurate to<br />

say all of these American companies<br />

are going to crash,” Mr Kudlow said,<br />

adding that there was “a much better,<br />

more optimistic picture”, with “no<br />

recession in sight”.<br />

As markets have soured in recent<br />

weeks, Mr Trump has lashed out at Mr<br />

Powell over the Fed’s plans to increase<br />

interest rates. On Friday, Mr Powell<br />

brusquely asserted his independence.<br />

Asked if he would quit if asked to by<br />

Mr Trump, he replied: “No.”<br />

Crucially for markets, Mr Powell<br />

also backtracked on previous comments<br />

about the Fed’s operation to<br />

reduce its balance sheet as part of the<br />

unwinding of post-crisis quantitative<br />

easing.<br />

Mr Powell last month said the<br />

shrinking of the Fed’s balance sheet<br />

was on autopilot, remarks that helped<br />

trigger a sharp downturn in US markets<br />

afraid the programme would<br />

depress asset prices. But on Friday he<br />

said that while he did not think that<br />

the turbulence had been caused by<br />

concerns over the shrinkage, the Fed<br />

“wouldn’t hesitate” to change balance<br />

sheet policy if needed.<br />

Earlier on Friday, data showed the<br />

US economy last month had its strongest<br />

job growth since February while<br />

wages accelerated at a quicker pace.<br />

Non-farm payrolls climbed 312,000<br />

in December, the US labour department<br />

said, beating by a wide margin economists’<br />

expectations for a gain of 177,000<br />

jobs, as employment rose sharply in<br />

healthcare, food and drinking establishments<br />

and manufacturing.<br />

Meanwhile, wage growth heated<br />

up last month with average hourly<br />

earnings up 3.2 per cent year-on-year<br />

— the quickest pace since 2009 — and<br />

up 0.4 per cent month-on-month,<br />

ahead of economists’ expectations.<br />

In addition to the jump in the<br />

S&P index, the tech-heavy Nasdaq<br />

Composite index jumped 3.9 per cent,<br />

while the Dow Jones Industrial Average<br />

climbed 2.8 per cent. Treasuries<br />

sold off as investor nervousness eased,<br />

pushing the 10-year US government<br />

bond yield up by 9 basis points to<br />

2.65 per cent.<br />

“The American economy is booming<br />

based on today’s reading of the<br />

employment situation, which should<br />

go a long way to reassuring nervous<br />

nellies in financial markets that the<br />

<strong>2019</strong> economic outlook skies will not<br />

be turning dark and grey,” said Chris<br />

Rupkey, chief financial economist at<br />

MUFG.<br />

Some investors and analysts had<br />

even thought the Fed might be forced<br />

to cut rates this year, but those expectations<br />

faded on Friday.<br />

Analysts forecast top 10 NSE...<br />

Continued from page 31<br />

billion.<br />

The trend was projected to continue<br />

by the end of the year with an<br />

additional N146.7 billion expected<br />

to be added to the bottom-line of<br />

these companies in the last quarter<br />

of the year.<br />

Banks made up six of the 10<br />

largest companies on the Exchange<br />

showing how strong and profitable<br />

the banking sector is in Nigeria.<br />

The financial sector will contribute<br />

70.3 percent of the N1 trillion at the<br />

end of the year with six companies<br />

projected to lead the industry with<br />

combined earnings of over N734<br />

billion.<br />

Ecobank, UBA, Stanbic IBTC<br />

Holdings and First Bank are the<br />

banks that complete the list with<br />

projected earnings of N101 billion,<br />

N81 billion, N79 billion and N59<br />

billion respectively.<br />

“Banks have enjoyed the high<br />

yield environment especially this<br />

year. With deposit interest rates<br />

remaining flat and risk-free rate rising,<br />

banks are making large spreads<br />

without needing to take the risk of<br />

lending to the real sector in a slow<br />

growth economy. It is very possible<br />

that we will see a similar strong performance<br />

for banks next year since<br />

we expect very little to change in<br />

the economic performance,” Okafor<br />

added.<br />

In 2017, the combined earnings<br />

of these companies was N70 billion<br />

short of hitting the trillion naira<br />

mark.<br />

Analysts are of the view that the<br />

top ten firms are to grow by 9 percent<br />

to make up for the needed funds to<br />

hit the mark. Ecobank, First Bank<br />

and Stanbic IBTC Holdings are the<br />

companies poised to champion the<br />

9 percent increase with the three<br />

firms projected to grow earnings by<br />

an average of 50 percent.<br />

With the N1 trillion projected<br />

earnings and current price of these<br />

companies, we arrived at a forward<br />

price to earnings multiple of 8.13x as<br />

opposed to the market P/E of 10.67<br />

at the end of 2018.


Monday <strong>07</strong> <strong>Jan</strong>uary <strong>2019</strong><br />

Start-Up Digest<br />

In<br />

association with<br />

BUSINESS DAY<br />

33<br />

Top 5 business ideas featured in 2018<br />

ODINAKA ANUDU and JOSEPHINE OKOJIE<br />

Start-Up-Digest has ranked<br />

entrepreneurs’ interview<br />

in 2018 on our weekly<br />

section and here are some<br />

ideas that we think were<br />

outstanding in 2018.<br />

Bathkandy<br />

Bathkandy was founded by<br />

Blondie Okpuzor. Her business idea<br />

was unique because she creates<br />

soaps, lotions and other beauty, skin<br />

care and household products using<br />

unconventional raw materials such<br />

as jollof rice, goat milk, garri, coffee,<br />

and chocolate.<br />

Blondie set up the company in<br />

December 2014.<br />

Her candles are unconventional<br />

and look like desserts. The soaps,<br />

candles, lotions are regular products<br />

but they look differently, like ice<br />

cream soups.<br />

“We have over 50 different types<br />

of soap. We infuse different things.<br />

We never had the same soap design<br />

twice. Every time you come, things<br />

look different. It is the same thing,<br />

but it looks different,” she explained<br />

to Start-Up Digest in May last year.<br />

“We have goat milk lotions,<br />

made from goat milk. We have<br />

scrubs made from garri, coffee, and<br />

chocolate,” she discloses.<br />

“They are all manufactured here<br />

in Nigeria. I make them by hand and<br />

we infuse delicious things like oils,<br />

tea, chocolates.<br />

“Recently we just made soap<br />

from jollof rice. We are using local<br />

ingredients to make them. We have<br />

found that there are a lot of natural<br />

things that are there for you, but if<br />

you don’t know or use them, then<br />

you don’t get the benefits. So, we<br />

merge science with arts,” she asserted.<br />

Her products make the skin look<br />

better and her packaging products<br />

come from locally recycled materials.<br />

As a mark of expansion, she set<br />

up a second store in Abuja in 2016.<br />

She is looking more internationally—to<br />

Ghana, Kenya and South<br />

Africa, because these are the biggest<br />

beauty markets in Africa.<br />

Blondie mentors younger entrepreneurs<br />

through her Bathkandy<br />

University.<br />

“We teach people how to make<br />

skin care products and start their<br />

own business. What we have found<br />

is that even though it is easy to start<br />

a skin care business, there are so<br />

many details that people do not<br />

have. Social media is a great thing.<br />

I have people who want me to mentor<br />

them and I do that. Everything I<br />

learnt was literally trial and error,<br />

so I won’t like others to go through<br />

that.”<br />

Madame Coquette/Fula Farms<br />

The 35-year-old Bello produces<br />

what she calls Madame Coquette<br />

(MC), which is a line of handbags<br />

and small leather goods. She set up<br />

this business 10 years ago.<br />

She uses local raw materials like<br />

snakes and crocodiles in making<br />

these bags. She buys snakes and<br />

crocodiles and uses them as raw<br />

materials. The entrepreneur also<br />

uses locally available leather in<br />

Hoawa Bello Abioye Tunde-Anjous Blondie Okpuzor<br />

making bags, importing some from<br />

other countries.<br />

“We use indigenous snake and<br />

crocodile skins from Kano and<br />

Kaduna. We hand- dye and colour<br />

the skins we use in making these<br />

products,” she told Start-up Digest<br />

in July 2018.<br />

Her products have been sold in<br />

North America and Europe.<br />

“I didn’t start with a lot of capital.<br />

I got a N30, 000 loan from my sister<br />

to start my business,” she said.<br />

She also founded Fula Farms<br />

in early 2015. This farm, located in<br />

Lekki part of Lagos, boasts of over 50<br />

cows. Hoawa produces milk, cheese<br />

and the local ‘fura’. A number of<br />

women make both ends meet from<br />

Fula Farms.<br />

“Most of the women were home<br />

makers and their primary objective<br />

was to take care of their children.<br />

They didn’t have a source of income<br />

and most of their time was spent<br />

in their homes. A majority of them<br />

were nursing mothers. I decided<br />

to change the scope of the business<br />

and tailor it to empower the<br />

women in the community we work<br />

in,” she said.<br />

“We have 90 percent female<br />

workforce. The farm stands as one<br />

of the few dairy farms in Lagos and<br />

it supplies small businesses and<br />

individuals with raw (fresh) milk<br />

and locally produced cheese,” she<br />

disclosed.<br />

X3M Group<br />

This business was founded by<br />

Steve Babaeko, who is the CEO of<br />

X3M Group, made up of X3M Ideas,<br />

X3M Music, and Zero Degrees,<br />

among others. His business is waxing<br />

strong at a time when many of<br />

its peers are struggling and going<br />

out of business.<br />

Babeko is an advertising/ branding/<br />

marketing guru who has also<br />

delved into audio-visual production<br />

and record label, with clearcut<br />

plans to diversify into other<br />

countries.<br />

Within few years of starting, he<br />

has set up offices in Accra, Johannesburg<br />

and Lusaka, among others,<br />

winning a couple of pan-African<br />

awards.<br />

“I am really excited because<br />

we are the only local agency in the<br />

country today operating at that<br />

regional level. We are like trailblazers,<br />

if you like. We are sort of<br />

experimenting and paving the way<br />

for other agencies on the continent<br />

to be able to go this route,” he told<br />

Start-Up Digest last month.<br />

Keexs<br />

Jide Ipaye is the founder of Keexs<br />

Footwear, an African- inspired<br />

range of casual footwear such as<br />

sneakers and smart shoes. Jide’s Keexs<br />

is the first innovative and social<br />

footwear brand in Nigeria and the<br />

African continent.<br />

He is focused on building a<br />

world-class footwear brand with<br />

manufacturing set-up in Nigeria,<br />

with a sole aim of creating economic<br />

empowerment opportunities for<br />

thousands of Africans, especially<br />

Nigerians.<br />

A Microbiology graduate of the<br />

University of Lagos, Jide was inspired<br />

to set-up Keexs by a personal<br />

challenge. He hardly found his size<br />

of shoes in the market and rarely got<br />

the designs he loved.<br />

As a result, he thought of making<br />

his own shoes to address this challenge<br />

and help others facing the<br />

same problem. He saw it as an opportunity<br />

to make a change rather<br />

than a perennial problem without<br />

a solution.<br />

“Keexs started out as a personal<br />

challenge for me. Being a size 48, I<br />

hardly got my size and when I eventually<br />

did, they were not exactly the<br />

style I liked. I have been dealing with<br />

this problem for almost 40 years, so<br />

I said to myself, ‘Why don’t I start<br />

making my own shoes and also<br />

helping others?”<br />

“I took the first step in conducting<br />

a research and went to a school<br />

in the Netherlands to learn how to<br />

design and manufacture sneakers.<br />

I did not want to focus on regular<br />

shoes.”<br />

After his studies in the Netherlands,<br />

he came back to Nigeria and<br />

established Keexs in December<br />

2015. Finance was a major challenge<br />

for Jide, but he was able to successfully<br />

jump the hurdle when he<br />

found a website called Kick Starter,<br />

a online-based US funding platform<br />

for creative projects.<br />

Jide put up a video with a writeup<br />

that told a story of his challenges,<br />

looking at the Nigerian context, saying<br />

what the challenges were and<br />

how the problem of unemployment<br />

in the economy could be solved<br />

by looking internally and creating<br />

value through manufacturing.<br />

And in forty days, Jide was able<br />

to raise $20,000 from the website to<br />

start his business. “Over a period<br />

of 40 days from November 2015 to<br />

December, we raised $20,000. The<br />

money was paid to the manufacturer<br />

to produce the first batch of<br />

the sneakers,” he said.<br />

When asked if there was any time<br />

he wanted to give up on his dreams,<br />

Jide said there were lots of time he<br />

wanted to give up but the enormous<br />

support he got from his wife encouraged<br />

him to ride on.<br />

When asked what he has done<br />

differently to ensure sustainability<br />

of the business, Jide stated that he<br />

has done a lot of research on the<br />

country’s shoe sector and understood<br />

why the likes of Bata Shoes,<br />

who was producing 10.4 million<br />

shoes per annum in the 1990’s<br />

failed.<br />

Currently, Keexs signed up for a<br />

World Bank grant to raise funds to<br />

set up the manufacturing arm of the<br />

business. Jide is an award-winning<br />

entrepreneur. In 2016, he won the<br />

Tony Elumelu Young Entrepreneur<br />

of the Year award.<br />

Abioye and Ladi<br />

For Abioye Tunde-Anjous and<br />

Ladi Oshinaike, co-founders of<br />

SirChefs Food and Beverage, their<br />

food inspiration came directly from<br />

the personal stories of the employees<br />

they found around them.<br />

SirChefs Food and Beverage is<br />

a real celebration of Nigeria’s food<br />

industry, with its essence created<br />

from local and traditional ingredients<br />

that are unique.<br />

Through its Breakfast King<br />

brand, Abioye and Ladi provide<br />

Nigeria’s Pap (popularly called Ogi<br />

or akamu) and Akara (bean cake) in<br />

cups. The pack enables employees<br />

and people with busy schedules to<br />

take breakfast quickly and regularly.<br />

“The idea behind our business<br />

came when we were both working<br />

with the health insurance industry.<br />

As a pharmacist, one of my roles in<br />

my former organisation was to talk<br />

to employees about their health and<br />

each time I asked if they had taken<br />

breakfast, I got a ‘no’ response from<br />

most of them,” Abioye said.<br />

“Living a fast-paced lifestyle is<br />

often why workers often skip their<br />

breakfast. Knowing that breakfast<br />

is the most important meal of the<br />

day and how it can make workers<br />

productive, I decided to fill the gap<br />

by providing them the right meal for<br />

breakfast,” Abioye stated.<br />

After doing some research on<br />

what the ideal breakfast could be,<br />

Abioye shared his idea with Ladi,<br />

his friend and colleague then,<br />

who bought into it and in 2017<br />

they established SirChef Food and<br />

Beverage.<br />

“We identified that even if there<br />

were options available for breakfast,<br />

they were not very healthy, and the<br />

ones that were healthy, you find<br />

them very expensive. So we felt we<br />

could make the food available and<br />

affordable,” Ladi disclosed.<br />

Abioye and Ladi started their<br />

business with the money they raised<br />

from their personal savings while<br />

they were working and also sourced<br />

additional capital from family and<br />

friends.<br />

SirChef Food and Beverage currently<br />

has 26 full-time and part-time<br />

employees.<br />

Start-Up Digest Team<br />

Odinaka Anudu<br />

Editor<br />

odinaka.anudu@businessdayonline.com<br />

08067478413<br />

Reporters<br />

Josephine Okojie<br />

Bummi Bailey<br />

Gbemi Faminu<br />

Joel Samson<br />

Graphics


Monday <strong>07</strong> <strong>Jan</strong>uary <strong>2019</strong><br />

34 BUSINESS DAY<br />

C002D5556<br />

Start-Up Digest<br />

Owolabi Mercy: Baker, caterer, mixologist<br />

Gbemi Faminu<br />

Owolabi Mercy is<br />

one of Nigeria’s energetic<br />

and hardworking<br />

young entrepreneurs.<br />

She is a<br />

baker, caterer, mixologist and chief<br />

executive officer (CEO) of Florry<br />

Cakes and More. Her business is<br />

to bake and cook exquisite meals<br />

for events.<br />

Although she is a graduate of<br />

Yaba College of Technology, also<br />

known as YABATECH, she started<br />

her business on a part-time basis<br />

in August 2012 while undergoing<br />

her National Diploma (ND)<br />

programme, baking cakes and<br />

snacks for her colleagues and those<br />

around her. Six years down the line,<br />

she has been able to expand her<br />

business to event management,<br />

catering and making of drinks such<br />

as Chapman and Punch.<br />

She started this business with<br />

N15, 000, which she proudly explains<br />

was entirely her savings. She<br />

says, “I am proud to have started<br />

my business with the sum of N15,<br />

000 which I saved on my own.”<br />

Mercy was encouraged to start<br />

this business owing to her passion<br />

for cooking, baking and planning<br />

of events, which she always enjoys<br />

doing.<br />

“Right from my childhood, my<br />

favourite place has always been the<br />

kitchen. I have always loved baking,<br />

cooking and planning events too.<br />

“While growing up, I took it<br />

upon myself to always decorate<br />

the house during festive seasons<br />

and I am grateful that my family<br />

encouraged me all the way, which<br />

helped me when I wanted to start<br />

my business. Now, I am so grateful<br />

because I do not have to look for a<br />

job anymore.”<br />

Owolabi says that she is able to<br />

StartupSouth partners Wish FM on<br />

business roundtable discussion<br />

StartupSouth, an entrepreneurship<br />

ecosystem<br />

development project<br />

focused on the South-<br />

South and South-East region, has<br />

partnered Wish FM in Port Harcourt<br />

for a roundtable entrepreneurship<br />

education programme.<br />

The business roundtable radio<br />

show is a 30-minute entrepreneurship<br />

education programme.<br />

Experts in micro, small<br />

and medium enterprises from<br />

across Nigeria will be invited<br />

weekly to discuss Nigeria’s entrepreneurship.<br />

Tomi Davies president of<br />

ABAN and co-founder, Lagos<br />

Angel Network, will be teaching<br />

different aspects of starting and<br />

running a business on the show.<br />

Part of the show will be used<br />

to showcase and promote businesses<br />

from the StartupSouth<br />

network in the forms of quick<br />

Owolabi Mercy<br />

remain different from other bakers<br />

by using only the best ingredients,<br />

establishing a friendly relationship<br />

with her clients, with a conscious,<br />

continuous effort of self-development,<br />

all of which have proved to<br />

work well.<br />

Speaking on some of the major<br />

challenges confronting her business,<br />

she complains about poor<br />

electricity supply, high cost of ingredients<br />

and transport problems,<br />

especially in terms of deliveries.<br />

She states that although she has<br />

been able to manage these issues,<br />

there is still a need for the government<br />

to intervene and help ease<br />

interviews.<br />

Uche Aniche, convener, StartupSouth<br />

and founder Havilah<br />

&Hills, said the aim of the partnership<br />

is to ensure that people<br />

learn how to start and grow<br />

their businesses as well as be<br />

informed on available financing<br />

options.<br />

Aniche stated that a dedicated<br />

portal will be provided for listeners<br />

to ask questions and get<br />

feedbacks.<br />

He noted that the roundtable<br />

discussion will focus on issues<br />

and topics which include Introduction<br />

to Innovation and Entrepreneurship,<br />

Validating Ideas,<br />

Team Building, Introduction to<br />

Selling, Introduction to Finance<br />

and Accounting Tools, Unit Economics<br />

and Access to Finance as<br />

well as Pitching, among others.<br />

The show will initially run for a<br />

year and would be aired 9am daily.<br />

the business environment, especially<br />

for start-ups.<br />

“I usually get my ingredients in<br />

Lagos major markets. I get them<br />

from wholesalers, and some other<br />

times I buy in groups with other<br />

bakers from wholesalers. Doing<br />

this reduces the cost price, and I<br />

always ensure that my ingredients<br />

are sourced from first-class producers.”<br />

The entrepreneur believes her<br />

products are always unique because<br />

of the way she uses special<br />

ingredients.<br />

“I also operate under a very<br />

clean environment to avoid the risk<br />

Africa needs to emulate Nigeria’s<br />

entrepreneurial drive – Lumumba<br />

Temitayo Ayetoto<br />

Patrick Lumumba, a professor,<br />

who is also a Kenyan<br />

activist and public<br />

speaker, has said the African<br />

continent looks to Nigeria for<br />

direction and inspiration regarding<br />

the enterprising drive of the<br />

average Nigerian.<br />

Lumumba, who was speaking<br />

at the event marking this year’s<br />

Face of Okija Cultural Festival in<br />

Anambra, called for the celebration<br />

of serial entrepreneurs like<br />

Ernest Azudialu-Obiejesi who<br />

built a conglomerate of companies<br />

from scratch and employed<br />

thousands of people. He said the<br />

entrepreneur was much better<br />

than politicians who contribute<br />

little to the society.<br />

Lumumba said companies<br />

such as Nestoil, Neconde, White<br />

of making harmful products, given<br />

that my goods are consumables.”<br />

When asked about plans to<br />

expand her business, the entrepreneur<br />

states that she has strong<br />

plans in this respect.<br />

“Over the last six years, I have<br />

been encouraged by the business<br />

so far. My clients’ database has<br />

grown tremendously, so has my<br />

profit margin. I have learnt lessons,<br />

and all these have encouraged me<br />

greatly. I am working on becoming<br />

a strong lady in the catering and<br />

event management world, and<br />

even establish my own restaurant,”<br />

she says.<br />

Dove, B&Q and others that make<br />

up the Obijackson Group, would<br />

not have sprouted without the<br />

daring spirit of Azudialu-obiejesi.<br />

Lumumba, once the chairman<br />

of Kenya’s anti-corruption commission,<br />

said key to Africa’s growth<br />

lies in the sustainable support for<br />

entrepreneurs through creation of<br />

enabling environment for private<br />

enterprise to thrive throughout the<br />

continent.<br />

Patrick Lumumba<br />

“Although I have been able to<br />

acquire certificates from trainings<br />

and seminars, I am still hunting<br />

for more certificates and trainings<br />

to gain more knowledge and<br />

expertise that will help my business<br />

grow.”<br />

The entrepreneur has an employee,<br />

but is working on growing<br />

her business to bring in more<br />

workers. She is also trying to get<br />

an official place for her business.<br />

“I am sure I will achieve all these<br />

in due time, though it will require<br />

extra funds and resources. But,<br />

hopefully, I can achieve it through<br />

financial aids from the government,<br />

consumer organisations or<br />

financial institutions.”<br />

Speaking on the effect of the<br />

economic downturn, she says that<br />

human beings have the ability to<br />

adapt to any situation, meaning<br />

that businesses still fare well in<br />

such period, though not as fast as<br />

before.<br />

“My role models are business<br />

moguls that started small but have<br />

gone far today,” she says.<br />

“I try to emulate them while<br />

working with my values, which<br />

include being hardworking, remaining<br />

committed and consistent<br />

with high level of patience and<br />

tolerance,” she tells Start-Up Digest.<br />

She urges the government to<br />

ease the business environment,<br />

especially for small and medium<br />

scale enterprises. Owolabi also<br />

wants the authorities to make<br />

policies that will aid start-ups,<br />

while calling on the government to<br />

provide stable electricity and necessary<br />

infrastructure for effective<br />

and easy production and mobility.<br />

On advice to other entrepreneurs,<br />

she says, “Remain hard<br />

working, make a conscious effort to<br />

develop yourself regularly, ensure<br />

you grow your people-network and<br />

always believe in yourself.”<br />

On democracy, he said Africa<br />

will get it right the day Nigeria gets<br />

it right, noting that Nigeria stands<br />

in a very unique position to resolve<br />

the challenges of the continent.<br />

He further urged Africa to focus<br />

on the things that matter; things<br />

that build and grow the continent<br />

and things that impact the people.<br />

“By February <strong>2019</strong>, Nigerians<br />

will go to the polls to elect their<br />

leaders. And I must state that the<br />

day Nigeria gets it right, Africa gets<br />

it right,” he said.<br />

“Young people in Nigeria and<br />

across Africa must identify what<br />

is in their best interest and actively<br />

participate in the electoral<br />

process. They must understand<br />

the significance and power of their<br />

votes. What are the policies on the<br />

table? Are we voting people for<br />

what they have done, for what they<br />

can do or for the hand-outs they<br />

offer before the elections?”


Monday <strong>07</strong> <strong>Jan</strong>uary <strong>2019</strong><br />

BUSINESS DAY<br />

35<br />

Start-Up Digest<br />

Top 5 funding options available for<br />

Nigerian entrepreneurs in <strong>2019</strong><br />

ODINAKA ANUDU<br />

Happy New Year to<br />

readers of Start-Up<br />

Digest in Nigeria<br />

and other parts of<br />

the world. As our<br />

manner is, we usually let entrepreneurs<br />

know some of the funding<br />

options available for them every<br />

new year. This year will not be an<br />

exception. Today, we will look at<br />

some of these funds and criteria<br />

for accessing them.<br />

General criteria<br />

The general criterion for accessing<br />

these funds is to have a business.<br />

These firms rarely fund ideas<br />

because ideas are untested and<br />

untried. You must have a business<br />

and ensure that it is providing a<br />

solution to a problem in society.<br />

Next is to have a bankable and<br />

viable business plan. More so,<br />

the entrepreneur should be clear<br />

on where he/she wants to be in<br />

the near future and be able to<br />

describe the market he/she plays.<br />

The entrepreneur should have<br />

good book-keeping in order to<br />

accurately know his/her revenue<br />

and the expenditure.<br />

Tony Elumelu Foundation<br />

Tony Elumelu Foundation has<br />

$100 million for 10,000 African<br />

entrepreneurs. If you are in agriculture,<br />

fashion and design,<br />

light manufacturing, ICT, and<br />

solid minerals, among others,<br />

then apply for the on-going Tony<br />

Elumemu fund. You can be lucky<br />

to be one of 1,000 entrepreneurs<br />

to be shortlisted.<br />

More than 150,000 Africans<br />

from 114 countries worldwide<br />

applied to join the 4th cycle of the<br />

programme in 2018.<br />

The 2018 class, however, included<br />

an additional 250 entrepreneurs<br />

to the standard selection of<br />

1,000. This was made possible by<br />

$1 million partnership with the<br />

International Committee of the<br />

Red Cross (ICRC), which pledged<br />

to support 200 entrepreneurs in<br />

conflict and fragile zones of Nigeria,<br />

particularly in the North-East<br />

where Boko Haram insurgency<br />

is rife and the Niger Delta region<br />

hard hit by environmental degradation<br />

from oil spillage. There was<br />

also a $200,000 agreement with<br />

the United Nations Development<br />

Programme (UNDP) to support<br />

40 pan-African entrepreneurs<br />

and a $50,000 partnership with<br />

Indorama to support 10 Nigerians.<br />

Many entrepreneurs will get<br />

$5,000 or more as grants or loans.<br />

BoI Funds<br />

The Bank of Industry (BoI) provides<br />

a number of funds for entrepreneurs<br />

at single digit.<br />

Olukayode Pitan<br />

Tony Elumelu<br />

This development finance institution<br />

(DFI) has been rated<br />

by many local and international<br />

agencies as one of the best managed<br />

banks in the world.<br />

The BoI has a number of funds<br />

that entrepreneurs of all levels<br />

can access. First is the Graduate<br />

Entrepreneurship Fund (GEF),<br />

which is meant for serving members<br />

of the National Youth Service<br />

Corps (NYSC). Candidates are<br />

allowed to submit their business<br />

ideas, which are then reviewed by<br />

a team of experts. The NYSC members<br />

whose ideas are marketable<br />

and bankable are then selected,<br />

trained for four weeks and then<br />

given between N500, 000 and N2<br />

million.<br />

There are also the Cottage<br />

Agro Processing (CAP) Fund for<br />

small and medium agro processors;<br />

Nolly Fund for players in the<br />

Nollywood industry, as well as<br />

Fashion Fund for designers and<br />

other players in the value chain.<br />

In fact, the bank has other<br />

Akintunde Oyebode<br />

matching and managed funds, including<br />

a fund for the automotive<br />

industry. Through 122 business<br />

development experts, the bank<br />

makes it easy for entrepreneurs to<br />

undergo the process of de-risking<br />

before approaching the bank for<br />

funds.<br />

The bank has a N5 billion fund<br />

from Africa’s richest man Aliko<br />

Dangote to finance SMEs at a<br />

single digit rate.<br />

In November 2018, Olukayode<br />

Pitan, managing director, BoI, said<br />

at a meeting with Fahad Obaid Al-<br />

Taffag, ambassador of the United<br />

Arab Emirates to Nigeria, that the<br />

bank was ready to support genuine<br />

foreign businesses willing to<br />

invest in Africa’s biggest market.<br />

“We cover the whole industrial<br />

sector to ensure that Nigerian<br />

companies become competitive.<br />

We know that borrowing money<br />

between 20 and 30 per cent is a<br />

big drag on companies and most<br />

of the banks in Nigeria are not able<br />

to give long term facilities. We are<br />

able to grant loans between seven<br />

and 10 per cent per annum for 10<br />

years,” he said during the meeting.<br />

AYEEN Financial Grants<br />

Africa’s Young Entrepreneurs<br />

Empowerment Nigeria (AYEEN)<br />

allows entrepreneurs to pitch their<br />

business ideas before a panel. The<br />

panel assesses each entrepreneur<br />

and decides whether to provide<br />

financing for the business.<br />

Hundreds of entrepreneurs<br />

walk away annually with various<br />

degrees of business funding and<br />

other forms of empowerment from<br />

various types of investors.<br />

Summy Smart Francis, CEO, AYEEN<br />

LSETF Loans<br />

The Lagos State Employment Trust<br />

Fund (LSETF) has N25 billion to<br />

support SMEs. Though this was<br />

started by Akinwumi Ambode,<br />

the outgoing Lagos State governor,<br />

authorities have assured that the<br />

scheme will continue owing to the<br />

impact it has made on the people<br />

of the state.<br />

The fund is divided into two<br />

categories; micro and small businesses.<br />

Under the micro, businesses<br />

can access up to N500, 000<br />

loans with an interest rate of five<br />

percent and a tenor of one year.<br />

For the small business category,<br />

businesses can get up to N5 million<br />

for a tenor of three years. The<br />

criteria for accessing the funds<br />

include: membership of a business<br />

organisation, which will<br />

recommend the business for the<br />

loan; Lagos State tax receipt for at<br />

least six months, and Lagos state<br />

residency card. This takes three<br />

weeks for processing.<br />

“It is incredibly fulfilling for me<br />

to see small businesses get access<br />

to funding without bias, without<br />

nepotism, without nepotism,”<br />

Akintunde Oyebode, chief executive<br />

officer and executive secretary<br />

of LSETF, told <strong>BusinessDay</strong> in an<br />

exclusive interview recently.<br />

“It has been superb and exciting.<br />

We have been able to support<br />

thousands of businesses, so it is<br />

rewarding and fulfilling to see a lot<br />

of our work starting to show signs<br />

of delivering some value,” he said.<br />

So far, up to 8,000 businesses<br />

have got over N6 billion from<br />

LSETF.<br />

World Bank Grants<br />

The World Bank provides millions<br />

of dollars for SMEs.<br />

The bank has a $160 million<br />

Growth and Employment in States<br />

(GEMS) funds for small businesses<br />

in Nigeria, which is yet to be fully<br />

disbursed. As of September 2018,<br />

only N3.7 billion of this money had<br />

been disbursed.<br />

GroFin Fund<br />

GroFin, a development financier,<br />

has committed over $500 million<br />

to funding Nigerian micro, small<br />

and medium business (MSMEs)<br />

across the country.<br />

The firm has five different types<br />

of fund: the Aspire Nigeria Fund,<br />

the Growth Africa Fund, the Small<br />

Growing Business Fund, the Aspire<br />

Small Business Fund and the<br />

Aspire Growth Fund.<br />

The Aspire Nigeria Fund, the<br />

Growth Africa Fund and the Small<br />

Growing Business Fund cater<br />

for all parts of Nigeria except the<br />

Niger Delta.<br />

The Aspire Small Business<br />

Fund provides a minimum of<br />

$100,000 and a maximum of $1.5<br />

million to SMEs in Nigeria.<br />

The Aspire Small Business<br />

Fund and the Aspire Growth Fund<br />

cater for the Niger Delta.<br />

The Aspire Small Business<br />

Fund provides between $10,000<br />

and $100,000 to small business<br />

owners in the oil-rich region,<br />

while the Aspire Growth Fund<br />

frees between $100,000 and $3<br />

million to businesses to stimulate<br />

growth in the area. GroFin<br />

provides its funds mostly for a<br />

maximum of six years.


www.businessday.ng Monday <strong>07</strong> <strong>Jan</strong>uary <strong>2019</strong><br />

36 BUSINESS DAY<br />

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MondayMorning<br />

In association with<br />

Learn to ask better questions<br />

John Baldoni<br />

All the leaders<br />

I know have<br />

at least one<br />

need in common:<br />

to connect<br />

honestly with others.<br />

One way to foster stronger<br />

connections is by asking<br />

good questions. Leaders<br />

who excel at this are<br />

able to cut to the heart of<br />

the matter in a way that<br />

disarms the other person<br />

and facilitates genuine<br />

conversation. Let’s look at<br />

several ways to ask better<br />

questions:<br />

— BE CURIOUS. Executives<br />

who do all the talking<br />

are deaf to the needs<br />

of others. Sadly, some<br />

managers think that being<br />

the first and last person to<br />

speak is a sign of strength.<br />

In reality, though, it’s the<br />

Engaging the ‘pole vaulters’ on your staff<br />

Katie Bailey and Emma Soane<br />

You may know the five<br />

principles for increasing<br />

employee engagement,<br />

but firms should also<br />

tailor engagement programs<br />

to reach different types of<br />

workers. After studying<br />

eight companies with a total<br />

of 180,000 employees, we<br />

classified workers into four<br />

groups and identified effective<br />

ways firms have customized<br />

programs. Our findings<br />

suggest that such efforts lead<br />

to more-engaged employees,<br />

who in turn perform<br />

better, are more loyal and<br />

enjoy better health and personal<br />

well-being. See if you<br />

recognize the types from our<br />

study.<br />

GRAND PRIX DRIVERS<br />

Nearly always strongly<br />

engaged with their work,<br />

they’re ideal employees<br />

much of the time — but<br />

they’re also at risk of burn-<br />

ing out.<br />

The Challenge: Prevent<br />

them from carrying too<br />

much of the load, especially<br />

in projects they’ve initiated.<br />

Best Practice: South Africa-based<br />

Nampak Plastics<br />

Europe made a conscious<br />

effort to spread work equitably<br />

among team members<br />

opposite.<br />

— BE OPEN-ENDED.<br />

Leaders should ask questions<br />

that encourage people<br />

to reveal not simply<br />

what happened, but also<br />

what they were thinking.<br />

Open-ended questions<br />

prevent you from making<br />

snap judgments and can<br />

elicit some surprising answers.<br />

— BE ENGAGED. When<br />

you ask questions, act like<br />

you care. Yes, act; use affirmative<br />

facial expressions<br />

and engaged body<br />

language to demonstrate<br />

interest. This sets up further<br />

conversation and<br />

gets the individual to reveal<br />

potentially important<br />

information.<br />

— DIG DEEPER. Executives<br />

frequently assume<br />

all is well if they have not<br />

and established delivery<br />

timetables only with input<br />

from the people who have<br />

to meet the deadlines. A<br />

few years ago U.K. supportservices<br />

firm Amey began<br />

offering workers stress-management<br />

workshops, holding<br />

sports tournaments and<br />

running health campaigns.<br />

About a year later, sick leave<br />

fell from 9.6 days to 7.1 (below<br />

the national average), attrition<br />

dropped from 13 to 7% and<br />

new hires referred by employees<br />

jumped from 5 to 10%.<br />

heard bad news. Big mistake.<br />

It may mean employees<br />

are afraid to offer<br />

up anything but good<br />

news, even if it means<br />

stonewalling. So when<br />

revealing information<br />

surfaces in your dialogue,<br />

dig for details without<br />

straying into recrimination.<br />

Get the whole story.<br />

Remember, problems on<br />

your team are, first and<br />

foremost, your problems.<br />

Asking good questions<br />

in the spirit of honest information<br />

gathering and<br />

eventual collaboration is<br />

good practice for leaders.<br />

It cultivates an environment<br />

where employees<br />

feel comfortable discussing<br />

issues that affect both<br />

their performance and<br />

that of the team. And that,<br />

in turn, creates a foundation<br />

for deepening levels<br />

points these workers to its<br />

Engagement Champions<br />

network of more than 150<br />

employees. Participation<br />

in the network, which promotes<br />

engagement companywide,<br />

encourages Pole<br />

Vaulters to deepen and<br />

broaden their involvement<br />

with all company initiatives.<br />

LONG-DISTANCE RUN-<br />

NERS<br />

They’re reliable and<br />

consistent, but they’re less<br />

engaged than Grand Prix<br />

Drivers and Pole Vaulters<br />

(when the Pole Vaulters are<br />

engaged).<br />

The Challenge: Keep<br />

them involved, and increase<br />

engagement.<br />

Best Practice: U.K.-based<br />

consulting and construction<br />

firm Mace Group focused<br />

on the creation of interesting,<br />

challenging and varied<br />

projects for staff members.<br />

Mace has also stepped up<br />

its corporate social responsibility<br />

activities in response<br />

of trust.<br />

(John Baldoni is a leadership<br />

keynote speaker,<br />

executive coach and executive<br />

educator.)<br />

POLE VAULTERS<br />

They’re strongly engaged,<br />

but their episodes of engagement<br />

are less frequent than<br />

those of Grand Prix Drivers.<br />

Pole Vaulters tend to be<br />

energized only by certain<br />

aspects of their work — cutting<br />

the important deal, for<br />

example.<br />

The Challenge: Get the<br />

most out of their on-again,<br />

off-again enthusiasm.<br />

Best Practice: Amey apto<br />

employee concerns that<br />

the company wasn’t doing<br />

enough for the community.<br />

FLATLINERS<br />

They’re rarely engaged,<br />

and never strongly so. In<br />

fact, they can easily become<br />

actively disengaged and<br />

have a demotivating effect<br />

on colleagues.<br />

The Challenge: Reverse<br />

their negative feelings and<br />

foster engagement.<br />

Best Practice: Nampak<br />

implemented several programs<br />

(such as visible recognition<br />

systems) to engage<br />

this group. Having compared<br />

its own survey data<br />

with ours, the company believed<br />

it reduced its Flatliners<br />

from 13 to 7% of its workforce.<br />

(Katie Bailey is a professor<br />

at King’s College London.<br />

Emma Soane is a professor<br />

at the London School of<br />

Economics.)<br />

(C) (2017) Harvard Business Review. Distributed by New York Times Syndicate<br />

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Tuesday 08 <strong>Jan</strong>uary <strong>2019</strong><br />

www.businessday.ng https://www.facebook.com/businessdayng @Businessdayng<br />

LegalPerspectives With Odunayo Oyasiji<br />

BUSINESS DAY<br />

37<br />

Case Review<br />

Gerhard Huebner V. Aeronautical Industrial Engineering and Project Management Company LTD (2017) LPELR-SC.198/2006<br />

What to note: This<br />

is a matter that<br />

was decided at<br />

the Supreme<br />

Court of Nigeria<br />

in 2017. It addresses the issue<br />

of trust extensively i.e. meaning<br />

and nature of trust, elements of<br />

trust, nature of resulting or implied<br />

trust and what the doctrine<br />

of constructive trust entails.<br />

Fact<br />

The District Head of Kajuru<br />

District in Kachia Local Government<br />

Area of Kaduna State<br />

(acting on the instruction of the<br />

Emir of Zaria) granted permission<br />

to the Appellant to build a<br />

temporary weekend hospitality<br />

resort on a hilltop in Kajuru<br />

Village sometimes in 1975. The<br />

Appellant built a temporary<br />

structure. He later built permanent<br />

structure and named it<br />

“The Kajuru Castle”.<br />

In order to expand the business,<br />

the Appellant in 1981<br />

started negotiating through the<br />

agency of the District Head to<br />

purchase the 70 hectares of land<br />

surrounding the hill. He was in<br />

the final stage of the negotiation<br />

when he was appointed as<br />

the Managing Director of the<br />

Respondent. The Appellant<br />

was advised to to buy the land<br />

in the name of the Respondent<br />

because it was unlawful for him<br />

to hold a legal estate in Kaduna<br />

State being a German. He took<br />

the advice and purchased the<br />

lan in the name of the Respondent.<br />

The receipt that serves as<br />

the evidence of the purchase<br />

was issued in the name of the<br />

Appellant and the Respondent.<br />

A certificate of occupancy<br />

dated <strong>Jan</strong>uary 1, 1997 was issued<br />

to the Appellant by Kachia Local<br />

Government. The certificate<br />

was used to apply for a statutory<br />

certificate of occupancy from<br />

the Kaduna State Government.<br />

The application was successful<br />

and a certificate of occupancy<br />

dated March 6, 1999 was issued<br />

by Kaduna State Government.<br />

The two certificates were issued<br />

in the name of the Respondent.<br />

The issue of the ownership of<br />

the property arose between the<br />

Appellant and the Respondent.<br />

The Appellant being the plaintiff<br />

at the High Court instituted the<br />

action claiming the ownership<br />

of the property and that same<br />

was held by the defendant/<br />

respondent upon a resultant<br />

trust to the benefit of the plaintiff.<br />

The Appellant’s case was<br />

dismissed by the trial court. The<br />

Court of Appeal also dismissed<br />

the appeal that was filed by the<br />

Appellant. The Appellant being<br />

dissatisfied then appealed to the<br />

Supreme Court.<br />

Issues for determination<br />

The counsel to the Appellant<br />

formulated two issues for determination<br />

of the Appeal. The issues<br />

are – “1. Whether the Court<br />

of Appeal was right to confirm<br />

the trial Court’s exclusion of<br />

documentary and oral evidence<br />

which were adduced by the Appellant<br />

before the trial Court<br />

to establish circumstances by<br />

which it may be implied that<br />

the Respondent held the legal<br />

estate in the subject property<br />

upon a resultant constructive<br />

trust in his favour. 2. Whether<br />

the Court of Appeal was right<br />

to hold that the Appellant was<br />

obliged to prove an implied<br />

resultant constructive trust by<br />

“credible and reliable evidence”<br />

showing the “grant” by him and<br />

“acceptance” by the defendant<br />

of the trust.”<br />

Counsel to the Respondent<br />

also formulated two issues.<br />

The issues are-“1. Whether the<br />

Court of Appeal was right to<br />

confirm the trial Court’s finding<br />

at law and upon the facts<br />

and circumstance of the case<br />

before the trial Court that the<br />

documentary evidence before<br />

it (i.e trial Court) as borne out<br />

by Exhibits A1, A2 and A3 being<br />

the Kachia local Government<br />

Certificate of Occupancy and<br />

the Kaduna State certificate of<br />

Occupancy respectively cannot<br />

be varied or altered by oral<br />

or extrinsic evidence as sought<br />

by the plaintiff/appellant to establish<br />

a resultant or implied or<br />

constructive trust in his favour.<br />

2. Whether the Court of Appeal<br />

was right to hold that the Appellant<br />

has the onus of proof<br />

as required by law (i.e standard<br />

of proof in civil proceedings)<br />

to prove an implied resultant/<br />

constructive trust by credible<br />

and reliable evidence.”<br />

The court adopted only one<br />

issue for the purpose of determining<br />

the matter i.e. “whether<br />

the lower court was right when<br />

it dismissed the Appellant’s<br />

appeal for failure to adduce<br />

sufficient evidence in proof of<br />

his claim that the Respondent<br />

is holding the legal estate upon<br />

an implied trust in respect of the<br />

disputed property for his benefit<br />

by implication of law.”<br />

Arguments/Submissions<br />

The counsel for the Appellant<br />

submitted that the evidence<br />

before the court clearly shows<br />

that the land in dispute was purchased<br />

and developed with the<br />

Appellant’s private resources<br />

and that the certificate of occupancy<br />

issued by the state<br />

and the local government in<br />

the name of the Respondent<br />

were meant to establish that<br />

the Respondent is just an implied<br />

trustee for the benefit of<br />

the Appellant. He stated that<br />

implied trust is an equitable<br />

conversion of the holder of the<br />

property into a trustee by operation<br />

of law, as such the question<br />

of leading evidence to prove a<br />

grant and acceptance does not<br />

arise.<br />

The Respondent’s counsel on<br />

the other hand argued that the<br />

oral testimony of the Appellant<br />

cannot vary the content of the<br />

two certificate of occupancy<br />

issued in favour of the Respondent.<br />

He also argued that the<br />

Appellant failed to establish<br />

before the lower court the existence<br />

of any legal relationship<br />

between him and the Respondent.<br />

Judgement<br />

The Supreme Court dismissed<br />

the appeal. The court held on<br />

the issue of implied trust that<br />

“the nagging issue of whether<br />

implied trust on the basis of<br />

equity crops up in favour of the<br />

appellant. In considering it, the<br />

acts of the appellant come into<br />

question, firstly assuming he<br />

knew he was not qualified to<br />

own land in Northern Nigeria,<br />

he acted in going ahead to make<br />

the purchase wrongfully and<br />

illegally and therefore without<br />

clean hand which equity cannot<br />

encourage or assist. The flip side<br />

would be if he made the payments<br />

with his funds not being<br />

aware that he could not have<br />

such ownership, then his action<br />

would be caught up by the<br />

principle that, ignorance of the<br />

law is not an excuse. Therefore,<br />

either way, he lacked the capacity<br />

to enter into the purchasing<br />

transaction for land being a<br />

foreign national. It follows that<br />

whether in law or equity he lost<br />

out.”<br />

With regards to nature of<br />

trust, the court held that “In<br />

its legal sense, “a trust” is the<br />

relationship, which arises wherever<br />

a person called the trustee<br />

is compelled in equity to hold<br />

property, whether real or personal,<br />

and whether by legal or<br />

equitable title, for the benefit of<br />

some persons (of whom he may<br />

be one and who are termed cestuis<br />

que trust) or for some object<br />

permitted by law, in such a way<br />

that the real benefit of the property<br />

accrues, not to the trustee<br />

but, to the beneficiaries or other<br />

object of the trust. To this end,<br />

there are Express Trusts, Implied<br />

or Resulting Trusts and<br />

Constructive Trusts. Express<br />

Trusts arise when the owner<br />

declares himself a trustee of the<br />

property for the benefit of another<br />

person or vests property<br />

in another person as trustee for<br />

the benefit of another person.<br />

Implied or Resulting Trust arise<br />

from the presumed intention of<br />

the owner, and the presumed<br />

intention arises by operation of<br />

law not by agreement of parties.<br />

Constructive Trusts are trusts<br />

imposed by equity regardless<br />

of the intention of the owner<br />

of the property, where it will<br />

be unconscionable for the “apparent<br />

beneficial owner” or<br />

trustee to hold the property for<br />

his benefit-We are concerned<br />

with implied or resulting trusts,<br />

which may arise in the following<br />

circumstances (i) Where an<br />

express trusts fails (ii) Where<br />

the beneficial interest under an<br />

express trust is not fully disposed<br />

of or exhausted.(iii) Where there<br />

is a purchase in the name of another<br />

or where a person makes<br />

a voluntary conveyance of his<br />

property to another.<br />

Conclusion<br />

I will conclude with the words of Muhammad JSC in the<br />

case of Madu V Madu (2008) 6 NWLR (Pt. 1083) 296<br />

where he stated that “Before I drop my pen, I think<br />

I should observe that this case, as I see it, should<br />

be an eye-opener to many people. Although, it is<br />

not illegal or prohibited to make use of another<br />

person’s name in transactions that are solely<br />

meant to be in favour of a particular individual,<br />

I think it carries a lot of risks where there is a<br />

failure in achieving goals for which the transaction<br />

is meant. I fail to appreciate the wisdom<br />

behind the concealment of name or identity of<br />

a person, who in actual sense, is the owner of a<br />

thing but would prefer to use the name of another<br />

person. The presumption is always that if<br />

a document for instance, bears the name of Mr.<br />

“X” it in law; belongs to Mr. “X” except where<br />

same is accompanied by conditions and exceptions.<br />

A good example is where a university<br />

certificate or a West African School Certificate<br />

(WASC) is issued in the name of “X”. The presumption<br />

is that it is “X” that is the rightful<br />

owner of that certificate. So it is a dangerous<br />

practice where people prefer to hide their identities<br />

and resort to using the identities of others<br />

in transactions, which are from the bottom<br />

of their minds. If such transactions are meant<br />

to be held in such resulting trust, I think they<br />

should be qualified by explanations, exceptions<br />

or conditions attached ...”


38<br />

BUSINESS DAY<br />

C002D5556<br />

Monday <strong>07</strong> <strong>Jan</strong>uary <strong>2019</strong>


Monday <strong>07</strong> <strong>Jan</strong>uary <strong>2019</strong> C002D5556 BUSINESS DAY 39


40 BUSINESS DAY www.businessday.ng www.facebook.com/businessdayng @businessDayNG @Businessdayng Monday <strong>07</strong> <strong>Jan</strong>uary <strong>2019</strong><br />

NEWS<br />

Operators say oil, gas industry faces uncertainties in <strong>2019</strong><br />

OLUSOLA BELLO<br />

Operators in the<br />

oil and gas industry<br />

say <strong>2019</strong><br />

will be uncertain<br />

in many dimensions,<br />

both for country<br />

and industry, and that this<br />

year’s election results have<br />

the potential for disruption<br />

of oil and gas facilities.<br />

They say prospects this<br />

year will depend on how the<br />

actors manage the unfolding<br />

uncertainties against emerging<br />

global realities, as deficit<br />

in refining will continue to<br />

hurt Nigeria in <strong>2019</strong>.<br />

According to them, there<br />

will be an election in the<br />

country, and for a new government<br />

it usually takes<br />

time to settle down.<br />

The uncertainties over the<br />

Petroleum Industry Bill (PIB)<br />

will persist, as nobody knows<br />

how long it would take. This<br />

indicator provides an important<br />

signal to investors.<br />

The PIB, which would<br />

ensure the government<br />

could move forward with<br />

new fiscals and make oil and<br />

gas attractive for companies<br />

to invest, was stalled in November<br />

2018 when President<br />

Muhammadu Buhari<br />

withheld assent. They hope<br />

that the document would be<br />

signed after the elections.<br />

Victor Eromosele, CEO of<br />

ME Consulting Limited, says<br />

prospects in <strong>2019</strong> in oil and<br />

gas industry is really anybody’s<br />

guess even though<br />

the 200,000 barrels of crude<br />

from Egina field and Dangote<br />

Refinery would remain<br />

the industry’s bright spots.<br />

Bank-Anthony Okorafor,<br />

president, Petroleum Technology<br />

Association of Nigeria<br />

(PETAN), says oil price<br />

will hover around $60-70 per<br />

barrel in <strong>2019</strong>, as top three<br />

producers, US, Russia and<br />

Saudi Arabia will continue<br />

to pump more. “Higher US<br />

crude supply to 12 million<br />

barrels per day, high production<br />

from Russia and<br />

Saudi would weaken the<br />

market.<br />

“American high production<br />

has hurt demand for<br />

Nigeria crude oil. Saudi<br />

will not want to lose market<br />

share to other countries,” he<br />

states. He says OPEC will not<br />

be able to maintain output<br />

cut in production as American<br />

production will make<br />

OPEC look weak.<br />

“Slowing growth in China,<br />

India and Europe will<br />

slow down the demand for<br />

crude oil. China presently<br />

consumes 12% of global oil<br />

production. So any slow<br />

growth in China will impact<br />

global crude oil demand.<br />

Intensification of US-China<br />

trade war will affect china<br />

demand for crude oil.<br />

“The heightened tension<br />

has diminished hopes of a<br />

near term resolution to the<br />

trade war. This is negative<br />

for global oil demand. The<br />

10% us tariff on $200 billion<br />

of Chinese goods jumps to<br />

25% at the start of <strong>2019</strong>. US<br />

intend to slap tariffs on an<br />

additional $260 billion of<br />

Chinese exports if anticipated<br />

meeting in <strong>Jan</strong> <strong>2019</strong> does<br />

not go well. Generally, slower<br />

economic growth reduces<br />

the outlook for oil demand,”<br />

he says.<br />

Abiodun Adesanya, former<br />

president of Nigerian<br />

Association of Petroleum<br />

Explorationists (NAPE), says<br />

there will be carry over of<br />

the 2018 challenges, which<br />

have created a lot of volatility<br />

in the oil and gas industry<br />

worldwide.<br />

He states that this year’s<br />

election results have the potential<br />

for disruption of oil<br />

and gas facilities, especially if<br />

the Niger Delta militants did<br />

not see it favouring them.<br />

He also notes that some<br />

level of drilling for oil in<br />

the North around Gombe<br />

and Bauchi trough may<br />

take place in the course of<br />

the year.<br />

L-R: Adebode Adefioye, member, Governing Council Bank Directors’ Association of Nigeria (BDAN); Ken Opara, 2nd vice<br />

president, Chartered Institute of Bankers (CIBN); Osaretin Demuren, president, governing council, BDAN; Uche Olowu,<br />

president/chairman of Council, CIBN; Jude Monye, secretary, governing council, BDAN; Segun Ajibola, past president, CIBN,<br />

and Olawale Oyeleke, member, governing council, BDAN, at BDAN’s courtesy visit to CIBN in Lagos, recently.<br />

FG orders CCECC to deliver Lagos-Ibadan rail project in 2 weeks<br />

MIKE OCHONMA & STELLA ENENCHE<br />

Worried by the<br />

slow pace of<br />

work on the<br />

Lagos-Ibadan<br />

standard gauge rail project,<br />

the Federal Government<br />

has handed down<br />

a two-week ultimatum to<br />

the contractor - China Civil<br />

Engineering Construction<br />

Company (CCECC), within<br />

which to complete the job.<br />

Minister of transportation,<br />

Rotimi Amaechi, gave<br />

the order in Abeokuta,<br />

the Ogun State capital on<br />

Thursday, during an inspection<br />

of the multi-billion-naira<br />

project.<br />

Amaechi expressed dissatisfaction<br />

over the section<br />

between Iju, Lagos and Agbado<br />

in Abeokuta. This was<br />

even as he explained that it<br />

... as deficit in refining will continue to hurt Nigeria<br />

was his passion to get the<br />

project done, necessitated<br />

the ultimatum.<br />

According to Amaechi,<br />

“I want the project delivered.<br />

Though, we cannot<br />

say that CCECC isn’t trying<br />

but, for commercial purposes,<br />

they have to complete<br />

the section so that,<br />

passengers can board train<br />

to Abeokuta.”<br />

He noted: “Getting to<br />

Abeokuta you will see that<br />

there’s an improvement but<br />

the problem they have now<br />

is the civil work between Agbado<br />

and Iju which is critical<br />

to me because I don’t think<br />

passengers will go to Agbado<br />

to join the train.<br />

“I believe that the closer<br />

we are to Lagos the better<br />

for the rail and that is why<br />

I had to tell them to tell me<br />

what they will do about this<br />

before the next two weeks,<br />

although there’s a huge improvement<br />

up to this point.<br />

I want them to speed up the<br />

construction from Iju to Agbado.”<br />

Meanwhile, the minister<br />

was not comfortable with<br />

the fact that very critical<br />

equipment had yet to be<br />

brought into the country the<br />

facilitate the project.<br />

According to him, the excuse<br />

the firm gave, was that<br />

the equipment were not offthe-shelf<br />

items that could<br />

be ferried in easily.<br />

In his submission, part<br />

of the solution to the congestion<br />

around Lagos seaport<br />

is an efficient rail line.<br />

“You can argue that the narrow<br />

gauge is there, but it is<br />

not efficient. But the moment<br />

you fix this then those<br />

goods will be transferred to<br />

the rail and then the logjam<br />

will disappear.<br />

“The moment we do the<br />

section from Iju to the sea<br />

port, then most of those<br />

goods, especially the ones<br />

going to Ibadan will be on<br />

the rail lines.”<br />

Asked if the government<br />

was under pressure to get<br />

the project completed, he<br />

replied: “Of course, and it<br />

is also because of the speed,<br />

for it takes you about 30<br />

minutes by rail from Lagos<br />

to Ibadan as against over<br />

one hour by road. And this<br />

is subsidised.”<br />

The minister further<br />

disclosed, “Though, the<br />

focus now is the completion<br />

of the project but, we<br />

are expecting the deployment<br />

of about 30 passenger<br />

coaches, 300 wagons and<br />

then, two sets of coaches<br />

from Agbor, Delta State, for<br />

test running of this ongoing<br />

project.”<br />

CBN makes first New Year entry<br />

into forex market with $210m<br />

… as external reserves decline to $43.05bn<br />

HOPE MOSES-ASHIKE<br />

Central Bank of Nigeria<br />

(CBN) weekend,<br />

made its first intervention<br />

in the interbank<br />

sector of the foreign exchange<br />

market for <strong>2019</strong> with<br />

$210 million injected into the<br />

wholesale segment and other<br />

sectors of the market.<br />

A breakdown of the figures<br />

obtained from the CBN weekend<br />

showed that customers<br />

in the Wholesale sector of the<br />

market received $100 million<br />

with the Small and Medium<br />

Enterprises (SMEs) and invisibles<br />

sectors each getting<br />

$55 million to meet the needs<br />

of customers.<br />

The dollar supply has<br />

helped to boost liquidity in<br />

the market and strengthen the<br />

value of the local currency.<br />

Consequently, naira gained<br />

N1.00k on Friday to close at<br />

N361 per dollar at the parallel<br />

market from N362 traded the<br />

previous day.<br />

However, naira depreciated<br />

marginally by N0.05k<br />

to close at N365.35k on Friday<br />

from N365.30k per dollar<br />

traded on Thursday, data<br />

from FMDQ indicated.<br />

External reserves last week<br />

declined to $43.0 billion as of<br />

Friday, <strong>Jan</strong>uary 4, <strong>2019</strong>, from<br />

$43.28 billion as of Decem-<br />

JAMES KWEN, Abuja<br />

ber 24, 2018, data from CBN<br />

revealed.<br />

Isaac Okorafor, CBN’s director<br />

of corporate communications,<br />

said the CBN continued<br />

from where it stopped in<br />

2018 in order to maintain the<br />

stability being enjoyed in the<br />

market.<br />

While noting that the<br />

bank had made commendable<br />

effort in keeping the exchange<br />

rates at the current<br />

levels, Okorafor re-echoed<br />

the Bank’s Governor, Godwin<br />

Emefiele saying that the<br />

current capital flow reversals<br />

from the emerging markets<br />

were expected to bring out<br />

pressures on the market rates.<br />

He, however, assured<br />

that, in spite of the anticipated<br />

pressures, coupled with<br />

the forthcoming elections,<br />

the bank was committed to<br />

maintaining the current exchange<br />

rate policy, given the<br />

level of reserves. Quoting the<br />

Governor, Okorafor said that<br />

the CBN was determined to<br />

sustain a stable exchange rate<br />

as it continues to put in place<br />

relevant measures to shore up<br />

the country’s reserves.<br />

Meanwhile, one United<br />

States dollar ($1) exchanged<br />

for N357 in the Bureau De<br />

Change (BDC) segment of the<br />

market on Friday, <strong>Jan</strong>uary 4,<br />

<strong>2019</strong>.<br />

Manpower threat to <strong>2019</strong> elections tackled as<br />

ASUU agrees to work as INEC ad hoc staff<br />

The threat of manpower<br />

to the conduct<br />

of the <strong>2019</strong><br />

general elections<br />

due to ongoing strike by<br />

the Academic Staff Union<br />

of Universities (ASUU) has<br />

been tackled as the Union<br />

agrees to work as ad hoc staff<br />

in the elections.<br />

Biodum Ogunyemi,<br />

ASUU national president,<br />

made this known at the end<br />

of the consultative meeting<br />

between the leadership of<br />

the Independent National<br />

Electoral Commission<br />

(INEC) and the Union in<br />

Abuja.<br />

Ogunyemi stated that<br />

ASUU had taken the appeal<br />

by INEC to allow its members<br />

participate as Collation<br />

and Returning Officers for<br />

the <strong>2019</strong> general elections,<br />

hence the Union could not<br />

restrict its members from<br />

working as ad hoc staff for<br />

the Commission.<br />

“We had a good meeting<br />

with the INEC team. We<br />

placed on record that our relationship<br />

with INEC dated<br />

back to 2010, when the former<br />

president Attahiru Jega<br />

was chairman. Even though<br />

we are not in the position<br />

now to do everything we<br />

were doing that time, we<br />

have assured them that we<br />

will not stand on the way of<br />

our members participating<br />

in the election as ad-hoc<br />

staff.<br />

“The decision of our union<br />

as at the last time we met was<br />

that our members are free as<br />

citizens to participate in the<br />

electoral process as ad-hoc<br />

staff and we have restated that<br />

today that we are not going to<br />

stop any of our members who<br />

wishes to serve in that capacity,”<br />

he said.<br />

Mahmood Yakubu, INEC<br />

chairman, had at the beginning<br />

of the meeting appealed<br />

to ASUU to continue<br />

with the existing collaboration<br />

with the Commission<br />

to enhance the credibility of<br />

this year’s polls.<br />

Yakubu said, “Allow your<br />

members to participate as<br />

Collation and Returning Officers<br />

for the <strong>2019</strong> general<br />

elections as doing so will not<br />

derogate from the Union’s<br />

withdrawal of service in respect<br />

of university-based<br />

activities such as teaching,<br />

supervision and statutory<br />

meetings.”<br />

He added, “For sometimes<br />

now, INEC has relied<br />

on the universities for the<br />

critical mass of election duty<br />

staff. ASUU has collaborated<br />

with the Commission in vetting<br />

the list of its members<br />

engaged as Collation and<br />

Returning Officers.


Monday <strong>07</strong> <strong>Jan</strong>uary <strong>2019</strong><br />

www.businessday.ng www.facebook.com/businessdayng @businessDayNG @Businessdayng<br />

Police recruitment: 232,000 excess applicants<br />

underscore Nigeria’s unemployment problem<br />

MICHEAL ANI<br />

The recent announcement<br />

by<br />

the Nigeria Police<br />

on the excessive<br />

turn out of people<br />

applying for recruitment<br />

into the law enforcement<br />

agency, affirms the critical<br />

state of the nation’s unemployment<br />

crisis, analysts say.<br />

As at 1:00pm, 2nd <strong>Jan</strong><br />

2018, the Police Service<br />

Commission (PSC) said it<br />

had received applications<br />

from 242,455 persons in its<br />

on-going recruitment exercise,<br />

even though it plans to<br />

enlist only 10,000 of these<br />

numbers into the Nigeria<br />

Police Force.<br />

This figure shows an excess<br />

of more than 232,000<br />

applicants vowing for the<br />

positions, a number analysts<br />

say is a tip of an iceberg of<br />

how Nigerians jostle for jobs<br />

as falling infrastructural de-<br />

velopment and slowdown<br />

in economic activities have<br />

forced companies turn off<br />

the tap of recruitment.<br />

This number of applications<br />

that the police received<br />

as at that date implies that<br />

for each successful applicant,<br />

23 others will be rejected.<br />

That is, assuming that<br />

the applications stop at this<br />

number, which is unlikely.<br />

Data from the National<br />

Bureau of Statistics (NBS)<br />

has shown that the rate of<br />

unemployment has been on<br />

a consistent increase in the<br />

past three years, settling as<br />

high as 23.1 percent in the<br />

third quarter of 2018 from<br />

18.8 percent recorded in the<br />

same quarter of the previous<br />

year.<br />

In nominal terms, a total<br />

of 20.9 million Nigerians are<br />

unemployed, signalling that<br />

about 3.1 million people<br />

have entered into the unemployment<br />

trap in less than a<br />

year. The NBS had earlier in<br />

Q4 2017 reported the number<br />

to be 17.8 million.<br />

“I am not surprised at<br />

the statistics released by the<br />

Nigerian police with regards<br />

to the number of participants<br />

that signified interest<br />

as against those that are required<br />

as it is an indication<br />

of the massive unemployment<br />

in the society,” says<br />

Timothy Olawale, Director-<br />

General, Nigerian Employers<br />

Consultative association.<br />

“There is no way that the<br />

government despite all its<br />

efforts in creating jobs, is going<br />

to succeed if the focus is<br />

on white-collar job creation<br />

alone, which is what they are<br />

throwing up,” Olawale said.<br />

An average university<br />

student in Nigeria spends<br />

about 4 years in the university,<br />

if and only if the Academic<br />

Staff Union of Universities<br />

and /or the Non Academic<br />

staff union does not embark<br />

upon any strike whatsoever.<br />

For about two months<br />

now, teachers in public<br />

universities in Nigeria<br />

have been on an indefinite<br />

strike designed to compel<br />

the Federal Government to<br />

meet their complaints on<br />

issues including poor funding,<br />

poor remuneration and<br />

low infrastructural developments<br />

in school.<br />

“It is not as if there are<br />

no jobs in the country, but<br />

the skills required to match<br />

these jobs are not there. That<br />

is why we say the government<br />

should identify what<br />

those skills are and make<br />

concerted efforts to develop<br />

capacity in those skills; that<br />

way our youth will fit into<br />

those jobs that are available,”<br />

Olawale said.<br />

“Furthermore, there is<br />

the need to imbibe in our<br />

youths the entrepreneurial<br />

spirit so that they can be selfemployed,”<br />

he added.<br />

L-R: Segun Agbekeye, group head, internal control, risks/compliance, Odu’a Investment Company Limited; Adewale Raji, Odu’a GMD/<br />

CEO; Kayode Fayemi, Ekiti State governor; Tope Arowolo, Odu’a group head, property development and management, and Yinka<br />

Tunji-Ojo, Odu’a general manager finance, during Odu’a team’s business meeting with the governor in Ado Ekiti.<br />

Nigeria’s e-payment transactions hit N56.85trn – reports<br />

Reports from the Nigerian<br />

Interbank<br />

Settlement System<br />

(NIBSS) have indicated<br />

that Nigeria’s electronic<br />

payment (e-payment) services<br />

recorded transactions<br />

worth N56.85 trillion from<br />

<strong>Jan</strong>uary to September 2018.<br />

The report, obtained by<br />

the News Agency of Nigeria<br />

on Sunday, showed an increase<br />

of N16.4 trillion when<br />

compared with the N40.45<br />

trillion that was recorded in<br />

the corresponding period of<br />

2017.<br />

The report showed that<br />

most of the electronic transactions<br />

were done through<br />

the NIBSS Instant Payment<br />

(NIP), Point of Sale (PoS),<br />

Automated Transfer Machines<br />

(ATMs), Mobile Money,<br />

Electronic Bills Payment<br />

(E-Bills) and Web payments.<br />

A breakdown of the report<br />

showed that ATMs transactions<br />

grew from N4.61 trillion<br />

in 2017 to N4.76 trillion at the<br />

end of the third quarter of<br />

2018.<br />

Also, the volume of transactions<br />

on ATMs under the<br />

period in review grew from<br />

560.86 million in 2017, to<br />

650.06 million in 2018. The<br />

report showed a rise of about<br />

N635 billion in the use of POS<br />

machines to carry out payments<br />

by Nigerians.<br />

Under the review period,<br />

98.73 million transactions<br />

worth N975 billion were carried<br />

out using POS in 2017,<br />

while in 2018, the volume<br />

grew to 196.83 million, valued<br />

at N1.61 trillion.<br />

Similarly, the volume<br />

of transactions carried out<br />

by Nigerians, using mobile<br />

money rose from N795.18<br />

billion in 2017, to N1.22 trillion<br />

as at September 2018.<br />

Also, using the web payment<br />

channel, the total<br />

value of transactions under<br />

the review period rose from<br />

N129.24 billion in 2017, to<br />

N183.<strong>07</strong> billion in 2018.<br />

However, the value of<br />

such transactions on e-bill<br />

payments, which allowed<br />

customers to pay utility bills<br />

such as power, cable and<br />

so on online, declined from<br />

N420.73 billion in 2017 to<br />

N370 billion in 2018.<br />

Meanwhile a financial<br />

analyst, Patricia Auta, has<br />

said that the NIBSS report<br />

showed an increased awareness<br />

and use of technology<br />

by individuals and businesses<br />

in the country.<br />

Auta urged the Central<br />

Bank of Nigeria (CBN), to<br />

intensify efforts on cashless<br />

economy, especially in states,<br />

to further grow the electronic<br />

payment space.<br />

BUSINESS DAY<br />

NEWS<br />

41<br />

‘Adamu Adamu current attention<br />

to education, not enough’<br />

KELECHI EWUZIE<br />

Concerned industry<br />

professionals in education<br />

sector have<br />

described the performance<br />

of Adamu Adamu, the<br />

minister of education, in the<br />

last three years as being pedestrian.<br />

They observe that his approach<br />

to issues concerning<br />

the education sector since his<br />

appointment to office leaves<br />

much to be desired, as the<br />

minister should think deep<br />

for solutions to the decay in<br />

the sector.<br />

In a interview with <strong>BusinessDay</strong><br />

they feel the minister<br />

should recognise the need<br />

to strengthen proactive programmes<br />

and activities that<br />

enhance quality education<br />

and offer knowledge, skill and<br />

values for Nigerian citizens to<br />

enable them compete with<br />

any economy in the world.<br />

Maurice Onyiriuka says<br />

the education sector still<br />

struggles with policy gaps<br />

and implementation backlog,<br />

adding that this issue remains<br />

unresolved not because the<br />

education minister don’t have<br />

ideas as to how to approach<br />

the outstanding issues, but<br />

because there have not been<br />

consensus, the realism and<br />

even the courage to confront<br />

the challenges.<br />

Onyiriuka expects the<br />

minister to address the situation<br />

in the education sector<br />

with gravity instead of the kid<br />

gloves he has used to attend to<br />

the mountainous problems.<br />

Odion and Omofonwan<br />

say in their study, ‘Educational<br />

System in Nigeria Problems<br />

and Prospects’ that the gross<br />

under funding of the educational<br />

sector in the country in<br />

general and the neglect of the<br />

maintenance of the physical<br />

facilities and instructional and<br />

living conditions have deteriorated<br />

in many of these schools,<br />

classrooms, libraries and labo-<br />

Nigerian states budget for <strong>2019</strong> so far<br />

ISRAEL ODUBOLA<br />

As it is now, 33 out<br />

of the 36 states<br />

of the Federation<br />

have presented<br />

their budgets to their respective<br />

State Houses of<br />

Assembly. The states that<br />

are yet to present theirs are<br />

Adamawa, Cross River and<br />

Zamfara.<br />

Lagos State, the commercial<br />

and financial<br />

nerve centre of Nigeria,<br />

presented a budget of<br />

N852.317 billion, N548 billion<br />

lower than the N1.4<br />

trillion presented for 2018.<br />

The proposed budget of<br />

Lagos State for <strong>2019</strong> is<br />

the highest nationwide,<br />

though this is not surprising,<br />

as the state has the<br />

largest internally generated<br />

revenue in Nigeria.<br />

The states with the second<br />

and third highest proposed<br />

budget for <strong>2019</strong> are<br />

Akwa Ibom and Rivers.<br />

The two south-southern<br />

states earmarked N670.7<br />

billion and N480 billion,<br />

respectively.<br />

Nasarawa, a state in<br />

the North-central zone,<br />

presented a budget worth<br />

N86.4 billion, the least<br />

across the federation. The<br />

state has endowment in<br />

agriculture, tourism and<br />

solid minerals like coal<br />

and iron ore.<br />

Apart from Nasarawa,<br />

eight states proposed a<br />

budget less than N150 billion<br />

are Abia (N139.5bn),<br />

Borno (N125.82bn), Enugu<br />

(N109bn), Ekiti (N129.9bn),<br />

Gombe (N118.7bn), Kogi<br />

(N146.7bn), Plateau<br />

(N148bn) and Taraba<br />

(N146.7bn).<br />

Regional analysis of<br />

ratories are nothing to write<br />

home about, all leading to decline<br />

in academic standards.<br />

It is the view of stakeholders<br />

that the minister must begin<br />

to look at ways to source<br />

for funds to focus attention on<br />

these areas if these educational<br />

institutions are to get out of<br />

the woods.<br />

Comfort Uyo, a university<br />

lecturer, is of the opinion that<br />

Adamu Adamu can achieve<br />

success if he is to implement<br />

the correct policies, but<br />

doubts the possibility since<br />

he is not solely in charge of<br />

key decision when it concerns<br />

funding.<br />

For example, since the introduction<br />

of the Universal<br />

Basic Education (UBE), the<br />

education sector at primary<br />

school is still characterised<br />

by poor performance and an<br />

increasing number of out-of<br />

–school children and one of<br />

the major explanations for<br />

this is the crisis of funding occasioned<br />

by inadequate preparation<br />

of the extent to which<br />

available resources could last.<br />

Again, widespread cases<br />

of arrears of unpaid teachers’<br />

salaries - of up to six months<br />

in many cases, frequent industrial<br />

disputes and strike<br />

actions by university teachers<br />

as well as shameful cases<br />

of primary and secondary<br />

school pupils using tree<br />

shades as their classrooms are<br />

some of the manifestations<br />

of poor funding of Nigeria’s<br />

education. For Babatunde<br />

Oguntona, an educationist<br />

the greatest investment education<br />

the minister can give<br />

Nigerians during his term as<br />

minister is to encourage human<br />

capital development.<br />

According to Oguntona,<br />

“I strongly believe that only<br />

what is required from government<br />

and the minister of<br />

education is to make available<br />

resources that can be used for<br />

the development of human<br />

capital so we can have good<br />

the budget of the 33 states<br />

shows that the South-West<br />

region has the highest cumulative<br />

budget of N2.011<br />

trillion, higher than that<br />

of South-South, which<br />

currently stood at N1.793<br />

trillion, but could be overtaken<br />

if Cross River State<br />

present a budget of at least<br />

N219 billion.<br />

The combined budget<br />

of South-East, North-<br />

Central and North-West<br />

currently stand at N878<br />

billion, N894.34 billion<br />

and N1.053 trillion, respectively.<br />

The North-East region<br />

has the lowest cumulative<br />

budget of N676 billion,<br />

although can only<br />

exceed that of the South-<br />

East region if Zamfara<br />

State proposes at least<br />

N202 budget for <strong>2019</strong>.


g<br />

www.<br />

42 BUSINESS DAY g<br />

@ g<br />

Monday <strong>07</strong> <strong>Jan</strong>uary <strong>2019</strong><br />

NEWS<br />

The curious case of Nigeria’s missing voters...<br />

Continued from page 1<br />

necessities of life,” pledged the<br />

former president.<br />

But Adebayo had become used<br />

to that cliché of promises, even at<br />

that time.<br />

Nothing around his vicinity instilled<br />

the sense of belonging that<br />

he had a government to alleviate<br />

his standard of living or one that at<br />

least, expressed its commitment in<br />

the provision of access to good road<br />

networks, stable electricity supply,<br />

qualitative education, potable water<br />

system and wholesome sanitary<br />

conditions to begin with.<br />

With Nigeria’s GDP at a mere<br />

$57.4 billion in 1999, the economy<br />

barely expanding, and GDP per<br />

capita at $496, his deflated confidence<br />

was further exhausted by<br />

the scarcity of job opportunities in<br />

town. He began clearing his path to<br />

London for ‘greener pastures’.<br />

As a result, participating in that<br />

election was a sheer adventure for him.<br />

He didn’t believe in the potency<br />

of that vote, especially as elections<br />

in that era was sullied in manipulations<br />

and conflicts. He only found<br />

it fascinating to join the excitement<br />

that brewed while maintaining long<br />

queues to cast a vote.<br />

By the next election in 2003,<br />

Adebayo was still in town. He simply<br />

went for accreditation but did not<br />

return to vote.<br />

Continued from page 1<br />

they can get away with because<br />

they earn exorbitant net interest<br />

margins to meet investors’ return<br />

expectations. That hurts both savers<br />

and borrowers.<br />

Banks benefit from the spread<br />

between the risk free rate (Treasury<br />

Bills) and interest on deposits, unlike<br />

their counterpart in South Africa, Europe,<br />

Asia, and the United States that operate in<br />

largely low risk environments.<br />

Johnson Chukwu, CEO and<br />

managing director of Cowry Asset<br />

Management Ltd said the economy<br />

is not as structured as emerging and<br />

advanced markets where customers<br />

have excellent credit history.<br />

For instance U.S banks will not<br />

lend to customers that have history<br />

of bad loans.<br />

Of course Nigerian banks have<br />

been stung in the past, as they are<br />

still grappling with Non-Performing<br />

Loans (NPLs) and impairment on<br />

financial assets brought on by the<br />

sudden drop in crude oil prices of<br />

mid-2014 that helped throw the<br />

economy into recession.<br />

“I didn’t go back because I was<br />

playing scrabble. Yes, I counted that<br />

as more important than going back<br />

to waste my time,” he said. “That I<br />

have a permanent voter’s card (PVC)<br />

does not mean I have a say in the<br />

country. The only thing that counts<br />

is my family and I. I will only get my<br />

PVC because it’s my right. I’ll get my<br />

tax identification number (TIN),<br />

international passport and driver’s license.<br />

Nigeria has a cracked system.”<br />

Twenty years later, more Nigerians<br />

have increasingly become<br />

disenchanted in the affairs of the<br />

country like Adebayo and that mien<br />

is expressed in their indifference to<br />

showing up at polling centres.<br />

Perhaps, those in and around the<br />

metropolis can point to a thing or two<br />

in terms of physical development,<br />

most in rural settlements can easily say<br />

things have remained the same despite<br />

the interrupted experience under<br />

democratic dispensations since 1999.<br />

In urban hubs, well-heeled citizens<br />

express minor interest in rowdy<br />

election, since they command individual<br />

economies in which government’s<br />

impact is next to nothing.<br />

Of the 67,422,005 registered voters<br />

in Nigeria during the last election<br />

(2015), only 31,746,490 (47.08 percent)<br />

were accredited. Among that<br />

were 29,432,083 of votes cast, of which<br />

28,587,564 (97 percent) were valid.<br />

Statistics by the Centre for Public<br />

“Net interest Margin is tiny in most<br />

advanced countries and you need<br />

to ensure that the spread can cover<br />

operating cost. To ensure the spread<br />

covers cost, you have to create loans.<br />

Difference between Treasury Bills<br />

(T-bills) and deposit is small; hence<br />

you cannot set up a bank in developed<br />

economies to trade on T-Bills,” Wale<br />

Okunrinboye, Head of research Sigma<br />

pensions told <strong>BusinessDay</strong> on phone.<br />

“For Ivorian banks’ leverage is<br />

high because interest rates and inflation<br />

rates are lower. If interest rates<br />

are lower you have to take on more<br />

risks to survive,” Okunrinboye said.<br />

Indeed the country’s macro environment<br />

is fraught with risk as<br />

economy has been growing sluggishly<br />

since the start of last year and<br />

inflation remains in double digits.<br />

The economy grew by 1.80 in the<br />

third quarter of 2018, lower than 1.95<br />

percent and 2.10 percent in the first<br />

and fourth quarter of 2018 and 2017.<br />

Kayode Tinuoye, Fund Manager at<br />

United Capital Asset Management Ltd,<br />

is of the view that Nigerian banks are<br />

financed by deposits, and that most of<br />

Policy Alternatives (CPPA) show that<br />

the election was particularly different<br />

from the 2011 edition as it reflected<br />

more than ever, a population with<br />

enfeebled trust in the process electing<br />

its representatives.<br />

Voter turnout significantly dwindled<br />

by 25 percent from a total votes<br />

of 38,209,978 in 2011 to 28,587,564<br />

in 2015, despite an increase in the<br />

voting age population to 87,784,373.<br />

Turnout, derived from the number<br />

of registered voters divided by the<br />

number of total votes cast was 43.65<br />

percent, marking the lowest in Nigeria’s<br />

democratic history since 1999. It<br />

moved from 52 percent in 1999 to 69<br />

in 2003, 57 in 20<strong>07</strong> and 54 in 2011.<br />

In juxtaposition with the 2011<br />

outcome, turnout for the 2015 presidential<br />

election dived in all the<br />

geopolitical zones, except in the<br />

south-west where it appreciated by<br />

approximately eight percent, from<br />

32 percent to 40 percent.<br />

Going by a state by state breakdown,<br />

only 13 states had 50 percent or more<br />

voter turnout. Almost all the Northern<br />

states, including those affected by insurgency<br />

had turnout of at least 40 percent,<br />

except Borno with 30 percent.<br />

Surprisingly, Lagos, a metropolis<br />

considered relatively non-violent<br />

in terms of pre or post-election<br />

violence, had the lowest turnout at<br />

29 percent. In contrast, Rivers state<br />

had the highest turnout at 71 percent<br />

amid a slew of controversies around<br />

electoral malpractice.<br />

L-R: Adedayo Pratt, HNC account officer, Leadway Pensure PFA; Tunde Mumuni, executive director, operations, Nigerian Investigation<br />

and Safety Company; Aderonke Adedeji, MD/CEO, Leadway Pensure PFA, and Ogechi Ekwosimba, benefits processing representative,<br />

LeadwayPensure PFA, at the opening of the Victoria Island branch office of Leadway Pensure PFA in Lagos, recently.<br />

Nigerian banks not using equity to create...<br />

the capital in the country are Tier 1 and<br />

not Tier 2, which is why they do not have<br />

the capacity to fund longer term projects<br />

because their funding is short term.<br />

“That is why most of them issue<br />

Eurobonds to fund long term<br />

projects just to match assets with<br />

liability,” said Tinuoye.<br />

Nigerian banks have some $1.3<br />

billion out of a total of $3.72 billion<br />

in outstanding Euro bonds due next<br />

year and a rising global interest rate<br />

environment expected for the period<br />

may lead to higher refinancing costs.<br />

A breakdown of financial leverage<br />

shows Zenith Banks assets to equity ratio<br />

increased to 7.22 times in September<br />

2018 from 6.68 times the previous year.<br />

Guaranty Trust Bank (GTBank)<br />

Plc’s leverage ratio moved to 6.42<br />

times in the period under review<br />

from 5.36 times the previous year.<br />

Access Bank’s leverage increased<br />

to 9.63 times in September 2018 from<br />

7.95 times the previous year.<br />

First Bank’s holdings’ asset to equity<br />

ratio rose to 7.68 times in the period<br />

under review, this compares with 7.72<br />

times recorded the previous year.<br />

•Continues online at<br />

www.businessday.ng<br />

Adebayo’s lack of faith in the<br />

system of governance is an issue analysts<br />

agree is rooted in the rife belief<br />

that votes don’t count and that election<br />

outcomes are predetermined by<br />

a minority of elite.<br />

Wale Ogunade, a constitutional<br />

lawyer and President, Voters Awareness<br />

Initiative describes this as the<br />

adverse effects of unfulfilled promises.<br />

“People are tired of empty of<br />

politicians in this country,” Ogunade<br />

said. “They would rather be indifferent<br />

than expend effort in futility.”<br />

Moreover, voters in recent times<br />

distance themselves from voting for a<br />

pocket of other reasons including the<br />

seeming recycling of leaders.<br />

There is a global wave of taste for<br />

youthful presidents and Nigerians<br />

youths desire same. But with slim<br />

chances for their preferred candidates,<br />

some rather duck the polls.<br />

Another major factor responsible for<br />

voters apathy remain electoral violence<br />

since election statistics now hardly go<br />

without being marred by death tolls.<br />

With issue-centred campaigning<br />

undermined by politicking, and<br />

supporters divided along religious,<br />

ethnic and sectional bias, over 160<br />

people across the country had lost<br />

their lives already to election related<br />

violence as at <strong>Jan</strong>uary 2015 (a few<br />

months before the last polls).<br />

At least 30 people were killed<br />

largely from inter-party conflicts<br />

and attacks on election sites, with<br />

problems being most pronounced in<br />

Rivers and Akwa Ibom states.<br />

There might not be significant<br />

changes in the narrative, which<br />

will no doubt likely bruise voters<br />

turnout in <strong>2019</strong>.<br />

The United States Institute of<br />

Peace observed in a report dubbed<br />

‘Nigeria’s <strong>2019</strong> Elections: Change,<br />

Continuity and the Risks to Peace,’<br />

that the conflict between farmers<br />

and herdsmen within the northern,<br />

central, middle-belt states and the<br />

apparent failure of government to nip<br />

the Boko-Haram insurgency in the<br />

bud also strengthens the perception<br />

that security remains a challenge.<br />

The case of the missing voters<br />

also poses a risk to integrity of the<br />

votes cast.<br />

Cases where people register and<br />

fail to turn up created huge opportunity<br />

for rigging and manipulations<br />

before the introduction of biometric<br />

card readers, according to Ade Adebambo,<br />

an All Progressive Congress<br />

(APC) party agent.<br />

When a party with the upper-hand<br />

in an area is on the verge of losing an<br />

election due to poor turnout, it would<br />

begin to mobilise supporters to vote<br />

and ensure that the numbers tally in<br />

a way that won’t elicit suspicion.<br />

To facilitate that, Adebambo says<br />

party agents are either bought to look<br />

the other way or threatened to succumb.<br />

“If for instance 2,000 people<br />

registered to vote but during the election,<br />

they got 200 where they need 500,<br />

the incumbent can mobilise people<br />

from another area to close the margin.<br />

These were things that happened. This<br />

time, things have changed.”<br />

Assuring that containment of<br />

manipulations would be further<br />

deepened in <strong>2019</strong>, Femi Adebiyi,<br />

the public relations officer at INEC<br />

said the commission will adopt simultaneous<br />

accreditation and voting<br />

to reduce incidence of low turnout.<br />

The method, he said, was experimented<br />

successfully in the recent<br />

gubernatorial elections in Anambra,<br />

Ekiti, and Osun, although observers<br />

believe those elections were characterised<br />

by irregularities.<br />

“We understand that this is a<br />

machine (card reader) and wherever<br />

there is going to be failure, we have<br />

back up,” said Akinbiyi who feels the<br />

commission (INEC) is being unfairly<br />

hammered by critics. “We expect that<br />

machines will fail. It fails but what is<br />

the percentage? If of all the process<br />

we have just about five percent failure,<br />

people will begin to hold on to that.”<br />

Going forward, observers appear<br />

positive that the <strong>2019</strong> election could be<br />

on track for improvement in turnout as<br />

enlightenment of voters has increased<br />

as to the dangers of leaving voting decisions<br />

in incompetent hands.<br />

Through the social media, more<br />

youths have been educated about<br />

government policies, actions and<br />

inactions and “will keep trying their<br />

luck because they know how important<br />

it is for them to vote,” according<br />

to Chidi Okereke a social media influencer<br />

with over 68, 000 followers.<br />

However, the concern for other<br />

observers is that while voter turnout<br />

may nudge higher, it will be mostly<br />

induced by monetary enticement<br />

from politicians, casting shadows on<br />

the integrity of elections.<br />

That was exemplified in the last<br />

election where contending parties<br />

dished out money to voters upon<br />

proof of voting in their favour.<br />

Balarebe Musa, a former Governor<br />

of Kaduna state and National<br />

Chairman of the Peoples Redemption<br />

Party shares this sentiment and<br />

believes turnout may increase, not<br />

because of voters’ conviction that the<br />

candidates can perform but because<br />

they need the monies and hand-outs<br />

to be offered. He said: “the fate of<br />

the election in Nigeria is decided by<br />

money. You can see what happened<br />

in the party primaries. This will<br />

continue even at the national election,<br />

people will be bought to vote<br />

because they are so poor,” he said.<br />

In Nigeria, voting is both a right<br />

and obligation once age 18 is attained.<br />

But it has not become compulsory<br />

like in 22 other countries mostly<br />

in Latin America.<br />

A citizen can face a fine of $20 (N7,<br />

200) for failing to vote in Australia,<br />

while eligible voters who duck the polls<br />

for three consecutive elections in Brazil<br />

may have their voter identity cancelled.<br />

It doesn’t end there. They can<br />

be restricted from borrowing from<br />

government financial institutions,<br />

obtaining a passport or taking public<br />

office if approved in a civil service test.<br />

Under compulsory voting, democratic<br />

election of leaders is treated as<br />

the responsibility of citizens, rather<br />

than a constitutional right.<br />

Just like civil responsibilities such<br />

as tax payment, voting in these democracies<br />

is regarded as one of the<br />

obligations to community noted in<br />

the United Nations Universal Declaration<br />

of Human Rights.<br />

In effect, research says the<br />

method appears to have produced<br />

governments with more stability,<br />

legitimacy and a genuine mandate<br />

to govern, a situation which in turn<br />

benefits all individuals.<br />

The idea that compulsory voting results<br />

in a higher degree of political legitimacy<br />

is based on higher voter turnout.<br />

Voluntary voting, for instance, prior to<br />

1924 accounted for between 47 percent<br />

and 78 percent turnout of eligible voters<br />

in Australia. But with the introduction<br />

of compulsory federal voting in 1924,<br />

this figure soared to between 91 and 96<br />

percent, with only 5 percent of eligible<br />

voters accounted as not enrolled.<br />

In contrast, Venezuela and the<br />

Netherlands in 1967 shifted from<br />

compulsory voting to voluntary participation<br />

and turnout in the subsequent<br />

national Dutch poll trimmed by<br />

about 20 percent while Venezuela saw<br />

a drop in attendance of 30 percent in<br />

1993 once compulsion was discarded.<br />

Until something similar happens,<br />

“People will come out to vote when<br />

the dividends of democracy become<br />

noticeable; when promises are fulfilled<br />

and perhaps when the Lagos-<br />

Ibadan expressway, a route that<br />

connects the economic nerve of the<br />

country to other states is completed,”<br />

said Adebambo, the APC party agent.


Monday <strong>07</strong> <strong>Jan</strong>uary <strong>2019</strong> C002D5556 BUSINESS DAY 43


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48<br />

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Monday <strong>07</strong> <strong>Jan</strong>uary <strong>2019</strong>


Monday <strong>07</strong> <strong>Jan</strong>uary <strong>2019</strong><br />

Stakeholders in the<br />

oil and gas industry<br />

say total deregulation<br />

of the downstream<br />

sector will<br />

unlock huge private investment<br />

potential in the sector.<br />

The stakeholders, who<br />

made the assertion while<br />

speaking with the News<br />

Agency of Nigeria on Sunday<br />

in Lagos, said deregulation<br />

would stimulate sustainable<br />

growth in the oil sector.<br />

They expressed worry<br />

over the huge amount of<br />

money annually spent by<br />

the Federal Government<br />

on subsidy payment, saying<br />

such sum could be used to<br />

develop other sectors of the<br />

economy.<br />

They urged the Federal<br />

Government to liberalise<br />

the downstream sector to attract<br />

investors and boost the<br />

country’s economy.<br />

The minster of state,<br />

Petroleum Resources, Ibe<br />

Kachikwu, had said that<br />

subsidy on Premium Motor<br />

Spirit (PMS), otherwise<br />

known as petrol, stood at<br />

over N1.4 trillion.<br />

The stakeholders said<br />

that became imperative for<br />

government to embark on<br />

total deregulation of the<br />

downstream sector to attract<br />

www.businessday.ng www.facebook.com/businessdayng @businessDayNG @Businessdayng<br />

Deregulation will unlock investment potential<br />

in downstream sector - stakeholders<br />

investors, while the country<br />

saved funds.<br />

Muda Yusuf, directorgeneral,<br />

Lagos State Chambers<br />

of Commerce and<br />

Industry (LCCI), said the<br />

biggest burden on the economy<br />

might be regarded as<br />

the petroleum subsidy regime.<br />

Yusuf said government<br />

should encourage private<br />

sector players to take over<br />

the downstream sector of<br />

the petroleum business,<br />

saying, “When this is done,<br />

most of the challenges we<br />

see as regard subsidy, refineries<br />

and others will be adequately<br />

addressed.<br />

“The government should<br />

only play the regulator and<br />

not an operational role. Government<br />

has no business refining<br />

petroleum products,<br />

retailing or distributing fuel<br />

as well as the marketing of<br />

these products. We cannot<br />

continue to carry that kind of<br />

burden in the oil sector.”<br />

Yusuf also said subsidy<br />

remained a big hole in the<br />

finances of government and<br />

puts pressure on the foreign<br />

exchange market.<br />

According to Yusuf, it has<br />

downward impact on the foreign<br />

reserves, just as it exerts<br />

immense stress on the na-<br />

tion’s treasury.<br />

He said one of the critical<br />

elements of the oil and gas<br />

sector reform, particularly<br />

the downstream sector, was<br />

the complete deregulation of<br />

the sector.<br />

An energy expert, Felix<br />

Andrew, said that continuous<br />

payment of subsidy would<br />

not be sustainable and urged<br />

government to liberalise the<br />

market and encourage “free<br />

entry, free exit’ to attract investors<br />

in the sector.<br />

Andrew, who is also the<br />

executive director, Blue-Sea<br />

Energy Limited, said that<br />

currently, Nigeria spent<br />

about N1.7’trillion on fuel<br />

subsidy annually, while its<br />

education and health sector<br />

could only access a paltry<br />

budget of N300 million and<br />

N400 million, respectively.<br />

According to Andrew, it is<br />

obvious that the fuel subsidy<br />

programme is placing a huge<br />

financial burden on the nation’s<br />

resources.<br />

“Hence, there is no better<br />

time to deregulate as this initiative<br />

is an enabler in freeing<br />

up scarce resources. This is to<br />

address the concerns clearly<br />

expressed by the citizens for<br />

which political leadership is<br />

unable to find the resources<br />

to satisfy.<br />

How Nigeria attains 31% broadband penetration target – NCC<br />

Nigerian Communications<br />

Commission<br />

(NCC) has<br />

confirmed that,<br />

based on empirical indices,<br />

Nigeria attained 31 percent<br />

broadband penetration.<br />

NCC management said in<br />

a statement on Sunday that<br />

this was contrary to insinuations<br />

in some quarters that<br />

the country was far away from<br />

the 30 percent target.<br />

NCC said by the five-year<br />

National Broadband Plan<br />

(NBP), 2013 -2018, it was targeted<br />

that the country should<br />

be able to attain a minimum<br />

of 30 percent from the 5 percent<br />

it had in 2013.<br />

It said expectedly, based<br />

on the population of Nigeria,<br />

estimate at 190 million, and<br />

connected lines of 169 million,<br />

those who had access to<br />

broadband at a speed of 1.5<br />

megabytes per second cover<br />

over 30 percent of the population.<br />

NCC said that to realise<br />

that, the Federal Government<br />

set up the NBP (2013-2018)<br />

with a target of 30 per cent<br />

by 2018, of which the figures<br />

doubled between 21 and 22<br />

percent in the months before<br />

November 2018.<br />

According to NCC, broadband<br />

penetration is typically<br />

measured by the percentage<br />

of total population with access<br />

to broadband networks<br />

out of each hundred.<br />

”According to NCC<br />

data, there were a total of<br />

168,729,005 mobile ”GSM”<br />

mobile subscribers in Nigeria<br />

as at November 2018. Of these<br />

108,457,051 were subscribed<br />

to internet access services<br />

provided by the major operators.<br />

“In terms of broadband<br />

services, a total of 58,965,478<br />

connected to the internet<br />

through 3G and 4G networks<br />

(including those provided<br />

by the Long Term Evolution<br />

(LTE) only service providers<br />

such as Smile and nTel).<br />

“This distinction is critical<br />

because Nigerians predominantly<br />

rely on mobile networks<br />

to access the internet,<br />

including broadband networks.<br />

“The commission said was<br />

made possible since the fixed<br />

broadband access which was<br />

to have been led by the erstwhile<br />

State incumbent – NI-<br />

TEL –” is now literally nonexisting.”<br />

“So, if we take the total active<br />

broadband subscription<br />

figure of 58,965,478 and divide<br />

by the population figure<br />

of 190,886,311 (using the UN’s<br />

projection as at December<br />

2017), we come to a penetration<br />

percentage of 30.9 percent.”<br />

The regulatory body<br />

said it used the UN’s figure<br />

because of consistency, adding<br />

that it appeared to be the<br />

BUSINESS DAY<br />

49<br />

NEWS<br />

baseline used by the International<br />

Telecommunication<br />

Union (ITU) in earlier studies.<br />

“For instance, if we use the<br />

Nigerian Population Commission’s<br />

2006 figure of 140<br />

million, we come to a broadband<br />

penetration rate of 42.1<br />

percent.<br />

“Also, looking through the<br />

ITU Broadband Commission<br />

September 2018 Report,<br />

one would see that Nigeria’s<br />

broadband penetration rate<br />

is set at an abysmal 19.9 percent.<br />

“This cannot be the case,<br />

since that report is based on<br />

industry statistics of December<br />

2017, which was clearly<br />

outdated as at September<br />

2018 when the report was<br />

published.<br />

“Clearly therefore, the<br />

NCC assertion that Nigeria<br />

has attained 30.9 per cent<br />

broadband penetration is<br />

logical and supported by<br />

available data in the commission’s<br />

custody. “There are<br />

lessons to be learnt from the<br />

needless controversy on this<br />

matter. To its credit, NCC has<br />

been rather transparent with<br />

industry data.”<br />

It said NCC website was<br />

being updated on a monthly<br />

basis with data of the subscription,<br />

tariff and other industry<br />

performance which<br />

enabled stakeholders to see a<br />

fair picture of overall industry<br />

performance.


50 BUSINESS DAY www.businessday.ng www.facebook.com/businessdayng @businessDayNG @Businessdayng Monday <strong>07</strong> <strong>Jan</strong>uary <strong>2019</strong><br />

NEWS<br />

Labour insists on strike as meeting<br />

with FG continues today<br />

JOSHUA BASSEY & KEHINDE AKINTOLA<br />

SERAP writes Fashola to name contractors that disappeared with power projects funds<br />

MICHEAL ANI, with agency report<br />

Socio-Economic Rights<br />

and Accountability<br />

Project (SERAP) says<br />

it has sent a Freedom<br />

of Information (FOI) request<br />

to Babatunde Fashola, minister<br />

of power, works and<br />

housing, urging him to use<br />

his good offices to “urgently<br />

provide information on specific<br />

names and details of<br />

contractors and companies<br />

that allegedly collected money<br />

for electricity projects but<br />

failed to execute any projects,<br />

starting from the return of<br />

democracy in 1999 to 2018.”<br />

According to SERAP, former<br />

Nigeria’s Vice President<br />

and Presidential candidate<br />

of the People’s Democratic<br />

Federal Government<br />

and organised labour<br />

are expected to meet<br />

again today in their<br />

continuation of effort<br />

to resolve the lingering minimum<br />

wage crisis and avert the<br />

proposed nationwide strike<br />

billed to commence tomorrow.<br />

A similar meeting held on<br />

Friday, <strong>Jan</strong>uary 4, to address<br />

the issue was inconclusive and<br />

both agreed to continue today.<br />

Labour had since commenced<br />

mobilisation of members<br />

and its civil society allies<br />

for what they said would be<br />

a long drawn nationwide industrial<br />

action to demand for<br />

the implementation of the<br />

N30,000 new minimum wage<br />

recommended by the Ama<br />

Pepple-led tripartite National<br />

Minimum Wage Committee.<br />

Chris Ngige, minister of labour<br />

and employment, during<br />

the meeting on Friday, said the<br />

high level Technical Committee<br />

announced by President<br />

Muhammadu Buhari would<br />

work on the fiscal issues to<br />

ensure sustainable payment<br />

of the N30,000 new national<br />

minimum wage.<br />

Labour had insisted there<br />

was no need setting up a technical<br />

committee and urged the<br />

federal government to transmit<br />

a draft bill of the N30,000<br />

recommended by the wage<br />

committee to the National Assembly.<br />

But Ngige said the technical<br />

committee when constituted<br />

would also advise state<br />

governments who have been<br />

complaining and groaning<br />

under heavy wage bill on how<br />

they should source funds to<br />

meet the financial obligations<br />

arising from the new minimum<br />

wage.<br />

According to Ngige, Federal<br />

Government and labour<br />

negotiating teams would meet<br />

again today by 5:00pm to fine<br />

tune fiscal issues on the new<br />

national minimum wage.<br />

“The meeting was not<br />

deadlock. We are making progress<br />

or we have made substantial<br />

progress in terms of the<br />

transmission of the national<br />

minimum wage bill,” the minister<br />

explained.<br />

When informed that the<br />

National Assembly was presently<br />

on recess and expected<br />

to resume on Wednesday,<br />

<strong>Jan</strong>uary 16, <strong>2019</strong>, Ngige said:<br />

“Very good that’s the issue we<br />

are looking at, they (National<br />

Assembly) are on recess as you<br />

can see it is a new bill on the<br />

National Minimum Wage Act<br />

<strong>2019</strong>.”<br />

Party (PDP), Atiku Abubakar,<br />

reportedly blew the<br />

whistle on Channels TV<br />

when he said, “Contractors<br />

were given some contracts<br />

for power projects and were<br />

paid 100 percent upfront yet<br />

the money went down the<br />

drain. Up till now, we are<br />

not holding the contractors<br />

responsible. People have<br />

collected money upfront<br />

100 percent and have disappeared;<br />

and have not even<br />

done any work.”<br />

SERAP said: “The revelation<br />

by Atiku is entirely consistent<br />

with SERAP’s recent<br />

report titled: From Darkness<br />

to Darkness: How Nigerians<br />

are Paying the Price for<br />

Corruption in the Electricity<br />

Sector, which also revealed<br />

When asked about the hard<br />

stance of the state governors<br />

on the agreement reached<br />

during the tripartite committee<br />

meeting, Ngige said: “the<br />

issue of the national minimum<br />

wage is n the exclusive list,” as<br />

stipulated by the 1999 Constitution<br />

(as amended).<br />

He maintained that if Mr.<br />

President is not committed to<br />

the implementation of the new<br />

minimum wage, he would not<br />

have provided the resources<br />

for the tripartite committee<br />

which worked for one year.<br />

“He (Buhari) is ready for<br />

it and received the report too.<br />

We are now working on the<br />

report. The report is in a raw<br />

form. It is the milling that we<br />

are doing. Now with labour<br />

discussing.<br />

“The high level technical<br />

committee is not a committee<br />

that to review the Minimum<br />

wage report. It is a committee<br />

that is economic. It is about<br />

budget and planning and advises<br />

Federal Government and<br />

even the state governments on<br />

sustainable implementation<br />

and how we can get the funds.<br />

Not a one and off thing not that<br />

we can pay in <strong>2019</strong> and cannot<br />

pay again. It will advise state<br />

governments that have been<br />

complaining and groaning under<br />

heavy wage bill on certain<br />

things they should do.”<br />

Ibom Air acquires three aircraft for operations<br />

IFEOMA OKEKE<br />

Akwa Ibom State<br />

government-owned<br />

Ibom Airline Company<br />

is gearing up<br />

to commence operations after<br />

acquiring three aircraft into its<br />

fleet, and concluding a recruitment<br />

process with 400 direct<br />

and indirect jobs for Akwa<br />

Ibom unemployed indigenes.<br />

The state government says<br />

the airline will for the moment<br />

operate within Uyo-Lagos-Abuja<br />

routes, adding that<br />

it ventured into airline operations<br />

to add to the capacity of<br />

existing airlines.<br />

Akan Okon, the state commissioner<br />

for special duties<br />

how over N11 trillion meant<br />

to provide regular electricity<br />

supply was allegedly squandered<br />

by politicians and<br />

contractors under successive<br />

governments.”<br />

In the FOI request dated<br />

<strong>Jan</strong>uary, 4, <strong>2019</strong> and signed<br />

by SERAP senior legal adviser<br />

Bamisope Adeyanju, the<br />

organisation said, “By publishing<br />

the names of the contractors<br />

and their registration<br />

details, if any, Nigerians will<br />

be better able to hold them<br />

to account for allegedly absconding<br />

with public funds<br />

meant for electricity projects,<br />

thereby throwing the country<br />

into perpetual darkness and<br />

socio-economic stagnation<br />

as well as denying people<br />

their human rights.”<br />

and aviation development, said<br />

in Uyo, the state capital, that the<br />

recruitment process had been<br />

concluded with an Akwa Ibom<br />

son as chief pilot. He explained<br />

that the heavy traffic witnessed<br />

at the Akwa Ibom airport made<br />

it imperative for the state government<br />

to join the few airlines<br />

operating there.<br />

“Ibom Air has come to stay.<br />

Three aircraft are secured and<br />

are ready for commencement<br />

of operation. It is completely<br />

owned and operated by Akwa<br />

Ibom State government and it<br />

will provide 400 direct and indirect<br />

jobs,” Okon said<br />

Okon said though the airline<br />

was exclusively owned by<br />

the Akwa Ibom State government,<br />

its management and<br />

operations would be benchmarked<br />

against international<br />

best practices.<br />

Staff of the new airline, recruited<br />

strictly on merit, are<br />

currently undergoing training<br />

in their various areas of<br />

specialties, and getting set to<br />

start operations as soon as<br />

required formalities are concluded,<br />

he said.<br />

On the state of the Victor Attah<br />

International Airport, he said<br />

was at the moment undergoing<br />

work to improve the standard<br />

of the airport with the ongoing<br />

work on the second runway, new<br />

taxiway, a power sub-station,<br />

new commercial building and<br />

other unique features.<br />

SHIN achieves first oil on 200,000bpd Egina FPSO<br />

KELECHI EWUZIE<br />

Samsung Heavy Industries<br />

Nigeria Limited<br />

(SHIN) says it has<br />

successful achieved<br />

the first oil on the 200,000<br />

barrels per day-capacity Egina<br />

Floating Production Storage<br />

Offloading (FPSO) unit.<br />

The FPSO achieved first<br />

Oil on December 29, 2018,<br />

after the global shipbuilding<br />

firm successfully completed<br />

the mooring, hook-up and<br />

required offshore commissioning<br />

of the floating vessel.<br />

In a statement by the<br />

company, this volume of onshore<br />

and offshore work had<br />

never been accomplished in<br />

Nigeria before now.<br />

According to the company,<br />

“With all these accomplished,<br />

the high-risk portion of the<br />

Egina project has now been<br />

completed. This achievement<br />

have been followed by very<br />

good response from Nigerian<br />

authorities, international clients<br />

and earned major headlines<br />

in the press. This leads<br />

SHI to gain competitive edge<br />

in future offshore project orders<br />

in West Africa, of course<br />

including Nigeria.”<br />

The Egina FPSO, one of<br />

the world’s largest FPSO,<br />

and indeed the largest FPSO<br />

ever deployed by the Total<br />

Group, was built for the<br />

French oil giant by SHIN.<br />

Production from Egina<br />

field of 200,000 barrels per<br />

day at peak will increase<br />

Nigerian current crude oil<br />

production by 10 percent.<br />

Since Egina FPSO arrived<br />

at its offshore location on<br />

August 29 from the fabrication<br />

and integration yard in<br />

Lagos, SHIN has worked towards<br />

successfully achieving<br />

this challenging goal of<br />

achieving First Oil in 2018,<br />

as agreed by all parties.<br />

The Korean giant also<br />

completed the FPSO<br />

mooring well in advance<br />

- completed on September<br />

17,2018 against target<br />

date of September 23, 2018,<br />

riser hook-up activities and<br />

required offshore commissioning,<br />

putting an exemplary<br />

effort in achieving<br />

First Oil in 2018.<br />

The company had also<br />

successfully completed the<br />

FPSO work in SHI-MCI yard<br />

before it continued its work<br />

offshore under strict Nigerian<br />

local content regulations<br />

with similar safety and<br />

quality standards applicable<br />

in the company’s Geoje<br />

shipyard in Korea.<br />

The statement says “We<br />

are very proud to announce<br />

the successful achievement<br />

of First oil in 2018, which is<br />

adding another feather in<br />

our cap, subsequent to our<br />

completion of the first ever<br />

Nigerian Onshore Integration<br />

works for EGINA FPSO<br />

with thorough preparation<br />

in compliance with Nigeria<br />

Local Content.”<br />

“Samsung is confident of<br />

successfully completing the<br />

remaining offshore commissioning<br />

works and handover<br />

of Egina FPSO to our client<br />

Total along with its partners<br />

(NNPC, CNOOC, SAPETRO<br />

and PETROBRAS on schedule,<br />

through close co-operation<br />

and support from all relevant<br />

Nigerian Government<br />

Agencies including NNPC,<br />

NAPIMS, NCDMB, NPA,<br />

NEPZA, NIMASA, NIS, DPR,<br />

etc., with Highest levels of<br />

Safety and quality control.”<br />

SHIN won the order to<br />

build the Egina FPSO in<br />

2013 and the facility is currently<br />

installed on the offshore<br />

field, located 150 km<br />

off the coast of Nigeria.<br />

The mega facility is 330<br />

metres in length, 61metres<br />

in breadth, and 34metres in<br />

height. It boasts 200,000 barrels<br />

of production per day at<br />

the peak and 2.3 million barrels<br />

storage capacity with topsides<br />

weighing 60,000 tonnes.<br />

The new-build FPSO contract<br />

was a turnkey project in<br />

which SAMSUNG covered<br />

the entire engineering, design,<br />

procurement, construction,<br />

transportation and commissioning.


Monday <strong>07</strong> <strong>Jan</strong>uary <strong>2019</strong> C002D5556 BUSINESS DAY 51


52 BUSINESS DAY www.businessday.ng www.facebook.com/businessdayng @businessDayNG @Businessdayng Monday <strong>07</strong> <strong>Jan</strong>uary <strong>2019</strong><br />

NEWS<br />

L-R:<br />

Usman Gur<br />

Muhammed,<br />

managing director/CEO,<br />

Transmission<br />

Company of<br />

Nigeria (TCN);<br />

Gboyega Oyetola,<br />

governor<br />

Osun State,<br />

and his deputy<br />

Benedict<br />

Olugboyega<br />

Alabi, during<br />

the courtesy<br />

visit by<br />

the management<br />

of TCN to<br />

the governor in<br />

Osogbo.<br />

BUA, CBMI sign agreement to build New 3million Kalambaina Cement II Plant in Sokoto<br />

ENDURANCE OKAFOR<br />

Less than one week<br />

after the listing of<br />

shares from the<br />

almost $1 billion<br />

Merger between<br />

BUA Kalambaina Cement<br />

Company and Cement Company<br />

of Northern Nigeria<br />

where it also assumed majority<br />

stakes in the enlarged<br />

company, BUA Group has<br />

announced that it has signed<br />

another contract with world’s<br />

renowned cement manufacturing<br />

company, CBMI, for<br />

the construction of a new<br />

3million metric tonnes per<br />

annum Kalambaina Cement<br />

Line 2 in Sokoto State, North<br />

West Nigeria.<br />

This comes barely 90<br />

days after the completion<br />

of another 3million MTPA<br />

BUA Obu Cement line 2 in<br />

Okpella, Edo State, Southern<br />

Nigeria and 7 months<br />

after the commissioning of<br />

its 1.5million MTPA Kalambaina<br />

Cement Plant line 1 in<br />

Sokoto state thus bringing<br />

BUA Cement’s total installed<br />

capacity to 11million MTPA<br />

by the time the new project Is<br />

completed.<br />

Speaking at the contract<br />

signing ceremony for the<br />

plant in Sokoto State, Abdul<br />

Samad Rabiu, Executive<br />

Chairman/CEO, BUA Group<br />

and Chairman of CCNN, disclosed<br />

that the construction<br />

of the new 3million mtpa kalambaina<br />

line was in line with<br />

BUA Cement’s strategic midterm<br />

expansion programme.<br />

According to Abdul Samad,<br />

the Nigerian market is still<br />

greatly underserved and with<br />

the projected growth in major<br />

infrastructure projects and<br />

spending over the next few<br />

years, it is important that local<br />

manufacturers are able to<br />

scale effectively to meet current<br />

and projected demand.<br />

Rabiu also added that this<br />

partnership between BUA<br />

and Sinoma CBMI is not the<br />

first as they were responsible<br />

for constructing the first BUA<br />

Kalambaina plant in Sokoto<br />

State. “We are very confident<br />

that Sinoma CBMI possesses<br />

the necessary technical expertise<br />

given their track records<br />

in deploying cement<br />

plants across the world. ”<br />

Mr. Tong Laigou, Chairman<br />

of CBMI, signed on behalf of<br />

CBMI construction.<br />

On BUA becoming Nigeria’s<br />

second largest cement<br />

producer by volume, Rabiu<br />

said that BUA’s strategic cement<br />

expansion programme<br />

which focused on key regional<br />

and export markets<br />

has seen it become the second<br />

largest producer of cement<br />

by volume in Nigeria<br />

this year whilst solidifying<br />

BUA Cement’s leadership<br />

positions in the North West,<br />

South South and South East<br />

Markets of Nigeria. “We will<br />

continue to deliver quality<br />

products which has earned<br />

us the ‘King of Strength and<br />

King of Cement’ moniker<br />

amongst block makers who<br />

form the largest users of cement<br />

in Nigeria”<br />

It would be recalled that<br />

the Security and Exchange<br />

Commission had recently<br />

approved the merger of<br />

the Cement Company of<br />

OMS denies allegation of underhand dealings in Nigeria’s oil business<br />

Ocean Marine Solutions<br />

(OMS)<br />

Limited, a leading<br />

asset protection<br />

companies in Nigeria, has<br />

denied the alleged allegation<br />

of its underhand dealing<br />

in the nation’s oil business.<br />

The company said in a<br />

document seen by <strong>BusinessDay</strong><br />

that the allegation<br />

came after NNPC approached<br />

OMS to replicate<br />

the achievement it had accomplished<br />

on the Bonny-<br />

Port Harcourt pipeline. OMS<br />

said its efforts led to the formal<br />

re-commissioning of<br />

pipeline in April 22 and 23,<br />

2016 by the minister of state,<br />

petroleum resources and the<br />

immediate past group managing<br />

director, NNPC.<br />

“Fearful that we will put<br />

an end to their illegal racketeering,<br />

vested interested<br />

in the Trans Forcados Pipeline<br />

(TFP) have engaged in a<br />

clumsy smear campaign in<br />

an effort to harm us and preserve<br />

the status quo,” OMS<br />

said in the statement.<br />

OMS lashed the alleged<br />

accusers and it said, “We<br />

hold Kola Karim, Shoreline<br />

Natural Resources Limited<br />

and Eraskorp Limited accountable<br />

for spreading<br />

these pathetic and malicious<br />

falsehoods.”<br />

The Marine Company<br />

further explained in the document,<br />

“if we accept NNPC’s<br />

invitation to take over responsibility<br />

for the security<br />

of the TFP, we will gladly put<br />

an end to the criminal abuse<br />

of another key part of our<br />

strategic national infrastructure.<br />

“The decision to assign<br />

the TFP surveillance package<br />

to OMS was reached<br />

after consideration of huge<br />

losses on TFP and rigorous<br />

appraisal of the company’s<br />

impressive record of performance<br />

on the Bonny-Port<br />

Harcourt and Warri-Escra-<br />

vos Crude Oil evacuation<br />

lines,” OMS quoted NNPC to<br />

have said.<br />

On that basis, OMS said,<br />

“The suggestions put in the<br />

press that OMS involvement<br />

in the TFP is untoward is<br />

outrageous.”<br />

The company cited that<br />

“since April 2016 we have<br />

delivered 60.17 million barrels<br />

of oil (and counting) to<br />

both refineries without any<br />

loss to the nation.”<br />

It further explained,<br />

“OMS did not seek out the<br />

TFP security and surveillance<br />

contract from NNPC.<br />

We were approached and invited<br />

to render our services<br />

because of the dire security<br />

situation and because we<br />

have reputation for delivering<br />

results.”<br />

OMS threatened to take<br />

legal step to resolving the accusations.<br />

“We will take the<br />

necessary legal and other<br />

steps to protect our reputation<br />

and expose the truth.”<br />

Northern Nigeria Plc with<br />

BUA’s Kalambaina Cement<br />

Company Limited of Nigeria<br />

that saw the enlarged<br />

CCNN become Nigeria’s<br />

12th largest company by<br />

market capitalisation.<br />

BUA Group’s current<br />

cement assets include<br />

the 6million MTPA Obu<br />

Cement I & II plants in<br />

Okpella, Edo State, the<br />

500,000mtpa Edo Cement<br />

Plant, the 1.5million MTPA<br />

Kalambaina Cement Plant<br />

and the 500,000 Sokoto Cement<br />

Plant. The Group also<br />

owns over 90 percent stake<br />

in the publicly listed Cement<br />

Company of Northern<br />

Nigeria Plc and is widely acclaimed<br />

for its high capacity<br />

utilisation, efficiency and<br />

quality of its products.<br />

‘Amaechi’s leaked audio<br />

tape reveals deceit in APC’<br />

OWEDE AGBAJILEKE, Abuja<br />

People’s Democratic<br />

Party<br />

(PDP) has reacted<br />

to the<br />

leaked audio tape by the<br />

director-general of APC<br />

Presidential Campaign<br />

Council, Rotimi Amaechi.<br />

Fielding questions<br />

from journalists at a<br />

press conference on<br />

Sunday in Abuja, Kola<br />

Ologbondiyan, director,<br />

media and publicity,<br />

PDP Presidential Campaign<br />

Organisation, said<br />

the audio tape by the<br />

minister of transportation<br />

revealed the deceit<br />

in the governing party.<br />

Amaechi was reported<br />

to have been caught<br />

on tape criticising President<br />

Muhammadu Buhari.<br />

The audio clip posted<br />

by Reno Omokri, an<br />

aide to former President<br />

Goodluck Jonathan, on<br />

his Twitter handle, echoes<br />

a voice he attributed<br />

to Amaechi purportedly<br />

saying, “Buhari neither<br />

reads nor listens to anyone.”<br />

However, Business-<br />

Day could not authenticate<br />

the voice.<br />

In the said audio allegedly<br />

attributed to<br />

Amaechi was a voice<br />

saying, “The President<br />

is not listening to anybody.<br />

He doesn’t care.<br />

You can write anything<br />

you want. The President<br />

doesn’t care. Does he<br />

read?”<br />

Reacting to the development,<br />

Ologbondiyan<br />

said the tape revealed<br />

the lies and deceits the<br />

governing party employed<br />

in winning the<br />

2015 elections.<br />

He said: “PDP’s comments<br />

on audio tape of<br />

Amaechi talking of the<br />

audio tape making the<br />

rounds in social media<br />

concerning the Minister<br />

of Transportation, Rotimi<br />

Amaechi, I think he<br />

has a huge responsibility<br />

to defend himself.<br />

“But if his principal,<br />

President Buhari, feels<br />

that the tape is normal,<br />

it is not our business<br />

in the PDP. What is out<br />

in the public domain is<br />

just a demonstration to<br />

Nigerians about the lies,<br />

deceptions, contrivances<br />

and beguilement that<br />

APC deployed to win the<br />

2015 election. It shows<br />

that they have no plans,<br />

no agenda, no vision<br />

in whatever form as far<br />

as governance is concerned<br />

for Nigerians.<br />

“And if one member<br />

of their own inner Caucus<br />

has come out to admit<br />

that, it is not within<br />

the purview of the PDP.”


Monday <strong>07</strong> <strong>Jan</strong>uary <strong>2019</strong> C002D5556 BUSINESS DAY 53


54<br />

BUSINESS DAY<br />

C002D5556<br />

Monday <strong>07</strong> <strong>Jan</strong>uary <strong>2019</strong>


Monday <strong>07</strong> <strong>Jan</strong>uary <strong>2019</strong> C002D5556 BUSINESS DAY 55


56 BUSINESS DAY www.businessday.ng www.facebook.com/businessdayng @businessDayNG @Businessdayng<br />

NEWS<br />

Nigeria suffered high rate of cholera,<br />

cerebrospinal meningitis outbreak in 2018<br />

ANTHONIA OBOKOH<br />

Despite the dramatic<br />

gains in<br />

disease outbreak<br />

made by<br />

Nigeria, major<br />

diseases still persist within<br />

states across the country, the<br />

monitoring the disease surveillance<br />

with weekly Epidemiological<br />

report of the Nigeria<br />

Centre for Disease Control<br />

(NCDC) states.<br />

Cholera and cerebrospinal<br />

meningitis outbreaks recorded<br />

the highest death rate<br />

in the country follow by Lassa<br />

fever, measles and yellow fever<br />

in 2018, the report states.<br />

“Between the first week and<br />

49 weeks of 2018, cholera outbreak<br />

confirmed deaths was<br />

1,135 and 50,500 suspected<br />

cases with 934 laboratory confirmed<br />

from 244 local government<br />

areas in 30 states were<br />

reported compared with 3,695<br />

suspected cases and 84 deaths<br />

from 73 LGAs of 19 states during<br />

the same period in 2017.<br />

L-R: Christopher<br />

Adesotu,<br />

Commissioner<br />

for Science and<br />

Technology;<br />

Muhammad<br />

I. Choudhary,<br />

Professor<br />

of Organic<br />

Chemistry, and<br />

Abiodun Falodun,<br />

rector, Edo State<br />

Polytechnic,<br />

Usen, during<br />

the Maiden<br />

International<br />

Symposium of<br />

the institution<br />

and unveiling of<br />

the Muhammad<br />

Iqbal Choudhary<br />

Centre for<br />

Natural Product<br />

Research (ICC-<br />

NPR), at the<br />

polytechnic, in<br />

Usen, near Benin<br />

City.<br />

African Leadership<br />

University, the Mauritius-based<br />

institution<br />

with an ambitious<br />

goal to train the continent’s future<br />

leaders, has raised $30 million<br />

in a Series B round led by<br />

Danish retail billionaire Anders<br />

Holch Povlsen.<br />

The new funds will be focused<br />

on rolling out the organization’s<br />

lifelong learning<br />

centers program, ALX, which<br />

opened in Nairobi last year<br />

and is set to open in Johannesburg,<br />

Lagos, Cape Town, and<br />

Casablanca later this year.<br />

The ALX program includes<br />

six-month courses designed<br />

for university graduates and<br />

other experienced workers<br />

interested in acquiring important<br />

leadership and technical<br />

skills from data science<br />

to operational management<br />

with the goal of making the<br />

“Cerebrospinal meningitis<br />

confirmed that between<br />

weeks 1 and 49 in 2018, 4,464<br />

suspected meningitis cases<br />

with 318 laboratory confirmed<br />

and 360 deaths from 299 LGAs<br />

of 35 states were reported<br />

compared with 9,939 suspected<br />

cases and 6<strong>07</strong> deaths from<br />

326 LGAs in 34 states during<br />

the same period in 2017,” according<br />

to the report.<br />

The continued spread of<br />

these outbreaks across the<br />

country is due to suboptimal<br />

vaccination coverage in many<br />

Nigerian states of all cases reported<br />

with known vaccination<br />

status, experts say.<br />

However, vaccination coverage<br />

is still too low in some<br />

states in the country to reach<br />

elimination, with the latest<br />

available figures on coverage,<br />

especially for cholera outbreak.<br />

Nigeria is currently the<br />

most impacted country with<br />

some 90 percent of cholera<br />

cases, the United Nations Children’s<br />

Fund (UNICEF) says.<br />

Cholera is a serious bacterial<br />

ogy and human resource to<br />

reduce outbreaks.<br />

Muntaqa Umar-Sadiq, CEO,<br />

Private Sector Health Alliance<br />

of Nigeria (PHN), said Nigeria’s<br />

epidemic preparedness and response<br />

capacity highlight six priority<br />

gaps required to enhance<br />

detection, prevention and management<br />

of an outbreak.<br />

“Priority gaps include infrastructure,<br />

logistics, commodities,<br />

technology, human<br />

resource and communication.<br />

“With more outbreaks<br />

on the horizon, Nigeria cannot<br />

afford to repeat this cycle<br />

of uncertain priorities, wasted<br />

time and investments. We<br />

need strong and clear leadership;<br />

effective deployment of<br />

new innovations,” he said.<br />

Doyin Odubanjo, chairman,<br />

Association of Public Health<br />

Physicians of Nigeria, Lagos<br />

chapter, lamented that despite<br />

the long experience with outbreaks<br />

in Nigeria, an understanding<br />

of the mechanism aiding<br />

its persistence in occurrence<br />

situations is still lacking.<br />

African Leadership University raises $30m in bid to reinvent graduate education<br />

participants “highly employable,”<br />

says co-founder Fred<br />

Swaniker.<br />

Unlike traditional graduate<br />

programs the centers can<br />

operate out of fairly low-cost<br />

set-ups such as co-working<br />

spaces and includes career<br />

placements and incubator<br />

programs for entrepreneurs.<br />

“We’ve been moving away<br />

from the conventional university<br />

programs and focused on<br />

unlocking Africa’s leadership<br />

talent,” he says.<br />

Right from its inception, the<br />

African Leadership programs<br />

have been focused on reinventing<br />

African high school,<br />

university and graduate education<br />

while attempting to<br />

overcome the continent’s<br />

many resource limitations.<br />

African higher education<br />

faces systemic, qualitative and<br />

quantitative challenges with<br />

too few universities to absorb<br />

the tens of millions of young<br />

applicants. This problem is<br />

compounded by financial and<br />

infrastructure constraints. A<br />

2016 survey also showed only<br />

10 universities in Africa were<br />

among the top 1000 schools in<br />

the world.<br />

But ALU’s disruptive approach<br />

has at times been quite<br />

radical even for some of its<br />

own staff, a few of whom quit<br />

last year as it became more<br />

clear it was not a traditional<br />

academic institution, according<br />

to a report by Times Higher<br />

Education.<br />

The latest funding round<br />

was originally agreed back in<br />

July, according to a SEC filing.<br />

It consists of about $28.2<br />

million in new cash and, according<br />

to Swaniker, there’s an<br />

additional $2.5 million in convertible<br />

debt.<br />

In just over three years,<br />

ALU has raised $80 million,<br />

says Swaniker. Its long term<br />

backers including the Omidyar<br />

Network and Silicon Valley<br />

investors including Bob<br />

King. That total is now made<br />

up of $50 million in venture<br />

funding to run its education<br />

operations, $20 million for its<br />

real estate arm to build campus<br />

properties (which it leases<br />

to the school) and another $10<br />

million for its student finance<br />

programme.<br />

The student finance program<br />

is designed to fund students<br />

by “taking an equity<br />

stake in their future”. After a<br />

student graduates ALU receives<br />

a fixed percentage of<br />

their income over a five to<br />

ten-year period. “Unlike a traditional<br />

loan, if they don’t get<br />

employed there’s nothing to<br />

pay,” says Swaniker.<br />

Explainer:<br />

These are the options NERC is<br />

proposing to check estimated billings<br />

ISAAC ANYAOGU<br />

Due to incessant<br />

complaints from<br />

members of the<br />

public regarding<br />

estimated billing, the<br />

Nigerian Electricity Regulatory<br />

Commission (NERC)<br />

has proposed options cap<br />

estimated bills for electricity<br />

customers with the overriding<br />

objective of assigning<br />

maximum energy consumption<br />

based on the customer’s<br />

property size and usage;<br />

dwelling or commercial.<br />

In the first option being<br />

considered, the Commission<br />

is considering a cap on estimated<br />

billing based on the<br />

projected average monthly<br />

consumption of each tariff<br />

class in the MYTO model.<br />

The Multi Year Tariff Order<br />

(MYTO) model and the<br />

tariff design by the distribution<br />

licensees are based on<br />

the recovery of the approved<br />

revenue requirement from all<br />

classes of consumers in accordance<br />

with the estimated<br />

annual energy consumption<br />

for the tariff class. In this respect,<br />

taking into consideration<br />

the customer population<br />

and customer mix for a distribution<br />

licensee, the projected<br />

average consumption per tariff<br />

class may be computed.<br />

It presents a hypothetical<br />

example: a distribution<br />

licensee with a total load of<br />

400MWhr/hr, 30% of consumption<br />

by R2 as per tariff<br />

design and comprised of<br />

250,000 R2 customers.<br />

Monthly energy off-take:<br />

288 million kWHr<br />

Consumption by all R2<br />

customers per tariff design @<br />

30% = 86.4 million kWhr<br />

Average consumption for<br />

R2: = 86,400,000/250,000 =<br />

345.60kWhr per customer<br />

per month Proposed cap on<br />

estimated billing: 345.60units<br />

x applicable R2 tariff for the<br />

DisCo NERC says this approach<br />

is strictly based on<br />

projections in the tariff design<br />

for the utility and does<br />

not take into account the actual<br />

level of supply during the<br />

period under consideration.<br />

However, the computed<br />

cap on estimated billing remains<br />

constant until a review<br />

that alters the structure of the<br />

cost recovery model.<br />

In the second method, the<br />

Commission is considering<br />

Governor of Edo<br />

State, Godwin<br />

Obaseki, has vowed<br />

to prosecute any<br />

contractor who delivers substandard<br />

work on the 230<br />

public primary schools being<br />

refurbished by the state government<br />

through the State<br />

Universal Basic Education<br />

Board (SUBEB).<br />

Monday <strong>07</strong> <strong>Jan</strong>uary <strong>2019</strong><br />

infection that causes severe<br />

watery diarrhoea and stomach<br />

cramps, which can lead to dehydration<br />

and even death.<br />

Chikwe Ihekweazu, CEO,<br />

NCDC said, “Cholera cases<br />

are being treated at designated<br />

treatment centres in affected<br />

states. We have ramped up our<br />

risk communications campaign<br />

so that people are better aware<br />

of the risk factors and ways to<br />

prevent cholera outbreaks.<br />

“We are also strengthening<br />

the disease surveillance and<br />

laboratory systems so that<br />

cases are reported early, detected<br />

in time and response<br />

measures initiated.”<br />

Recently, Nigeria was<br />

among the countries that<br />

benefitted from Gavi’s vaccine<br />

alliance against cholera<br />

on the continent.<br />

Health experts have<br />

harped on the need to check<br />

and invest heavily in tackling<br />

disease outbreaks, stressing<br />

that Nigeria must do more to<br />

improve the country’s infrastructure,<br />

invest in technolthe<br />

application of the average<br />

consumption of each tariff<br />

class within a franchise area<br />

as the cap for estimated billing<br />

of unmetered customers.<br />

The justification is that all<br />

distribution licensees have<br />

aggregated data on the average<br />

energy consumption for<br />

each tariff class within the<br />

franchise area of the utility<br />

based on information from<br />

prepaid vending platforms.<br />

A hypothetical example: a<br />

distribution licensee with the<br />

following average vending<br />

data for its franchise area and<br />

extracted over a preceding<br />

period of three (3) months:<br />

R2 – 250kWhr per month<br />

R3 – 780kWHr per month<br />

The proposed cap on<br />

estimated bills would be<br />

250units x applicable R2 tariff<br />

and 780units x applicable R3<br />

tariff, respectively.<br />

According to NERC, the<br />

third method, it is proposing<br />

to consider the option of<br />

capping the estimated bill of<br />

consumers within a Business<br />

Unit to the average vending<br />

of the same tariff class within<br />

the area.<br />

In developing the guidelines<br />

for capping estimated<br />

billing, the Commission said<br />

it is imperative of taking into<br />

account the disparity in the<br />

availability of supply within<br />

franchise area and the customer<br />

profile.<br />

The third method is presented<br />

in an hypothetical<br />

example: the vending data<br />

on average energy purchase<br />

within the Business Unit of a<br />

distribution licensee over the<br />

preceding three (3) months is<br />

as follows:<br />

Business Unit A: R2 –<br />

350kWhr per month<br />

Business Unit B: R2 –<br />

157kWhr per month<br />

The Commission propose,<br />

under this model, that<br />

Business Unit A will apply a<br />

cap of 350kWhr per month<br />

while Business Unit B will<br />

apply a cap of 157kWhr for<br />

unmetered customers within<br />

the same tariff class<br />

While these options are<br />

still proposals, it is calling on<br />

the public to provide comment<br />

on these options even<br />

though many customers argue<br />

that the priority should<br />

have been to compel DisCos<br />

to provide meters for their<br />

customers according to their<br />

performance agreement.<br />

Obaseki meets contractors on revamp of 230 schools,<br />

threatens prosecution over sub-standard job<br />

The governor gave the<br />

warning when he held a<br />

meeting with the contractors<br />

handling the school renovation<br />

project at Government<br />

House in Benin City, on<br />

Thursday.<br />

He said, “Ordinary, I will<br />

not interact with contractors<br />

but because of the priority we<br />

place on basic education.


FT<br />

BUSINESS DAY<br />

FINANCIAL TIMES<br />

Monday <strong>07</strong> <strong>Jan</strong>uary <strong>2019</strong> www.businessday.ng https://www.facebook.com/businessdayng @Businessdayng<br />

57<br />

World Business Newspaper<br />

May warns of ‘uncharted territory’ if MPs reject her deal<br />

Prime minister refuses to rule out taking Brexit decision to Parliament multiple times<br />

Laura Hughes<br />

Theresa May has said<br />

the UK would be in<br />

“uncharted territory”<br />

if MPs reject her Brexit<br />

deal next week, as she<br />

refused to rule out bringing the<br />

deal back to Parliament multiple<br />

times.<br />

A vote on the deal is now<br />

earmarked for the week starting<br />

<strong>Jan</strong>uary 14, after the prime minister<br />

postponed it in December<br />

because she risked almost guaranteed<br />

defeat.<br />

Speaking on Sunday, she was<br />

adamant that the Commons vote<br />

on her Brexit deal would “definitely”<br />

go ahead next week.<br />

Questioned on whether she<br />

would continue to put the deal<br />

back to MPs if it is rejected, Mrs<br />

May told the BBC’s Andrew Marr<br />

Show: “If the deal is not voted<br />

on at this vote that’s coming up,<br />

then actually we’re going to be in<br />

uncharted territory.”<br />

“I don’t think anybody can<br />

say exactly what will happen in<br />

terms of the reaction we will see<br />

in Parliament.”<br />

Mrs May said she would seek<br />

to avert defeat in the vote by<br />

securing new reassurances for<br />

Northern Ireland, a greater role<br />

for UK parliamentarians in forging<br />

the future relationship with<br />

the EU and further pledges from<br />

Brussels.<br />

Mrs May is seeking legally<br />

binding assurances that a socalled<br />

backstop plan — intended<br />

to avoid a hard Irish border, based<br />

on proposals for a temporary<br />

UK-EU customs union — will be<br />

time-limited.<br />

She acknowledged on Sunday<br />

that “we are still working on”<br />

securing these assurances from<br />

the EU.<br />

Downing Street will seek to<br />

win over critics who have vowed<br />

to rebel against Mrs May’s deal<br />

this week, by highlighting the<br />

dangers posed by a no-deal Brexit<br />

or a second referendum.<br />

Asked to rule out a second<br />

referendum, Mrs appeared to<br />

soften her stance, saying it was<br />

her personal view that a second<br />

Top congressional Democrats Steny Hoyer, Chuck Schumer and Nancy Pelosi met Donald Trump at the White House on Wednesday<br />

to discuss the president’s demand for border wall funding © EPA<br />

vote would divide the country.<br />

“In my view there should not be<br />

a second referendum”, she told<br />

the BBC.<br />

In a message to Labour MPs<br />

and Conservative Eurosceptics<br />

who have vowed to vote down<br />

her deal, Mrs May said: “We have<br />

got people who are promoting<br />

a second referendum in order<br />

to stop Brexit, and we have got<br />

people who want to see their<br />

perfect Brexit.”<br />

“I would say don’t let the<br />

search for the perfect become<br />

the enemy of the good because<br />

the danger there is that we end<br />

up with no Brexit at all.”<br />

World unprepared for slowdown,<br />

says IMF’s Lipton<br />

Fund official warns on trade tensions, policy flaws and weakness in China<br />

Colby Smith and Brendan Greeley<br />

The leaders of the world’s largest<br />

countries are dangerously unprepared<br />

for the consequences<br />

of a serious global slowdown, a<br />

senior executive at the International<br />

Monetary Fund has warned.<br />

In particular, governments will<br />

find it hard to use fiscal or monetary<br />

measures to offset the next recession,<br />

while the system of cross-border support<br />

mechanisms — such as central<br />

bank swap lines — has been undermined,<br />

warns David Lipton, the first<br />

deputy managing director of the IMF.<br />

“The next recession is somewhere<br />

over the horizon, and we are less<br />

prepared to deal with that than we<br />

should be . . . [and] less prepared than<br />

in the last [crisis in 2008],” Mr Lipton<br />

told the Financial Times on the<br />

sidelines of the American Economic<br />

Association annual meeting in Atlanta.<br />

“Given this, countries should<br />

be paying attention to keeping their<br />

economy on a level trajectory, building<br />

buffers and not fighting with<br />

each other.”<br />

In its most recent forecasts, in<br />

October, the IMF projected 3.7 per<br />

cent growth in the global economy<br />

this year. However, with the IMF set<br />

to release updated forecasts later this<br />

month, Mr Lipton admitted that the<br />

growth outlook is being undermined<br />

by trade tensions, policy flaws and<br />

weakness in Asia.<br />

“China is clearly slowing down<br />

— we think China’s growth has to<br />

slow, but keeping it from slowing<br />

in a dangerous way is an important<br />

objective,” he said, noting that a<br />

downshift would be “material very<br />

broadly, not just in Asia.”<br />

Concern about the faltering<br />

growth outlook, coupled with rising<br />

interest rates, has prompted sharp<br />

falls in equity markets in recent<br />

weeks. Jay Powell, chairman of the<br />

Federal Reserve, tried to offset this<br />

on Friday at the Atlanta conference<br />

by saying that “US data seem to be<br />

on track to sustain good momentum<br />

into the new year”. He pledged<br />

that the Fed would take a “patient”<br />

approach to monetary policy tightening.<br />

Separately Larry Kudlow, White<br />

House economic adviser, told the<br />

conference — which brings together<br />

around 13,000 economists — that<br />

“there’s no recession in sight.” He<br />

urged economists to ignore the<br />

swings on Wall Street.<br />

However, some leading economists<br />

pointed out that the new<br />

gloomy investor “narrative” could<br />

become self-reinforcing. “Suddenly,<br />

the markets are reacting as if there’s<br />

a crisis of interest rate increases,” argued<br />

Robert Shiller, the Yale professor<br />

and Nobel laureate. He pointed<br />

out that, although the Fed had been<br />

raising rates for several years, investors<br />

were only reacting to this now.<br />

“This doesn’t look rational,” he<br />

says, drawing parallels with the<br />

1920s in terms of the sudden shift<br />

in psychology. “[Then] the earnings<br />

were high, the economy was moving<br />

well, but suddenly it crashed — and<br />

again it was talk, I think. There was<br />

a new narrative that developed in<br />

1929, just as there is a new narrative<br />

developing today.”<br />

The debates in Atlanta revealed<br />

widespread pessimism among economists<br />

about the chance of any rapid<br />

resolution to the current trade wars.<br />

“It is always possible that President<br />

Trump can wake up one day, reach<br />

out to his friend President Xi and<br />

decide to take yes for an answer”,<br />

said Adam Posen, president of the<br />

Peterson Institute for International<br />

Economics.<br />

Trump tries to sell border ‘barrier’ to Democrats<br />

Government drops demand for concrete wall as shutdown heads into third week<br />

Kadhim Shubber<br />

Donald Trump said a steel<br />

barrier would satisfy his<br />

demand for a wall along<br />

the US-Mexico border on Sunday,<br />

as the partial shutdown of the government<br />

look set to continue into<br />

its third week.<br />

The US president, and his acting<br />

chief of staff, reiterated comments<br />

that a concrete wall was<br />

not strictly necessary as they attempted<br />

to reframe Mr Trump’s<br />

demands as a call for the sort of<br />

border fencing constructed under<br />

previous US presidents.<br />

“We have to build the wall or<br />

we have to build a barrier,” said Mr<br />

Trump to reporters before he left<br />

the White House for Camp David.<br />

“The barrier or the wall can be of<br />

steel instead of concrete if that<br />

works better,” he added.<br />

Mick Mulvaney, the White<br />

House acting chief of staff, said<br />

on NBC’s Meet the Press that Mr<br />

Trump was willing to “take a concrete<br />

wall off the table”.<br />

“If he has to give up a concrete<br />

wall, replace it with a steel fence in<br />

order to do that so that Democrats<br />

can say, “See? He’s not building a<br />

wall any more,” that should help us<br />

move in the right direction,” said<br />

Mr Mulvaney in comments aired<br />

on Sunday morning.<br />

Talks between Democrats and<br />

the White House to end the shutdown<br />

ended on Saturday without<br />

visible progress. The two sides are<br />

set to continue negotiations on<br />

Sunday afternoon, but Mr Trump<br />

said he did not expect a breakthrough.<br />

“I don’t expect to have anything<br />

happen at that meeting . . . but I<br />

think we’re going to have some<br />

very serious talks come Monday,<br />

Tuesday, Wednesday,” he told<br />

reporters.<br />

Hundreds of thousands of federal<br />

employees have been on leave<br />

or working without pay since December<br />

22 after the White House<br />

and Congress failed to agree a<br />

funding bill to keep the entire government<br />

open. Roughly a quarter<br />

of federal agencies, including the<br />

Department of Justice and Department<br />

of Homeland Security, are<br />

affected.<br />

Mr Trump has demanded<br />

$5.6bn in funding for a border wall<br />

and has said he would continue<br />

the partial shutdown for months,<br />

or even years, if his demand was<br />

not met. A border wall was Mr<br />

Trump’s signature promise during<br />

the 2016 presidential campaign.<br />

He insisted Mexico would pay<br />

for the wall, which the southern<br />

neighbour has refused to do.<br />

Some 650 miles of the almost<br />

2,000-mile US-Mexico border is<br />

already covered by various forms<br />

of fencing, much of it built as a<br />

result of the Secure Fencing Act of<br />

2006, which was signed by George<br />

W Bush.<br />

Nancy Pelosi, the Democratic<br />

leader in the House, has refused<br />

to offer any money for a wall.<br />

On Thursday, Democrats, who<br />

recently regained control of the<br />

lower chamber, passed a bill that<br />

would fund the government but<br />

not a wall.<br />

Chuck Schumer, the top<br />

Democrat in the Senate, has offered<br />

funding for border security<br />

measures but no money for Mr<br />

Trump’s wall, which Democrats<br />

regard as an ineffective waste of<br />

money.<br />

The idea has also been criticised<br />

by Republicans. In 2015, Mr<br />

Mulvaney dismissed Mr Trump’s<br />

calls for a barrier on the US-Mexico<br />

border as too simplistic, calling<br />

the demand “absurd and almost<br />

childish”. He said on Sunday that<br />

circumstances on the ground had<br />

changed and so had his view.<br />

In December, the Republicancontrolled<br />

Senate passed a shortterm<br />

funding bill that would have<br />

kept the government open. The bill<br />

did not include money for a wall.<br />

Mitch McConnell, the Republican<br />

majority leader in the Senate,<br />

has said he will not bring another<br />

funding bill for a vote until the<br />

White House and Democrats have<br />

come to an agreement.<br />

Mr Trump has said he may<br />

announce a national emergency<br />

to build the wall if Congress did<br />

not grant money for the project, a<br />

dramatic step that would probably<br />

be challenged in the courts.<br />

“Presidents have authority to<br />

defend the nation,” said Mr Mulvaney<br />

on CNN’s State of the Union<br />

on Sunday. The acting chief of<br />

staff said Mr Trump had asked his<br />

cabinet secretaries “to try and find<br />

money that we can legally use to<br />

defend the southern border”.


www.businessday.ng https://www.facebook.com/businessdayng @Businessdayng Monday <strong>07</strong> <strong>Jan</strong>uary <strong>2019</strong><br />

58 BUSINESS DAY<br />

FT<br />

US trade negotiators<br />

head to China against<br />

gloomy backdrop<br />

Market volatility and global slowdown<br />

concerns raise pressure on<br />

both sides to do deal<br />

James Politi and Lucy Hornby<br />

US and Chinese negotiators<br />

are under mounting pressure<br />

to compromise in a new<br />

round of trade talks this week, as<br />

growing financial market volatility<br />

and fears of a bruising slowdown hit<br />

the global economy.<br />

A delegation of American officials<br />

will meet Chinese counterparts<br />

on Monday in Beijing for two days of<br />

discussions — the first face-to-face<br />

talks since President Donald Trump<br />

and President Xi Jinping agreed<br />

a trade truce at the G20 summit<br />

in Argentina last month — with a<br />

looming March 2 deadline to strike<br />

an agreement or see an escalation<br />

in tariffs.<br />

The mission, led by Jeff Gerrish,<br />

the US deputy trade representative,<br />

follows a torrid month for global<br />

markets, which have been convulsed<br />

by concerns of a looming<br />

downturn in the world’s two biggest<br />

economies. The S&P 500 has fallen<br />

13 per cent since the start of October.<br />

Mr Gerrish will be joined by<br />

high-ranking officials from the<br />

agriculture department, energy department<br />

and treasury department<br />

in a sign that the talks are becoming<br />

more specific than they were when<br />

Mr Trump and Mr Xi met in Buenos<br />

Aires.<br />

For the US, success will hinge<br />

on how far China is prepared to go<br />

to purchase more American goods<br />

in agriculture, manufacturing and<br />

energy, as well as curbing intellectual<br />

property theft and the forced<br />

transfer of technology.<br />

“Mutually assured destruction<br />

is too strong but the incentives for<br />

both China and the US are to work<br />

towards some kind of agreement,”<br />

said Stephanie Segal, a senior fellow<br />

at the Center for Strategic and International<br />

Studies, a Washingtonbased<br />

think-tank. “They are going<br />

to be looking for an outright victory,<br />

and if not they will want to declare<br />

sufficient progress to kick the can<br />

down the road.”<br />

“If I were them, I would be looking<br />

at the list of US demands that the<br />

Chinese said they would be willing<br />

to accept, and clarifying those so I<br />

can declare victory and it doesn’t<br />

look like I capitulated,” said one<br />

former US trade official.<br />

The Chinese want Washington to<br />

commit to not raising tariffs further<br />

and removing levies on some items,<br />

as it hopes to chip away at the US<br />

approach.<br />

Senior US officials were comforted<br />

by a strong jobs report for<br />

December, including a significant<br />

jump in manufacturing employment<br />

which allayed some concerns about<br />

a weakening outlook.<br />

They have interpreted last week’s<br />

revenue warning from Apple, which<br />

the iPhone maker largely blamed on<br />

the economic slowdown in China,<br />

as a symptom of Beijing’s weakness<br />

rather than a worrying sign of<br />

spreading economic pain from their<br />

trade war.<br />

China is grappling with sharply<br />

weakening growth, led by lower<br />

domestic demand and the trade<br />

war, prompting the government to<br />

resort to stimulus measures, such<br />

as injecting $117bn into the banking<br />

system, investing in infrastructure<br />

and urging banks to increase lending<br />

to small businesses.<br />

NATIONAL NEWS<br />

A demonstration in Paris on Saturday started peacefully but ended in violence © AFP<br />

Macron condemns ‘extreme violence’ as French protests continue<br />

Activists smash through ministry door in eighth weekend of demonstrations<br />

Victor Mallet<br />

The latest round of anti-government<br />

protests across France at<br />

the weekend degenerated in<br />

Paris into violent clashes between<br />

protesters and the security forces,<br />

prompting the beleaguered President<br />

Emmanuel Macron to condemn “extreme<br />

violence”.<br />

For the eighth Saturday in a row,<br />

“gilets jaunes” demonstrators —<br />

sporting the yellow reflective jackets<br />

that French motorists are obliged to<br />

carry in their cars — massed in cities<br />

around the country to protest against<br />

the cost of living and to call for Mr<br />

Macron’s resignation, underlining<br />

the challenge to the once-popular<br />

president’s authority after more than<br />

two months of disruption.<br />

The interior ministry said there<br />

were some 50,000 demonstrators<br />

nationwide, compared with 32,000<br />

the previous Saturday during the<br />

Christmas-New Year holiday period.<br />

There were also clashes in Bordeaux,<br />

Caen and other cities.<br />

In recent days Mr Macron and<br />

his government, sensing that urban<br />

shopkeepers and residents are dismayed<br />

by the economic impact of<br />

the prolonged unrest, as well as by<br />

the burning of cars and smashing of<br />

shop windows, have decided to take a<br />

tough line against the demonstrators,<br />

and have suggested that those who<br />

continue to protest are extremists<br />

Tension mounts over Congo poll results delay<br />

US warns electoral authorities not to distort outcome<br />

Tom Wilson and David Pilling<br />

The Democratic Republic of<br />

Congo was edging towards<br />

crisis on Sunday as the electoral<br />

commission postponed the announcement<br />

of presidential results<br />

and the international community<br />

stepped up pressure on Joseph Kabila,<br />

the incumbent, to cede power.<br />

Tension has increased after the<br />

respected Catholic Church said<br />

there had been a clear winner of the<br />

presidential poll a week ago, in what<br />

diplomats said referred to a likely<br />

victory for opposition candidate<br />

Martin Fayulu.<br />

Speaking to the Financial Times,<br />

Mr Fayulu warned the electoral<br />

commission to publish accurate<br />

results, saying “nobody denies that<br />

I am leading the polls”. The former<br />

ExxonMobil executive, a relative<br />

unknown before campaigning began<br />

last November, said he backed the<br />

call by the Catholic bishops’ conference,<br />

known as Cenco.<br />

“We completely agree with Cenwho<br />

deserve no mercy.<br />

A march of an estimated 4,000<br />

people from the Paris town hall to<br />

the national assembly began peacefully,<br />

but ended in violence and failed<br />

to reach its destination when some<br />

of the demonstrators — including<br />

a man identified by police as a former<br />

professional boxer — attacked<br />

a group of gendarmes in riot gear<br />

blocking a pedestrian bridge across<br />

the River Seine. A riverboat restaurant<br />

was set on fire.<br />

Nearby, a small group stole a forklift<br />

truck from a construction site and<br />

smashed down the door to a ministry<br />

building containing the office of<br />

Benjamin Griveaux, the government<br />

spokesman, who was forced to flee<br />

under escort.<br />

“Once again, extreme violence<br />

has come to attack the republic — its<br />

security forces, its representatives, its<br />

symbols,” Mr Macron said on Twitter.<br />

“Those who commit these acts forget<br />

the core of our civil pact. Justice will<br />

be done. Everyone must pull themselves<br />

together to prepare for debate<br />

and dialogue.”<br />

Christophe Castaner, the interior<br />

minister, played down the<br />

significance of Saturday’s protests<br />

and said that 56,500 members of<br />

the security forces, more than one<br />

per demonstrator according to the<br />

official figures, had been mobilised<br />

to quell unrest.<br />

“You can see that this movement<br />

is not representative of France,” he<br />

co’s statement because everybody<br />

knows the results,” he said.<br />

Mr Fayulu also welcomed what<br />

he implied was growing international<br />

pressure on Mr Kabila to accept that<br />

his chosen successor, Emmanuel<br />

Shadary, had lost. “It is very encouraging<br />

that all over the world they are<br />

following closely what is going on<br />

in Congo and making some strong<br />

statements so that the truth will come<br />

out,” he said.<br />

Last Thursday, the US state<br />

department warned the electoral<br />

commission, widely believed to be<br />

aligned with the government, not to<br />

distort results. “There are moments in<br />

every nation’s history when individuals<br />

and political leaders step forward<br />

and do the right thing. This is one of<br />

those moments,” it said.<br />

Washington hinted strongly that<br />

it accepted Cenco’s verdict that Mr<br />

Shadary, known as Mr Kabila’s “dauphin”,<br />

had been defeated.<br />

Peter Pham, US special envoy for<br />

the African Great Lakes region, said:<br />

“There is an old dictum that posits<br />

told LCI television. Although most<br />

of the demonstrations had passed off<br />

peacefully, he said, “at the end there<br />

were numerous provocations and<br />

attacks. Town halls were attacked —<br />

those in Rennes and Rouen — and<br />

institutions like the high court in<br />

Perpignan, and gendarmeries.”<br />

Bruno Le Maire, finance minister,<br />

said in a television interview on Sunday<br />

that he wanted citizens who believed<br />

in representative democracy to<br />

declare “enough is enough”. He said:<br />

“There are forces today that want to<br />

bring down democracy.”<br />

The “gilets jaunes” protests were<br />

triggered by motorists’ anger over<br />

fuel prices that have risen as a result<br />

of green taxes introduced by<br />

the Macron government to reduce<br />

emissions, but the movement has<br />

since developed into an inchoate<br />

series of anti-government and antiestablishment<br />

demonstrations.<br />

Mr Macron’s U-turn on the taxes<br />

and the promise of €10bn of extra<br />

government spending to help the<br />

poor have not mollified the hardline<br />

protesters who continue to take to the<br />

streets on Saturdays.<br />

Those marching in Paris on Saturday<br />

were critical of Mr Macron,<br />

a former Rothschild banker, who is<br />

seen as a “president of the rich” and<br />

has so far failed to convince the majority<br />

of the benefits of his economic<br />

reforms. But few demonstrators were<br />

supportive of any other established<br />

French politicians either.<br />

that the voice of the people is the<br />

voice of God; here rather we have a<br />

case where the ‘vox Dei’ points the<br />

way to the true ‘vox populi’.”<br />

In expectation of possible popular<br />

unrest should Mr Shadary be declared<br />

the winner regardless of the<br />

true count, both the US and the Congolese<br />

government have deployed<br />

troops in the past few days.<br />

Donald Trump, US president,<br />

said he had dispatched 80 soldiers<br />

to nearby Gabon to protect US citizens<br />

and property should violence<br />

break out.<br />

In a letter to Congress, Mr Trump<br />

said he might deploy additional<br />

forces to Gabon or to Congo itself.<br />

The Congolese government has<br />

also been sending thousands of<br />

troops around the country, particularly<br />

to opposition strongholds, in<br />

what observers say could be a preparation<br />

to quash anti-government<br />

protests. Last week, the government<br />

shut down internet services, ostensibly<br />

to prevent the dissemination of<br />

false results.<br />

Egypt tries to block<br />

airing of Sisi’s ‘60<br />

Minutes’ interview<br />

CBS refuses to stop broadcast, in which<br />

president confirms closest<br />

ever co-operation with Israel<br />

Heba Saleh<br />

An interview with US television<br />

channel CBS in which Abdel<br />

Fattah al-Sisi, Egypt’s president,<br />

spoke of his country’s close<br />

co-operation with Israel in fighting<br />

Isis militants, has stirred controversy<br />

after the broadcaster said Cairo tried<br />

to stop it from being aired.<br />

The interview on the 60 Minutes<br />

news programme was due to air on<br />

Sunday evening after CBS said it<br />

had refused Egyptian government<br />

demands to refrain from broadcasting<br />

it. In an excerpt provided by CBS,<br />

Mr Sisi is quoted as having said: “That<br />

is correct . . . we have a wide range of<br />

co-operation with the Israelis,” in<br />

response to a question asking him<br />

if co-operation with Israel was now<br />

the closest ever between the two<br />

countries.<br />

Egypt has had a peace treaty<br />

with Israel since 1978 and the two<br />

countries have diplomatic relations,<br />

but Egyptian public opinion still<br />

regards the Jewish state as an enemy<br />

and occupier of Arab lands. Mr Sisi’s<br />

unprecedented admission could<br />

hand his critics further ammunition<br />

to attack him.<br />

News of co-operation with Israel<br />

against Isis militants in the Sinai has<br />

been widely circulated in the past<br />

year. A New York Times story in February<br />

2018 cited US officials saying<br />

Israel had conducted a covert air campaign<br />

including some 100 air strikes<br />

against Isis militants in the North Sinai<br />

with Cairo’s permission. Egypt denied<br />

the story at the time. Egypt has fought<br />

four wars against Israel since 1948, the<br />

last of which in 1973 was aimed at winning<br />

back sovereignty over the Sinai.<br />

Cairo has not responded to CBS’s<br />

claim that it asked the channel to pull<br />

the episode in which Mr Sisi is interviewed<br />

by Scott Pelley, the program’s<br />

anchor and journalist.<br />

CBS has promoted the programme<br />

as “the interview Egypt’s government<br />

doesn’t want on TV”. CBS said it was<br />

contacted by the Egyptian ambassador<br />

shortly after the interview was recorded<br />

in the US and asked to refrain<br />

from airing it, but the broadcaster<br />

has not specified what the Egyptians<br />

found objectionable.<br />

The channel has not said why it<br />

has held the broadcasting of the interview<br />

since September, when it was<br />

recorded during a visit by Mr Sisi to<br />

New York to attend the UN General<br />

Assembly.<br />

Other excerpts of the interview<br />

made public by CBS include a denial<br />

by Mr Sisi of assertions by Human<br />

Rights Watch that the country is<br />

holding 60,000 political prisoners.<br />

Egypt’s official line is that there are<br />

no political detainees in the country<br />

and that everyone in prison is there<br />

for breaking the law.<br />

Mr Sisi, a former defence minister,<br />

led a popularly backed coup<br />

in 2013 against his elected Islamist<br />

predecessor. He has presided over<br />

one of the harshest crackdowns in<br />

Egypt’s modern history, targeting<br />

mainly Islamists but extending to<br />

secular critics, bloggers and journalists.<br />

“I don’t know where they got this<br />

figure [of 60,000 prisoners],” Mr Sisi<br />

told CBS. “I said there are no political<br />

prisoners in Egypt. Whenever there<br />

is a minority trying to impose an extremist<br />

ideology we have to intervene<br />

regardless of their numbers.”


Monday <strong>07</strong> <strong>Jan</strong>uary <strong>2019</strong> www.businessday.ng https://www.facebook.com/businessdayng @Businessdayng<br />

@ FINANCIAL TIMES LIMITED<br />

Former Barclays executives<br />

prepare to face fraud trial<br />

John Varley, former chief, and 3 others pursued in SFO prosecution<br />

Caroline Binham<br />

The UK Serious Fraud Office has<br />

made a last-minute personnel<br />

change to ensure its flagship<br />

case against four former Barclays top<br />

brass is properly overseen as one of<br />

the biggest tests in its 30-year history<br />

comes to trial.<br />

Barclays’ former chief executive,<br />

John Varley, is one of four defendants<br />

whose long-anticipated trial begins<br />

this week. They face charges over<br />

the bank’s emergency refinancing<br />

arrangements with Qatar in 2008, as<br />

Barclays struggled to avoid the fate of<br />

other high-street rivals bailed out by<br />

the UK taxpayer.<br />

It is the first jury trial in the world<br />

of a major bank’s chief executive over<br />

actions taken during the financial<br />

crisis more than a decade ago and<br />

is scheduled to take at least four<br />

months at London’s Southwark<br />

Crown Court.<br />

The question of who at the SFO is<br />

accountable for the case has been in<br />

doubt since its general counsel quit<br />

for a law firm. The stakes for the SFO,<br />

which has spent millions of pounds<br />

in ringfenced money from the Treasury<br />

investigating the case over more<br />

than six years, are high after bloody<br />

noses in other trials recently, including<br />

the collapse of the retrial of two<br />

former Tesco executives late last year.<br />

SFO charges against Barclays<br />

itself and its operating subsidiary<br />

over the Qatari arrangements were<br />

also scrubbed in October, sparing the<br />

bank from trial.<br />

The anti-fraud agency has now<br />

named Mark Thompson, its chief<br />

operating officer, as the official accountable<br />

for the case.<br />

The agency’s director, Lisa Osofsky,<br />

had to recuse herself from the<br />

Barclays case following her arrival at<br />

the SFO in late August from private<br />

practice, where she was a monitor<br />

to banks trying to overhaul their<br />

compliance.<br />

Alun Milford, the SFO’s former<br />

general counsel who had taken the<br />

Neil Hume<br />

Investors are warming to gold<br />

as markets are whipsawed by<br />

concerns about slowing global<br />

growth.<br />

As US equities tumbled in<br />

December, the holdings of goldbacked<br />

exchange traded funds<br />

rose by 2.25m ounces, according<br />

to Scotiabank, helping to drive<br />

the price of the metal to six-month<br />

highs of more than $1,290 a troy<br />

ounce.<br />

That forced funds that had<br />

placed speculative wagers against<br />

gold in the US futures market to<br />

cover their positions, sending the<br />

market from a net short to a net<br />

long position — where bullish wagers<br />

outnumber bearish bets — for<br />

the first time since June last year.<br />

Analysts believe there has been<br />

a further increase in bullish bets as<br />

well as short covering, although<br />

this has yet to be reflected in official<br />

data. Weekly reports compiled<br />

by the US Commodity Futures<br />

Trading Commission are not being<br />

published because of the partial<br />

government shutdown.<br />

COMPANIES & MARKETS<br />

lead role in the case, has recently left<br />

for Kingsley Napley, the law firm.<br />

While the firm’s instruction precedes<br />

his arrival by many months and he<br />

will not be involved, Kingsley Napley<br />

has a role acting for some of the witnesses<br />

in the case.<br />

Mr Thompson is viewed as a safe<br />

pair of hands at the agency and also<br />

stood in as acting director after the<br />

previous director, Sir David Green,<br />

left in April and before Ms Osofsky<br />

took up the role.<br />

But while Mr Thompson is an<br />

experienced investigator, he is an<br />

accountant by background and not<br />

a lawyer.<br />

The SFO has shrugged off concerns<br />

that there is no senior lawyer<br />

acting as a “second pair of eyes” as<br />

the landmark case proceeds to trial.<br />

Mr Thompson is expected to<br />

make any decisions in conjunction<br />

with Hannah von Dadelszen, a<br />

senior lawyer who jointly heads its<br />

fraud team, while the case controller,<br />

Rakesh Somaia, has been in place<br />

throughout the probe.<br />

The agency declined to comment.<br />

After six years and interviews with<br />

at least 40 individuals, the case is<br />

finally heading to trial.<br />

As well as Mr Varley, in the dock at<br />

Southwark Crown Court will be Roger<br />

Jenkins, the rainmaker who negotiated<br />

the two 2008 capital raisings; Tom<br />

Kalaris, who was a trusted lieutenant<br />

in Barclays’ investment banking unit,<br />

and Richard Boath, the former European<br />

head of the investment bank’s<br />

financial institutions group.<br />

The case involves issues over what<br />

the bankers told the market when Barclays<br />

twice turned to Middle Eastern<br />

investors in 2008 as part of emergency<br />

cash calls worth £11.8bn at the height<br />

of the financial crisis.<br />

Qatari investors ploughed a total<br />

of £6.1bn into Barclays over the two<br />

capital raisings. The SFO alleges that<br />

the bankers induced the Qataris to<br />

invest through side deals worth more<br />

than £300m not fully disclosed to the<br />

market nor to other investors.<br />

Gold lures investors as gyrating markets take shine off stocks<br />

An eruption of volatility has seen the metal re-establish its haven status<br />

“A combination of rising open<br />

interest on Comex and the gold<br />

price going up tells me that new<br />

longs are coming into the market,”<br />

said John Reade, chief market<br />

strategist at the World Gold<br />

Council.<br />

For much of 2018 gold was out<br />

of favour, hit by the strength of the<br />

dollar and interest rate rises in the<br />

US, which dented the appeal of<br />

assets such as the precious metal<br />

that offer no yield. That saw gold<br />

trade as low as $1,174 in August in<br />

spite of rising geopolitical tensions<br />

and the fallout from US-China<br />

trade war.<br />

Sentiment towards gold began<br />

to improve towards the end of the<br />

year as US stock markets fell and<br />

volatility increased. That has continued<br />

into <strong>2019</strong> amid speculation<br />

a slowing US economy will ultimately<br />

force the Federal Reserve<br />

to stop raising interest rates.<br />

Analysts say gold can continue<br />

to shine as long as markets remain<br />

volatile — a fact underlined late<br />

last week after a better than expected<br />

US jobs report saw equity<br />

markets bounce.<br />

FINANCIAL TIMES<br />

John Varley, Barclays’ former chief executive, is one of four defendants facing charges over the bank’s emergency refinancing arrangements<br />

with Qatar in 2008 © Getty<br />

RBS admits misleading court to repossess customer’s home<br />

Case highlights concerns that banks are struggling to change scandal-hit culture<br />

Nicholas Megaw<br />

Lawyers representing Royal<br />

Bank of Scotland falsely denied<br />

the existence of a customer<br />

complaint in a court hearing to repossess<br />

a borrower’s home.<br />

The case will fuel concerns that<br />

banks continue to mistreat customers<br />

despite claiming to have transformed<br />

their culture after a series<br />

of scandals.<br />

Richard, a longtime RBS customer<br />

who did not wish to give his<br />

full name, initially fell into arrears<br />

on a NatWest-branded mortgage<br />

when the bank paid some property<br />

management fees levied by a third<br />

party that he thought were unfair.<br />

He complained about his treatment<br />

to the Financial Ombudsman<br />

Service in May. However the bank<br />

initiated court proceedings to repossess<br />

the property in June, and<br />

its lawyers said on August 15 that<br />

it had “no knowledge” of any FOS<br />

complaint, according to a witness<br />

statement prepared for the hearing.<br />

“Consequently, the claimant<br />

[RBS] asks that the court will refuse<br />

the defendant’s request to dismiss<br />

[or] adjourn the hearing”, added the<br />

lawyers.<br />

Airbus faces a test of its credibility<br />

this week when it reveals whether<br />

it met its target to deliver around<br />

800 aircraft last year, as the plane maker<br />

races to narrow an orders gap with archrival<br />

Boeing.<br />

The European group’s factories<br />

worked overtime during the Christmas<br />

holidays to make up for delays because<br />

of supplier issues.<br />

Guillaume Faury, head of Airbus’s<br />

commercial arm, had made sorting out<br />

the company’s supply chain a key focus.<br />

Mr Faury, who takes the helm from<br />

chief executive Tom Enders in April, is<br />

understood to have launched a review<br />

looking at Airbus’s ways of working,<br />

industry executives with knowledge of<br />

the move confirmed.<br />

The group said in October that it<br />

would deliver about 20 fewer aircraft but<br />

still hoped to meet its target by including<br />

18 A220 jets, the model acquired<br />

through its purchase of the Bombardier<br />

C series. Deliveries are watched by investors<br />

as a key indicator for cash flow.<br />

Airbus had delivered 673 aircraft to<br />

the end of November, leaving it 127 jets<br />

short of its target.<br />

Analysts at Vertical Research Partners<br />

are forecasting 797 deliveries for<br />

2018. Industry sources pointed out that<br />

Airbus was in a similar position in 2017<br />

but still managed to close that year with<br />

a record 718 deliveries.<br />

A spokesman declined to comment<br />

on the final tally, which will be announced<br />

on Friday, but said “the Airbus<br />

team worked flat out until the very last<br />

hours of December 31”.<br />

Boeing, which will unveil its numbers<br />

on Tuesday, had been targeting<br />

between 810 and 815 deliveries in 2018,<br />

up from 763 in 2017. It had delivered 704<br />

planes by the end of November.<br />

In terms of the annual orders race,<br />

Boeing was far ahead of its European<br />

rival by the end of November with 690<br />

net firm orders, fuelling speculation<br />

that it would break Airbus’s five-year<br />

winning streak.<br />

Airbus had reported 380 net firm<br />

orders in the same period but last week<br />

said it had firmed up two more deals<br />

for another 120 aircraft. In 2017, Airbus<br />

secured 1,109 net orders while Boeing<br />

netted 912.<br />

The court agreed and ordered<br />

Richard to hand back his property<br />

to NatWest.<br />

However, the FOS had told Nat-<br />

West about the complaint by at least<br />

early July, according to correspondence<br />

seen by the Financial Times.<br />

The bank’s claim to have no<br />

knowledge of the issue was also<br />

directly contradicted by the office<br />

of chief executive Ross McEwan one<br />

week after the court hearing. A representative<br />

from his office told the<br />

customer’s local MP that RBS could<br />

not discuss his case because of an<br />

“ongoing complaint” with the FOS.<br />

After being contacted by the<br />

FT, RBS acknowledged that there<br />

had been an error in its witness<br />

statement.<br />

“We are aware of [Richard’s]<br />

situation, and understand that the<br />

Financial Ombudsman Service<br />

have reopened their investigation.<br />

We will not take any further action<br />

against [Richard] at this time<br />

and await the outcome of their<br />

independent investigation,” said a<br />

spokesperson.<br />

The case comes as the taxpayerowned<br />

bank is battling to improve<br />

customers’ perceptions after largely<br />

completing its decade-long restructuring.<br />

RBS was ranked the country’s<br />

least popular bank brand in an<br />

official ranking published by competition<br />

regulators this year, while<br />

NatWest was tenth of 16. Executives<br />

have made customer satisfaction<br />

a priority after admitting the bank<br />

had been “distracted” with internal<br />

problems in recent years.<br />

It came under particular fire for<br />

the behaviour of its Global Restructuring<br />

Group, which was accused<br />

of “widespread and systematic”<br />

mistreatment of struggling small<br />

businesses after the financial crisis.<br />

RBS has pledged changes to<br />

ensure “past mistakes cannot be<br />

repeated”, but has nonetheless faced<br />

accusations of being overly aggressive<br />

towards individual customers.<br />

This month, for example, the BBC reported<br />

that RBS refused to compensate<br />

a customer who was defrauded<br />

of £20,000 after a violent mugging<br />

until it was contacted by reporters.<br />

In addition to the witness statement,<br />

Richard said RBS had repeatedly<br />

refused to engage with his efforts<br />

to arrange a way to repay his arrears,<br />

and pushed him into further debt by<br />

reneging on agreements to renew the<br />

fixed rate on the rest of his mortgage.<br />

Airbus under spotlight with race to hit delivery target<br />

European aircraft maker struggling to close orders gap with US rival Boeing<br />

Sylvia Pfeifer and Patti Waldmeir<br />

BUSINESS DAY<br />

59<br />

“Boeing will end up ahead in 2018<br />

in terms of deliveries and orders, on<br />

the back of their wide-body strength,<br />

and that’s confirming a trend we saw<br />

in 2017,” forecasts Chris Higgins, aerospace<br />

analyst at Morningstar Securities.<br />

He estimates that Boeing secured<br />

around 200 wide-body orders in 2018,<br />

nearly four times as many as Airbus.<br />

“It’s a structural issue, it’s not a<br />

one-year issue, and that has potential<br />

implications for Airbus, they may have<br />

to refresh their wide-body line-up much<br />

sooner than they expected.”<br />

Richard Aboulafia, analyst at the<br />

Teal Group, said what mattered most<br />

was the “book-to-bill ratio”. Based on<br />

the end of November figures, Boeing<br />

could achieve a ratio of 1.0 — meaning<br />

new orders would match the number of<br />

aircraft deliveries.<br />

Mr Higgins forecasts that the current<br />

year could be challenging for both<br />

aircraft manufacturers. “Given the<br />

economic backdrop, which is to say<br />

cautiously pessimistic, there are going to<br />

be a lot of airlines sitting on their hands<br />

in terms of orders this year. I’d not be<br />

surprised if <strong>2019</strong> comes in flat or maybe<br />

even down a bit in terms of orders”.


Monday <strong>07</strong> <strong>Jan</strong>uary <strong>2019</strong><br />

www.businessday.ng www.facebook.com/businessdayng @businessDayNG @Businessdayng<br />

BUSINESS DAY<br />

BD Money<br />

Analysis<br />

Gainers & Losers: A<br />

review of mutual<br />

funds in 2018<br />

A review of the performance<br />

of mutual funds between<br />

<strong>Jan</strong>uary and November<br />

2018 showed that Abacus<br />

Money Market Fund, Nigeria<br />

International Debt Fund<br />

and SFS Fixed Income Fund,<br />

rewarded investors with the<br />

most superior returns.<br />

Page 61<br />

OPINION<br />

The perilous art of<br />

state intervention<br />

It must feel good to be a<br />

farmer in Nigeria today,<br />

or textile factory owner,<br />

airlines operator, power<br />

generator or distributor,<br />

real<br />

sector<br />

operator<br />

or maybe<br />

a small<br />

business<br />

Page 62 owner.<br />

Cover Story<br />

A Fixed income guide for<br />

Nigeria in <strong>2019</strong><br />

Fixed income investors,<br />

from retail to institutional<br />

buyers like the banks and<br />

pension funds, can look<br />

forward to a rewarding year<br />

in <strong>2019</strong>.<br />

Pages 63-64<br />

Investing<br />

What you need to know about<br />

bank penny stocks in <strong>2019</strong><br />

A 16 percent depreciation in banking<br />

stocks on the floor of the Nigerian<br />

Stock Exchange (NSE) in 2018 puts<br />

investors on the edge, especially new<br />

stockholders seeking to take positions<br />

in penny stocks in <strong>2019</strong> as analysts<br />

see performance driven by banking<br />

blue-chips.<br />

Page 65<br />

Commodities<br />

Cocoa investors cheery as<br />

2018 gains lift earnings<br />

by 30%<br />

Cocoa rounded off 2018 as a<br />

resilient and top performing<br />

major commodity on the<br />

global scene, gaining about<br />

28 percent in the first<br />

month of the 2018/<strong>2019</strong><br />

season and investors in local<br />

cocoa market are cheery<br />

as the price appreciation<br />

promises at least 30 percent<br />

in earnings.<br />

Page 67


Monday <strong>07</strong> <strong>Jan</strong>uary <strong>2019</strong><br />

www.businessday.ng www.facebook.com/businessdayng @businessDayNG @Businessdayng<br />

BUSINESS DAY<br />

61<br />

Gainers & Losers: A review of mutual funds in 2018<br />

Analysis<br />

Endurance Okafor &<br />

Oluwasegun Olakoyenikan<br />

A<br />

review of the performance<br />

of mutual<br />

funds between <strong>Jan</strong>uary<br />

and November<br />

2018 showed that<br />

Abacus Money Market Fund,<br />

Nigeria International Debt<br />

Fund and SFS Fixed Income<br />

Fund, rewarded investors with<br />

the most superior returns.<br />

A mutual fund is an investment<br />

vehicle that is made up of<br />

a pool of funds collected from<br />

many investors for the purpose<br />

of investing in securities such<br />

as stocks, bonds, money market<br />

instruments and similar assets.<br />

Mutual funds therefore afford<br />

investors to invest in a portfolio<br />

of different forms securities<br />

which could help mitigate<br />

risks. Investment in mutual<br />

funds could be done with any of<br />

the licensed mutual fund managers<br />

available of NSE website,<br />

of which some are owned by<br />

banks.<br />

<strong>BusinessDay</strong> did a survey<br />

on seventy-four (74) funds dis-<br />

‘<br />

The fixed-income<br />

asset class is probably<br />

the only one where<br />

smart money<br />

can demonstrate<br />

differential value<br />

at this time.<br />

Positioning by local<br />

portfolio managers<br />

ahead of when hot<br />

money returns after<br />

hopefully peaceful<br />

polls might be one<br />

strategy<br />

’<br />

tributed over six broad portfolio<br />

classes traded on the Security<br />

and Exchange Commission<br />

(SEC). The survey revealed that<br />

majority of the funds suffered<br />

losses while a few others reported<br />

the same unit price as<br />

the year before.<br />

The returns posted by some<br />

of the mutual funds in 2018 reflect<br />

their abilities to withstand<br />

the economic headwinds in the<br />

global market which negatively<br />

impacted emerging economies<br />

including Nigeria.<br />

Abacus Money Market, a<br />

Fund managed by Investment<br />

One Fund Management Limited,<br />

took the lead among money<br />

market funds, posting 9900<br />

percent return in 2018, and its<br />

Net Asset Value, which opened<br />

the year at N4.1 billion, rose to<br />

N8.59 billion. The average return<br />

of the class however stood<br />

at -0.22 percent.<br />

This placed the fund over<br />

thirteen others in the asset class<br />

with unchanged prices, United<br />

Capital Money Market Fund<br />

shed 9.50 percent and Kedari<br />

Investment Fund grew its return<br />

by 6.25 percent.<br />

Rafiq Raji, chief economist<br />

at Macroafricaintel, said asset<br />

management is very difficult in<br />

these parts, and as such advised<br />

that fund managers should look<br />

in direction of fixed-income,<br />

blue-chips stocks, and flowspositioning.<br />

“The fixed-income asset<br />

class is probably the only one<br />

where smart money can demonstrate<br />

differential value at<br />

this time. Positioning by local<br />

portfolio managers ahead of<br />

when hot money returns after<br />

hopefully peaceful polls might<br />

be one strategy,” Raji recommended.<br />

Omotola Abimbola, a research<br />

analyst at Ecobank said<br />

“multi assets or balanced funds<br />

are likely going to continue to<br />

overweight fixed income over<br />

equities.”<br />

He however explained that<br />

“for fixed income, tightening<br />

external financing conditions<br />

and CBN policy tightening will<br />

keep interest rates elevated and<br />

sustain investor apathy for duration.”<br />

Unlike the money market<br />

funds, bond funds recorded an<br />

impressive performance for the<br />

year as the funds in the class<br />

grew their returns. In all, Nigeria<br />

International Debt Fund,<br />

managed by Afrinvest Asset<br />

Management Limited, was the<br />

best performing fund in the category<br />

with 15.20 percent gain.<br />

The fund’s performance was<br />

significant when compared to<br />

Kedari Investment Fund, its<br />

closest rival that grew return by<br />

5.85 percent.<br />

Johnson Chukwu, MD of<br />

Cowry Assets Limited said ordinarily,<br />

any good fund manager<br />

should have a good performance,<br />

because a portfolio<br />

investor will first identify the<br />

instrument that qualify for investment<br />

in their portfolio, that<br />

is those instruments that have<br />

very good fundamentals.<br />

“The selectiveness of investors<br />

in picking instruments into<br />

their portfolio is such that any<br />

good portfolio or fund manager<br />

should ordinarily outperform<br />

the market index, because<br />

their choices will largely be on<br />

the good performers,” Chukwu<br />

said.<br />

On the way to go for fund<br />

managers in <strong>2019</strong>, Abimbola<br />

said “for equities, due to the fragility<br />

of the economic recovery<br />

and external sector pressures<br />

styming portfolio capital flows,<br />

investors will likely continue to<br />

prefer value stocks with strong<br />

fundamentals and stable cash<br />

flow over cheaply priced speculative<br />

stocks.”<br />

Data by the stats bureau<br />

revealed that Nigeria’s economic<br />

expansion remained<br />

sluggish in Q3, as it was below<br />

analysts’ expectation at 1.81<br />

percent growth rate from 1.50<br />

percent recorded for the previous<br />

quarter.<br />

In 2018, Nigeria equities lost<br />

18 percent as foreign capital<br />

fled emerging markets on the<br />

back of rising interest rates in<br />

the United States and slower<br />

global growth concerns.<br />

“Unless we have exciting<br />

IPOs like MTN’s during the<br />

course of the year, we might<br />

have another boring year on the<br />

NSE,” Raji mentioned.<br />

A further analysis of the asset<br />

classes revealed that the performance<br />

of the fixed income<br />

funds was less impressive compared<br />

to the bond funds. However,<br />

the fixed income asset<br />

class was very competitive in<br />

2018. In spite of the tussle, SFS<br />

Fixed Income Fund, managed<br />

by SFS Capital Nigeria Limited,<br />

emerged the best performer<br />

in the class, recording 12.84<br />

percent growth in return from<br />

N1.48 per unit to N1.67 per unit<br />

as at November 2nd.<br />

Just as the names implies,<br />

the performance of mixed<br />

funds in the year under review<br />

reported mixed returns; losses<br />

and unchanged prices. Coronation<br />

Balanced Fund, under<br />

the management of Coronation<br />

Asset Management, gained the<br />

most in 2018; this is after posting<br />

12.09 percent return to hit<br />

N1.20 per unit.<br />

Ayo Akinwunmi, Head of Research<br />

at FSDH Merchant Bank<br />

said the investment strategy<br />

and the investment time of the<br />

fund manager are important<br />

determinants of their return.<br />

“The ability of the fund manager<br />

to select stocks of investment<br />

instrument is an important<br />

factor in determining the<br />

return on that fund. Some fund<br />

managers are aggressive while<br />

some are a little bit conservative,”<br />

Akinwunmi said.<br />

Ethical funds did not have<br />

a great year as performance of<br />

funds was generally poor just<br />

like the equity based funds.<br />

All funds in this asset class declined<br />

in 2018 but ARM Ethical<br />

Fund, a fund managed by Asset<br />

& Resources Management<br />

Company Limited, posted the<br />

lowest lost, making the fund<br />

the best performer for the year.<br />

The fund lost marginally by 0.67<br />

percent to N28.20 per unit from<br />

N28.39 per unit it opened with<br />

at the beginning of the year.<br />

“Although stocks are cheap<br />

with market valuation multiples<br />

at multi year lows and dividend<br />

yield at a record high, investor<br />

sentiment is likely to remain<br />

weak in the short term due to<br />

elevated domestic and external<br />

sector risks,” Abimbola said.<br />

From a high position of third<br />

best performing market in 2017<br />

with 42 percent rally, the Nigerian<br />

stock market dropped<br />

17.47 percent in 2018 and 0.43<br />

percent as at the close for the<br />

week Friday, 04 <strong>Jan</strong>uary <strong>2019</strong>,<br />

pushing year to date return to<br />

-2.52 percent.


www.businessday.ng www.facebook.com/businessdayng @businessDayNG @Businessdayng Monday <strong>07</strong> <strong>Jan</strong>uary <strong>2019</strong><br />

62 BUSINESS DAY<br />

The perilous art of state intervention<br />

Opinion<br />

PATRICK ATUANYA<br />

Patrick Atuanya is the Editor<br />

<strong>BusinessDay</strong> Media Limited<br />

Email : patrick.atuanya@businessday.ng<br />

Twitter : @patrick_atuanya<br />

It must feel good to be a<br />

farmer in Nigeria today,<br />

or textile factory owner,<br />

airlines operator, power<br />

generator or distributor,<br />

real sector operator or maybe a<br />

small business owner.<br />

The list is endless, as at last<br />

count the Federal Government<br />

through the Central Bank of Nigeria<br />

(CBN), has at least 18 Development<br />

Finance Operations<br />

across various sectors of the Nigerian<br />

economy.<br />

These include the Agricultural<br />

Credit Guarantee Scheme<br />

(ACGS), Interest Drawback<br />

Programme (IDP), Commercial<br />

Agriculture Credit Scheme<br />

(CACS), Paddy Aggregation<br />

Scheme (PAS), Micro, Small<br />

and Medium Enterprises Development<br />

Fund (MSMEDF),<br />

Anchor Borrowers’ Programme<br />

(ABP), Presidential Fertilizer<br />

Initiative (PFI), National Food<br />

Security Programme (NFSP),<br />

National Collateral Registry<br />

(NCR), SME Credit Guarantee<br />

Scheme (SMECGS), Small and<br />

Medium Enterprises Restructuring<br />

and Refinancing Facility<br />

(SMERRF), Real Sector Support<br />

Facility (RSSF), Textile Sector<br />

Intervention Fund (TSIF),<br />

Power and Airline Intervention<br />

Fund (PAIF), Nigeria Electricity<br />

Market Stabilisation Facility<br />

(NEMSF), Nigeria Bulk Electricity<br />

Trading Payment Assurance<br />

Facility (NBET-PAF), Non-oil<br />

Export Stimulation Facility<br />

(NESF), and Export Development<br />

Facility (EDF).<br />

Sadly, the problem with<br />

these myriad schemes goes<br />

beyond the funny names and<br />

weird acronyms.<br />

Here are some data from<br />

the CBN.<br />

In the first half of 2018, a total<br />

of 10,420 loans valued at N1.75<br />

billion were guaranteed under<br />

the ACGS, a total of 5,929 IDP<br />

rebate claims valued at N89.31<br />

million were settled, the sum<br />

of N39.34 billion was disbursed<br />

to 16 projects for the CACS,<br />

‘<br />

Nigeria seems to<br />

have mastered<br />

the art of state<br />

interventions. It<br />

may be time to<br />

begin unwinding<br />

these good<br />

intention-ed but<br />

perilous outlays<br />

’<br />

N4.25 billion was released to<br />

three banks for disbursement<br />

to three projects under the PAS,<br />

N4.77 billion was disbursed under<br />

MSMEDF, the ABP saw disbursement<br />

of N36.37 billion to<br />

155,732 farmers, a total of N20.0<br />

billion was released to a single<br />

obligor under the PFI, through<br />

the Nigeria Sovereign Investment<br />

Authority (NSIA), the sum<br />

of N4.04 billion was disbursed<br />

under the NFSP, the sum of<br />

N23.91 billion was disbursed<br />

to five (5) projects under RSSF,<br />

the sum of N19.1 billion was<br />

released for two (2) projects<br />

under the TSIF, a sum of N18.74<br />

billion was disbursed to four (4)<br />

power projects under the PAIF,<br />

the sum of N38.53 billion was<br />

disbursed to one (1) distribution<br />

company (DisCo), seventeen<br />

(17) generation companies<br />

(GenCos), six (6) gas companies<br />

(GasCos) and five (5) service<br />

providers, under NEMSF,<br />

the sum of N248.4 billion was<br />

disbursed to the NBET Plc under<br />

NBET – PAF, N19.04 billion<br />

to finance six (6) projects under<br />

NESF, and a N50.0 billion debenture<br />

under the EDF.<br />

This all came to a tidy sum of<br />

N529 billion just in the first six<br />

months of 2018.<br />

Beyond the stress this imposes<br />

on the CBN balance sheet<br />

and distortions to the wider<br />

economy, no one seems to be<br />

concerned about the inefficiency<br />

being encouraged as growth<br />

in most of the sectors government<br />

is pumping money into<br />

remains lacklustre.<br />

According to the National<br />

Bureau of Statistics (NBS), in<br />

the third quarter of 2018, the<br />

agricultural sector grew by<br />

1.91 percent (year-on-year) in<br />

real terms, a decrease by –1.16<br />

percent points from the corresponding<br />

period of 2017, Real<br />

GDP growth in the manufacturing<br />

sector (often a target of these<br />

interventions) in Q3 2018 was<br />

1.92 percent, Textile, Apparel<br />

and Footwear under Manufacturing<br />

sector grew by a measly<br />

1.04 percent in Q3 2018, down<br />

from 2.73 percent in Q2 2018<br />

and 1.85 percent in Q1 2018.<br />

With growth in the targeted<br />

sectors still this tepid and unemployment<br />

rising, it is fair to<br />

assume that the spending has<br />

created little jobs, meaning it<br />

has been largely inefficient and<br />

unproductive.<br />

Indeed a member of the<br />

monetary policy committee<br />

(MPC) of the CBN, Obadan,<br />

Mike Idiah, in his personal<br />

statements following the 121<br />

MPC meeting of Nov 21-22,<br />

2018, flagged the lacklustre<br />

growth in one of the targeted<br />

sectors, saying: “Although agriculture<br />

was one of the three<br />

major drivers of growth during<br />

the period, its contribution to<br />

growth at 0.27 percent showed<br />

highly reduced significance in<br />

relation to previous quarters.<br />

The sector thus needs to be further<br />

stimulated beyond what<br />

the Central Bank of Nigeria<br />

(CBN) is currently doing.”<br />

Obadan also alluded to the<br />

Central Bank’s use of non-conventional<br />

monetary policy tools<br />

being ‘overburdened.’<br />

Nigeria seems to have mastered<br />

the art of state interventions.<br />

It may be time to begin<br />

unwinding these good intention-ed<br />

but perilous outlays.<br />

About BD Money: This finance supplement is targeted at investors and other readers keen to make their money work harder.<br />

Team Members: Lolade Akinmurele (Lead); Hope Moses Ashike; Segun Adams; Oluwasegun Olakoyenikan; Temitayo Ayetoto; Israel Odubola


Monday <strong>07</strong> <strong>Jan</strong>uary <strong>2019</strong><br />

www.businessday.ng www.facebook.com/businessdayng @businessDayNG @Businessdayng<br />

BUSINESS DAY<br />

63<br />

www.businessday.ng www.facebook.com/businessdayng @businessDayNG @Businessdayng Monday <strong>07</strong> <strong>Jan</strong>uary <strong>2019</strong><br />

64 BUSINESS DAY<br />

Cover Story<br />

Cover Story<br />

A Fixed income guide for Nigeria in <strong>2019</strong><br />

YOUR QUESTIONS<br />

LOLADE AKINMURELE<br />

Fixed income investors,<br />

from retail to<br />

institutional buyers<br />

like the banks and<br />

pension funds, can<br />

look forward to a rewarding<br />

year in <strong>2019</strong>.<br />

After a record breaking 2017<br />

for government bond yields<br />

which peaked at 18 percent,<br />

2018 saw yields fall to 14 percent<br />

on average amid lower inflation<br />

rate and reduced bond supply<br />

from the federal government<br />

which tweaked its debt strategy<br />

to borrow less domestically in<br />

favour of external debt.<br />

However, there are signs of<br />

a higher yield environment in<br />

<strong>2019</strong> and those signs started<br />

flashing as early as late 2018.<br />

Rising global interest rates<br />

which sparked sell-offs in<br />

emerging markets and political<br />

uncertainty that coloured<br />

the second half of the year, saw the<br />

Central Bank of Nigeria push yields<br />

higher in the fourth quarter of 2018<br />

using Open Market Operations<br />

(OMO) auctions, to attract foreign<br />

portfolio investors and tame inflation<br />

ahead of the system liquidity<br />

that accompanies campaign<br />

spending in an election year.<br />

The OMO auctions laid down<br />

a marker for fixed income yields,<br />

with one-year government Treasury<br />

Bills rising as high as 17 percent<br />

while average bond yields<br />

rose nearly 200 basis points to 15<br />

percent.<br />

Enter <strong>2019</strong> and there are atleast<br />

three key reasons why fixed income<br />

yields will sustain the upward momentum<br />

that started late last year.<br />

First is the expectation for higher<br />

inflation this year. Consensus<br />

forecasts point to an uptick in inflation<br />

to 12.8 percent from 12.2 percent<br />

average in 2018. The factors<br />

that will drive inflation higher in<br />

<strong>2019</strong> include the implementation<br />

of a minimum wage hike; expectations<br />

for pre-election spending,<br />

which will trigger increased system<br />

liquidity, and a likely increase in<br />

food prices as the lasting effects of<br />

flooding and violence in the middle<br />

belt take a toll on prices.<br />

Yields typically need to stay<br />

above inflation if investors must<br />

make real returns. Therefore, the<br />

higher inflation rate goes the higher<br />

fixed income yields climb and<br />

vice versa.<br />

The second reason why bond<br />

investors can expect higher yields<br />

this year rides on the back of increased<br />

CBN monetary tightening.<br />

The price stability mandate of the<br />

CBN means if inflation rises, interest<br />

rates are likely to be raised. The<br />

apex bank relied heavily on raising<br />

interest rates in the latter part<br />

of 2016 when inflation soared to a<br />

high of 18 percent. The CBN hiked<br />

benchmark rates to 14 percent<br />

from 11 percent over that period<br />

and that’s where it has stayed for<br />

nearly two years now.<br />

The outlook for higher interest<br />

rates in the United States<br />

and sustained foreign capital<br />

outflow this year will only pile<br />

more pressure to the CBN to<br />

tighten even further.<br />

The consensus forecast for<br />

interest rates in <strong>2019</strong> is a 50-basis<br />

hike to 14.5 percent. The<br />

Monetary Policy Committee<br />

is scheduled to hold their first<br />

meeting of <strong>2019</strong> this <strong>Jan</strong>uary.<br />

The last reason why yields<br />

look set to jump in <strong>2019</strong> is the<br />

Federal government’s widening<br />

budget financing gap which<br />

would only boost local bond<br />

supply and bid yields higher.<br />

The Federal government’s<br />

<strong>2019</strong> budget has a N2.3 trillion<br />

deficit and is predicated on revenues<br />

of N7 trillion.<br />

Both scenarios are threatened<br />

by disappointing revenues<br />

which naturally feeds into a<br />

wider deficit that will leave the<br />

government with limited options<br />

than to borrow.<br />

Capital expenditure bore<br />

the brunt of disappointing<br />

revenues in the past two years<br />

but <strong>2019</strong> will give the government<br />

less wriggle room given<br />

the spike in recurrent expenditure<br />

which cannot be easily<br />

made away with like capital<br />

spending.<br />

Non-debt recurrent expenditure<br />

alone will hit N4 trillion<br />

this year. If government revenue<br />

is to perform as it did in<br />

2017 or 2018 where only 50 percent<br />

of the target was met, then<br />

worker salaries, overhead costs<br />

and statutory transfers will be<br />

higher than total revenue, before<br />

considering capital expenditure<br />

and debt servicing.<br />

The total non-debt recurrent<br />

expenditure will equate to 128<br />

percent of the government’s<br />

projected N3.5 trillion revenue<br />

for the year. N3.5 trillion is half<br />

of the N7 trillion <strong>2019</strong> revenue<br />

projection.<br />

What that implies is that<br />

the government would have<br />

to borrow just to maintain an<br />

over bloated bureaucracy. Add<br />

capital expenditure as well as<br />

debt servicing obligations and<br />

there could be a fiscal crisis on<br />

the cards for the government in<br />

<strong>2019</strong>.<br />

The fear of a fiscal crisis is<br />

why the government will be<br />

keeping a keen eye on oil prices<br />

which has recently slumped to<br />

$55 per barrel, $5 higher than<br />

the budget predication of $60<br />

per barrel. Although most oil<br />

price forecasts, as off the mark<br />

as they have been over the years,<br />

point to an average of $70 per<br />

barrel, if prices remain sticky at<br />

$55 then there is a fair chance of<br />

the government missing the oil<br />

revenue target.<br />

The oil production benchmark<br />

gives even more cause for<br />

worry.<br />

The budget benchmark is<br />

N2.3 trillion, but an OPEC-induced<br />

cut threatens to restrict<br />

production to 1.6 million barrels<br />

daily, 30 percent lower than<br />

the target. This implies that the<br />

expected revenue from oil could<br />

be 30 percent lower only from a<br />

production perspective. Nonoil<br />

revenue will rely largely on<br />

company profitability at a time<br />

when economic growth has<br />

stalled and average incomes are<br />

shrinking.<br />

When revenues failed to<br />

meet up to expectations, the<br />

government turned to borrowing,<br />

with the debt stock more<br />

than doubling since 2014 to N24<br />

trillion as of the end of 2018, according<br />

to the Debt Management<br />

Office (DMO).<br />

Rising debt service cost as a<br />

percentage of revenue, which<br />

hit a high of 66 percent in 2018,<br />

didn’t deter the government,<br />

with bond investors emerging<br />

big beneficiaries of attractive<br />

yields on money lent to the government.<br />

Is my car an asset or liability?<br />

I<br />

get often confused whether<br />

my car is really an asset<br />

or just another liability given<br />

how much it costs me to<br />

maintain it.<br />

While some argue that cars are<br />

assets because they can put a decent<br />

amount of money back into<br />

your pocket once sold, others say<br />

the hidden costs of owning a car<br />

makes it a liability despite it being<br />

a liquefiable investment.<br />

These expenses include fuel<br />

costs, repair and maintenance,<br />

registration, sales tax, insurance<br />

and toll fees.<br />

I am torn between both arguments<br />

and would like a logical<br />

advice on whether to consider<br />

my car an asset and if it features<br />

in my net worth. I would also<br />

like to know how to calculate<br />

the worth of my car if I eventually<br />

deem it fit to be an asset.<br />

Should I have a joint account with my husband?<br />

One of the main conversations<br />

I have avoided so<br />

far with my husband is<br />

whether as a couple we should<br />

have a joint account.<br />

While some couples feel<br />

that marriage is a partnership<br />

in which everything should<br />

be shared, including bank accounts,<br />

others value autonomy<br />

more highly.<br />

What are the advantages<br />

and disadvantages of having<br />

joint accounts, and there are<br />

any fast rules about the best<br />

type of account?<br />

My main fear has always<br />

been that if things turn bad in<br />

our relationship, my spouse has<br />

the ability to clean out the account<br />

and take all the money,<br />

even if it was deposited by me.<br />

I would like to know the<br />

thoughts of financial experts.


Monday <strong>07</strong> <strong>Jan</strong>uary <strong>2019</strong><br />

www.businessday.ng www.facebook.com/businessdayng @businessDayNG @Businessdayng<br />

BUSINESS DAY<br />

65<br />

Investing<br />

What you need to know about bank penny stocks in <strong>2019</strong><br />

OLUWASEGUN OLAKOYENIKAN<br />

& SEGUN ADAMS<br />

A<br />

16 percent depreciation<br />

in banking<br />

stocks on the floor<br />

of the Nigerian Stock<br />

Exchange (NSE) in<br />

2018 puts investors on the edge,<br />

especially new stockholders<br />

seeking to take positions in penny<br />

stocks in <strong>2019</strong> as analysts see<br />

performance driven by banking<br />

blue-chips.<br />

Although, the sector outperformed<br />

the Nigerian Stock Exchange<br />

(NSE) All Share Index<br />

which shed 17.81 percent in 2018,<br />

the suspension of trading in the<br />

shares of Skye Bank over inability<br />

of its shareholders to recapitalise<br />

the lender which eventually collapsed,<br />

and the proposed merger<br />

and acquisition deal between<br />

Access Bank and Diamond Bank<br />

undermined investor sentiment<br />

in the banking stocks.<br />

Unity Bank, one of the three<br />

penny stocks in the banking sector,<br />

was able withstand the rout<br />

in the market by gaining 101.89<br />

percent to emerge the secondbest<br />

performing stock in 2018,<br />

while the other – Wema Bank<br />

and Jaiz Bank – had negative returns.<br />

This is despite the negative<br />

sentiment of investors in the<br />

major banking stocks and low<br />

patronage of penny stocks in the<br />

market.<br />

Penny stocks get their name<br />

from the fact that they are cheap<br />

and a lot of people when starting<br />

out on investment tend to<br />

go in for cheaper stocks as their<br />

first investment. They do this because<br />

they are deemed to have<br />

higher returns when things go<br />

according to plan.<br />

“Penny stocks are like a surgical<br />

knife. If used by a doctor<br />

(experienced), it could save<br />

lives (make money). On the<br />

other hand, if used by a goon<br />

(amateur) it could kill (make you<br />

bankrupt). In my opinion, penny<br />

stocks can only be a good lesson<br />

rather than a potential earning<br />

source,” said Rohit Dalal, a New<br />

Delhi-based finance analyst.<br />

Meanwhile, some other analysts<br />

believe that penny bank<br />

stocks could rise on the back of<br />

improved financial performance<br />

of major stocks in the sector.<br />

“Low operational efficiency,<br />

poor quality of asset, and lack of<br />

capital buffers are some of the<br />

unattractive characteristics of<br />

bank penny stocks,” said Gbolahan<br />

Ologunro, Research Analyst<br />

at CSL Stockbrokers.<br />

Gbolahan explained that the<br />

period following the elections<br />

which coincides with release<br />

companies’ full year reports<br />

would likely stretch the valuation<br />

of big banks that are expected to<br />

make profits, causing investors<br />

to revalue and buy into penny<br />

stocks.<br />

Aluko Paul, a Research Analyst<br />

at MBC Securities Limited<br />

said bank penny stocks in <strong>2019</strong><br />

might be affected by trickledown<br />

effect of investor negative sentiment<br />

on major stocks in the sector<br />

after a gloomy 2018.<br />

“The Apex Bank should be<br />

ready to rescue dying banks as<br />

further collapse of any bank will<br />

affect the financial system of the<br />

economy,” Paul said.<br />

ANALYSIS<br />

Where are interest rates headed?<br />

Israel Odubola<br />

After taking into account<br />

many factors which<br />

includes economic<br />

developments in domestic<br />

and global markets, the<br />

Monetary Policy Committee<br />

of the Central Bank of Nigeria<br />

maintained the Monetary Policy<br />

Rate (MPR) at 14 percent, with<br />

the asymmetric corridor at +200<br />

and -500 basis points around the<br />

MPR in 2018.<br />

Furthermore, deposit money<br />

banks are required to keep 30<br />

percent of their funds with the<br />

CBN and liquidity ratio was<br />

retained at 30%. The last time<br />

MPC changed rate was in July<br />

2016 when the MPR was lifted by<br />

200bps.<br />

In the communiqué released<br />

at the end of the two-day meeting<br />

that ended on November 22<br />

2018, the MPR was retained so as<br />

to sustain the gradual improvement<br />

in both output growth and<br />

price stability. The committee<br />

noted that keeping the MPR at<br />

current level reflects the confidence<br />

in the various policies<br />

implemented by CBN which<br />

have moderated domestic price<br />

level and stabilized the foreign<br />

exchange rate.<br />

Although still in a tepid posture,<br />

the economy is gradually<br />

recovering from recession. The<br />

economy expanded by 1.81 percent<br />

in the third quarter of 2018,<br />

up from 1.5 percent in previous<br />

quarter, but still below 1.91 percent<br />

recorded in the first quarter.<br />

Analysts at Financial Derivatives<br />

forecast a growth rate of<br />

1.8 percent in Q1 <strong>2019</strong>. However,<br />

growth rate still falls short<br />

of population growth rate of 2.6<br />

percent, implying that the economy<br />

needs stimulus policies to<br />

make growth sustainable and<br />

inclusive.<br />

The manufacturing purchasing<br />

managers’ index has been on<br />

the upward trend for twenty-one<br />

consecutive months, and moved<br />

to 61.1% in December 2018 compared<br />

to 56.8% and 57.1% in the<br />

July and August 2018 respectively,<br />

indicating an improvement<br />

in economic activities in<br />

the last quarter of 2018. Furthermore,<br />

the overall consumer confidence<br />

index improved in the<br />

last quarter of 2018 to 9.7 points<br />

compared in 1.5 points in the<br />

preceding quarter, reflecting betterment<br />

in family income, financial<br />

and economic situations.<br />

Inflation rate is still in doubledigits,<br />

standing at 11.28 percent<br />

in November 2018 up from 11.26<br />

percent in the preceding month,<br />

and 1.30 percent higher than 9.98<br />

percent benchmark for <strong>2019</strong>.<br />

However, the rate would rise<br />

marginally to 13 percent owing<br />

to increased liquidity and higher<br />

imported inflation according to<br />

analysts at Financial Derivatives<br />

Limited, but analysts at FSDH<br />

Research pegged inflation rate at<br />

the close of 2018 to 11.7 percent<br />

because of increased food prices,<br />

electioneering spending and implementation<br />

of new minimum<br />

wage.<br />

The year <strong>2019</strong> comes with a<br />

lot of expectations and uncertainties<br />

as investors and entrepreneurs<br />

are of mixed feelings<br />

how political conditions and<br />

economic activities would affect<br />

them.<br />

If the MPC decides to raise or<br />

cut the rate at its next meeting<br />

in <strong>Jan</strong>uary <strong>2019</strong> (probably) will<br />

have positive and negative implications<br />

on the economy. Loosening<br />

the MPR (cut rate) would<br />

create more credit for the real<br />

sector and boost economic recovery<br />

through increased business<br />

investments, higher purchasing<br />

power and employment<br />

generation, which are the hallmark<br />

of the Economic Growth<br />

and Recovery Plan (ERGP) but<br />

this, would aggravate inflationary<br />

pressure in the economy.<br />

On the other hand, raising<br />

the rate can help to mitigate<br />

inflationary pressures and stabilize<br />

the foreign exchange<br />

market but might slow down<br />

growth because higher interest<br />

rate would increase the cost of<br />

borrowing, thereby discouraging<br />

investment as well as consumer<br />

spending.<br />

Raji Rafiq, chief economist at<br />

Macroafricanintel, strongly believed<br />

that MPR will most likely<br />

be held at 14 percent as inflationary<br />

pressures remain heightened<br />

despite downward trends.<br />

“Inflation expectations are my<br />

only consideration. Besides if the<br />

minimum wage proposal goes<br />

through, there would probably<br />

be additional inflationary pressure”<br />

Raji added.<br />

A research analyst at CSL<br />

StockBrokers, Gbolahan Ologunro,<br />

opined that MPC would<br />

retain the rate at 14% throughout<br />

this year.<br />

“This is because of heightening<br />

in global financing conditions<br />

and this is because United<br />

States has provided guidance<br />

for at least 75 basis points increase<br />

in interest rate and we<br />

might see the European Central<br />

Bank also ending its quantitative<br />

easing program. The outcome<br />

of these might lead to capital<br />

outflow reversal from emerging<br />

economies, so the CBN in<br />

response to alleviate this impact<br />

which would affect exchange<br />

rate stability might come under<br />

pressure to hike rate” Ologunro<br />

explained, adding CBN would<br />

continue to use the reserves to<br />

ensure stability in the foreign exchange<br />

market.<br />

In a report released by FSDH<br />

Research, a similar position was<br />

held that MPC will vote to maintain<br />

interest rate at current levels.<br />

With inflationary pressure in<br />

the economy driven majorly by<br />

campaign-related spending and<br />

implementation of new minimum<br />

wage effective this year,<br />

analysts forecast that MPR will<br />

be retained at 14%.


www.businessday.ng www.facebook.com/businessdayng @businessDayNG @Businessdayng Monday <strong>07</strong> <strong>Jan</strong>uary <strong>2019</strong><br />

66 BUSINESS DAY<br />

Data<br />

Week Ahead<br />

(<strong>Jan</strong>uary 7 – 11, <strong>2019</strong>)<br />

BONDS<br />

Next week, Open Market Operations (OMO) maturities worth N375.4bn will hit<br />

the banking system.<br />

The Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) will continue with its weekly Open Market Operations<br />

(OMO) mop ups to keep liquidity levels in check.<br />

Yields on corporate Eurobonds are expected to pare in the coming weeks as flight<br />

to safety imperative becomes stronger in the face of the impending elections.<br />

NAIRA<br />

The naira appreciated last week to close at N357 per dollar in the parallel market.<br />

Analysts expect the naira to trade fairly stable this week as the CBN continues its<br />

usual intervention in the Foreign Exchange market.<br />

EQUITIES MARKET<br />

Analysts expect that a bearish performance will dominate the capital market this<br />

week, following the poor performance of the All Share index which shed 1.28 percent<br />

last week, as sell pressures persist due to pre-election jitters.<br />

COMMODITIES<br />

Forecasts of increased global wheat supply in the 2018/<strong>2019</strong> season would put<br />

pressure on prices.<br />

Weakening demand coupled with a supply glut would continue to push SUGAR<br />

prices down.<br />

EVENTS<br />

Chartered Institute of Tax of Nigeria (CITN) holds its Annual tax week program at<br />

Oriental hotel, Victoria Island Lagos on the 9th to 11th.


Monday <strong>07</strong> <strong>Jan</strong>uary <strong>2019</strong><br />

www.businessday.ng www.facebook.com/businessdayng @businessDayNG @Businessdayng<br />

BUSINESS DAY<br />

Cocoa investors cheery as 2018 gains lift earnings by 30%<br />

Temitayo Ayetoto<br />

Commodities<br />

Cocoa rounded off<br />

2018 as a resilient<br />

and top performing<br />

major commodity<br />

on the global scene,<br />

gaining about 28 percent in the<br />

first month of the 2018/<strong>2019</strong><br />

season and investors in local<br />

cocoa market are cheery as the<br />

price appreciation promises at<br />

least 30 percent in earnings. The<br />

international boon may ignore<br />

some farmers but not investors<br />

in contracts, as they are poised<br />

to gain more than triple the local<br />

price of N750.<br />

“Considering the price we<br />

bought, and the price in the<br />

international market, we are<br />

looking at a gain of almost 30<br />

percent from what we aggregated<br />

over the Q4 2018 period,”<br />

said Obianujwu Okafor,<br />

communications executive at<br />

AFEX Commodities Exchange<br />

limited. “The same will be true<br />

of most operators in Nigeria’s<br />

cocoa market considering that<br />

the crop is mostly cultivated for<br />

export.”<br />

The local market in 2018 saw<br />

a sharp turn from a trend that<br />

saw farmers preferring to selloff<br />

to international buyers during<br />

year end, stirring price fall.<br />

For every week in Q4 2018, after<br />

AFEX expanded its transactions<br />

in cocoa, prices began to appreciate,<br />

in the two main producing<br />

states: Edo and Ondo. Prices<br />

were mostly stable on higher<br />

production and better quality of<br />

harvest.<br />

The fourth quarter started<br />

at N550 per kilogramme before<br />

rising to N750 on a demand<br />

pressure created by farmers bid<br />

to redeem contract pledges. At<br />

the beginning of the season,<br />

buyers made upfront payment<br />

on contract prices but some<br />

farmers made some side sales,<br />

leading supply shortage.<br />

On a broader spectrum however,<br />

cocoa ended on a poor<br />

note owing to the negative impact<br />

of flooding on low lands<br />

yield. Initial projections were<br />

quite bright due to early rain<br />

but at the tail end of the year<br />

when farmers expected bumper<br />

harvest, the fruiting failed<br />

to blossom, leading to a cut in<br />

the estimate from 320,000 to<br />

260,000.<br />

The bullish position on international<br />

prices during the beginning<br />

of December came as<br />

a new lease of life for prices as<br />

front-month cocoa contract had<br />

earlier plunged on news that<br />

ample arrivals and purchases of<br />

cocoa beans were recorded in<br />

Côte d’Ivoire and Ghana.<br />

Compared to values displayed<br />

at the beginning of November,<br />

the nearby contract<br />

prices weakened by 8 percent<br />

from $2,200 to $2,025 per tonne<br />

on London futures markets<br />

which prices at par African origins,<br />

by the end of the month.<br />

Concurrently, prices dipped<br />

by 7 percent in New York from<br />

$2,264 to $2,106 per tonne during<br />

the last trading day of November.<br />

Before dropping, the<br />

front-month contract traded<br />

on a positive note in the course<br />

of the first trading week of the<br />

period and reached its highest<br />

level of the month to settle at<br />

$2,254 per tonne in London. At<br />

the same time, they firmed by 5<br />

percent and reached $2,381 per<br />

‘<br />

One of the issues<br />

on the front burner<br />

of our plan is<br />

to increase local<br />

consumption. If 20<br />

percent of production<br />

is consumed, cocoa<br />

prices will go up,<br />

farmers will grow<br />

more and we will<br />

now know that we<br />

can never have a glut<br />

for prices to crash on<br />

our head<br />

’<br />

tonne in New York.<br />

According to the International<br />

Cocoa Organisation,<br />

the 2018/19 crop year harvest<br />

started strongly in Côte d’Ivoire,<br />

with cumulative cocoa arrivals<br />

recorded at ports reached<br />

689,000 tonnes, up by 35 percent<br />

from 510,000 tonnes seen<br />

in the same period last season.<br />

On the demand side, ICCO<br />

estimates an increase in world<br />

grindings of 3.9 percent during<br />

the last crop season. Grindings<br />

reached a record 4.570 million<br />

tonnes, up by 173,000 tonnes.<br />

This estimate reflects the continuous<br />

increase in demand<br />

which is especially reflected<br />

in the steady cocoa processing<br />

growth in origin countries.<br />

Processing activities grew of 5.1<br />

percent to 1.711 million tonnes<br />

in Europe and by 4.3 percent<br />

to 1.031 million tonnes in Asia<br />

and Oceania whereas Africa’s<br />

increase was by 5.7 percent to<br />

951,000 tonnes. In contrast,<br />

grindings in the Americas<br />

slightly regressed by 0.3 percent<br />

from the previous season to<br />

877,000 tonnes.<br />

It might take Nigeria 10 years<br />

for Nigeria to land itself in the<br />

league of these nations, with<br />

500,000 metric tonnes of production<br />

under modest estimate,<br />

says Sayina Riman president<br />

Cocoa Association of Nigeria<br />

(CAN). The country had about<br />

27 cocoa processing plant but<br />

is only left with five, producing<br />

less than 20 percent capacity.<br />

CAN is hoping to lean on the<br />

proper implementation of a 10-<br />

year cocoa plan for a revival in<br />

the industry. It is particularly<br />

looking to anchor growth on a<br />

government-driven increase<br />

in consumption rate which<br />

is at two percent of production.<br />

If Nigerians consume 250<br />

grammes of cocoa every two<br />

weeks for instance, the country<br />

might be importing 50 percent<br />

to augment local output to service<br />

demand, says Riman.<br />

“One of the issues on the<br />

front burner of our plan is to<br />

increase local consumption. If<br />

20 percent of production is consumed,<br />

cocoa prices will go up,<br />

farmers will grow more and we<br />

will now know that we can never<br />

have a glut for prices to crash<br />

on our head. Anytime there is a<br />

glut, we will consume it locally,”<br />

he said. “That’s why we are advocating<br />

that all the beverage<br />

industries like Cadbury and<br />

Nestle should increase the cocoa<br />

content in their beverages<br />

because of the health benefits.<br />

These companies have five percent<br />

cocoa content in their beverage<br />

chain.”


BUSINESS DAY<br />

Insight<br />

NEWS YOU CAN TRUST I MONDAY <strong>07</strong> JANUARY <strong>2019</strong><br />

<strong>2019</strong> polls: Atiku has the vision but lacks momentum. Why?<br />

GLOBAL PERSPECTIVES<br />

OLU FASAN<br />

Dr. Fasan, a London-based<br />

lawyer and political economist,<br />

is a Visiting Fellow at the London<br />

School of Economics.<br />

e-mail: o.fasan@lse.ac.uk,<br />

twitter account: @olu_fasan<br />

At every election,<br />

newspapers and<br />

commentators advocate<br />

“issue-based<br />

campaign”. They call<br />

for messages containing ideas<br />

that the candidates want the<br />

voters to support. Yet, just about<br />

40 days before Nigeria’s presidential<br />

election, the ideas of the<br />

two main candidates, President<br />

Muhammadu Buhari and former<br />

Vice President Atiku Abubakar,<br />

are hardly the subject of media<br />

analysis or public discussion,<br />

despite sharp differences in their<br />

messages. For instance, while<br />

Buhari focuses his campaign on<br />

the narrow issues of corruption,<br />

security and the economy, Atiku<br />

sets out wide-ranging talking<br />

points about political, economic<br />

and institutional reforms. Yet,<br />

Buhari is getting most of the<br />

attention, while Atiku appears<br />

to be lacking momentum in the<br />

campaign. Why?<br />

Let’s start with the contrasts<br />

between their ideas. Buhari’s<br />

manifesto is essentially<br />

promising more of the same.<br />

If re-elected, President Buhari<br />

would do nothing differently,<br />

but instead intensify his current<br />

policies, including throwing more<br />

government money at tackling<br />

poverty and unemployment<br />

through the social intervention<br />

programmes. To be honest,<br />

Buhari’smanifesto simply lacks<br />

intellectual depth or “the vision<br />

thing”. But not so Atiku’s plan.<br />

His economic visionis truly<br />

radical, underpinned by extensive<br />

programme of deregulation and<br />

liberalisation. Equally radical are<br />

his proposed political reforms<br />

and anti-corruption strategy.<br />

Take political reforms. Along<br />

standing advocate of political<br />

restructuring, Atiku recalls in his<br />

manifesto that: “At independence,<br />

the various regions were<br />

growing at their own pace with<br />

the political and economic strategies<br />

that suited their individual<br />

peculiarities”. But now, he says,<br />

“the centre has a pervasive<br />

and over-bearing presence and<br />

influence on the other tiers of<br />

government”, adding that “Nigerian<br />

states have been reduced<br />

to parastatals of the federal<br />

government”. So, what would<br />

he do if elected? Well, he would,<br />

among other things, “decongest<br />

the exclusive and concurrent list<br />

in the Constitution”, to devolve<br />

powers, responsibilities and<br />

resources to Nigeria’s sub-units.<br />

What about Atiku’s anticorruption<br />

strategy? Well, this<br />

is far-reaching too. He outlines<br />

an elaborate set of “immediate<br />

actions”that he would take,<br />

if elected. For instance, Atiku<br />

promises that, within his administration’s<br />

“first 100 days in<br />

office”, he would: expeditiously<br />

pass critical legislation “relating<br />

to whistle-blowing, cybercrime,<br />

witness protection, electronic<br />

evidence, and asset forfeiture”;<br />

set up Major Corruption Case<br />

Monitoring and Review Committee<br />

that would include “NGOs,<br />

civil society organisations and<br />

media as observers”; and review<br />

and expedite action on the passage<br />

of all existing and pending<br />

new laws or amendments to all<br />

anti-corruption laws currently in<br />

the National Assembly. Theseare<br />

in addition to medium-term<br />

commitments on detection of<br />

corruption, sanctioning corrupt<br />

practices, institutional strengthening<br />

and reward system.<br />

Which brings me back to my<br />

questions. If everyone wants an<br />

issue-based campaign, why is the<br />

ongoing presidential campaign<br />

not about issues? Why are Atiku’s<br />

elaborate programmes of economic,<br />

political and governance<br />

reforms not being discussed and<br />

scrutinised? Why are comparisons<br />

not being made between<br />

Atiku’s and Buhari’s campaign<br />

promises? And why does Atiku<br />

seem to be struggling in this<br />

campaign, lacking momentum,<br />

despite the intellectual depth and<br />

radical nature of his plans?<br />

Last week, one of Buhari’s<br />

strong supporters mockingly<br />

asked Atiku to throw in the<br />

towel now as his campaign was<br />

going nowhere. Another tweeted<br />

that “Right now @atiku and his<br />

running mate @PeterObi are<br />

more of a liability 43 days to<br />

Presidential election in Nigeria”.<br />

But how could a challenger<br />

who promises to transform<br />

Nigeria politically, economically<br />

and institutionally be more of a<br />

liability than an incumbent who is<br />

focusing his campaign on narrow<br />

issues of corruption, security and<br />

the economy, in spite of his poor<br />

recordon these issues?<br />

Well, there are several reasons<br />

why Atiku appears to be<br />

struggling. The first is that next<br />

month’s presidential election<br />

will not be about issues. It’s<br />

about who has and can inspire<br />

a passionately enthusiastic base.<br />

Unfortunately, Atiku doesn’t have<br />

the fanatical followings that Buhari,<br />

a cult figure, has. Despite the<br />

fact that youth unemployment<br />

rose from 3m in 2015 to 13m<br />

in 2018 (a 263% increase over<br />

3½ years) under Buhari, most<br />

of the poor still prefer him to<br />

Atiku. They see Atiku, a multibillionaire<br />

(allegedly), as part of the<br />

problem, and Buhari, a “sandalwearing<br />

ascetic”, as the solution.<br />

In this regard, the 2016 US<br />

presidential election holds many<br />

lessons for the Nigerian election.<br />

Donald Trump, who could<br />

wow a strong base, the poor<br />

working-class White, most of<br />

who could literally die for him,<br />

beat Hillary Clinton, who, despite<br />

having positive ideas and vision,<br />

inspired little passion or enthusiasm<br />

among her middle-class and<br />

college-educated supporters.<br />

Truth is, Atiku’s support base is<br />

threadbare, compared with the<br />

rural and urban poor who, as<br />

someone puts it, “would die for<br />

Buhari before they knew why”!<br />

Another reason is the integrity<br />

or character factor, and<br />

here, again, we can learn from<br />

America. In the 2016 election,<br />

Donald Trump ceaselessly attacked<br />

the integrity of Hillary<br />

Clinton, repeatedly calling her<br />

“Crooked Hillary”. That fired up<br />

Trump’s base, who truly believed<br />

Clinton was a “criminal”, but<br />

‘ Despite the fact<br />

that youth unemployment<br />

rose<br />

from 3m in 2015<br />

to 13m in 2018<br />

(a 263% increase<br />

over 3½ years)<br />

under Buhari,<br />

most of the poor<br />

still prefer him to<br />

Atiku. They see<br />

Atiku, a multibillionaire<br />

(allegedly),<br />

as part of<br />

the problem, and<br />

Buhari, a “sandalwearing<br />

ascetic”,<br />

as the solution.<br />

,<br />

also dampened the enthusiasm<br />

of Clinton supporters. Scholars<br />

have shown that an incumbent<br />

with a poor record can divert<br />

voters’ attention and shape the<br />

debate in a more advantageous<br />

way. To be sure, the APC cannot<br />

win on its record, on corruption,<br />

security and the economy. But it<br />

is relentlessly playing the integrity<br />

card, painting Atiku and the<br />

PDP as corrupt. That, of course,<br />

is what Buhari’s supporters<br />

believe and want to hear, and it<br />

is energising them. By contrast,<br />

Atiku lacks passionate supporters<br />

who believe enough in him to<br />

counterbalance Buhari’s fanatical<br />

supporters.<br />

The truth is that the perception<br />

issue is working, or might<br />

work, against Atiku in this election.<br />

AzuIshiekwene, a Vanguard<br />

columnist, wrote last week in the<br />

paper that “the indescribable fear<br />

of who the real Atiku in power<br />

could be – that unknowable<br />

quality – makes it a bit easier to<br />

forgive Buhari’s shortcomings”.<br />

He is right. Atiku, as I wrote<br />

recently,“carries a baggage of<br />

negative perceptions and is running<br />

under a party that still has a<br />

serious image problem, a legacy<br />

of PDP’s 16 years in power”. And,<br />

of course, the APC, despite having<br />

its own serious integrity or<br />

character issues, with allegations<br />

of corruption swirling around<br />

the party and the Buhari government,<br />

is successfully defining<br />

the debate about the issue to its<br />

advantage.<br />

Now, another reason for<br />

Atiku’s seeming lack of momentum<br />

is his lukewarm support in<br />

the North. The truth is that Atiku<br />

can’t win the election unless he<br />

can beat Buhari in the North.<br />

Yet, he doesn’t seem to have<br />

enthused the North with his<br />

radical proposals. For instance,<br />

unlike the South, the North is<br />

not enthusiastic about political<br />

www.businessday.ng<br />

restructuring, some are even<br />

hostile to it. Cleverly, if also<br />

opportunistically, Buhari has positioned<br />

himself as anti-restructuring<br />

to appeal to those parts<br />

of the North that are hostile<br />

to the issue. Of course, Buhari<br />

has also warmed himself to the<br />

hearts of most of the poor in the<br />

North the way that Atiku hasn’t.<br />

What’s more, over the past 3½<br />

years, Buhari has cynically, with<br />

elections in mind, courted the<br />

Fulani herdsmen by refusing to<br />

condemn their rampaging and<br />

killing of farmers in the Middle<br />

Belt and elsewhere in Nigeria.<br />

The recent endorsement of<br />

Buhari for re-election by Miyetti<br />

Allah, the herders’ association,<br />

was clearly a reward for his<br />

sympathy towards their cause.<br />

But, sadly, it bears a similarity<br />

tothe endorsement of Donald<br />

Trump in the 2016 presidential<br />

election by the racist Ku Klux<br />

Klan (KKK)!<br />

The US example brings us<br />

to another reason why Atiku<br />

appears to be struggling in this<br />

campaign: lack of party unity.<br />

Following the bitter presidential<br />

primaries between Hillary Clinton<br />

and Bernie Sanders, which<br />

Sanders’ supporters believed<br />

Clinton won with some skulduggery,<br />

there was schism in<br />

the Democratic Party. Sanders’<br />

supporters refused to campaign<br />

wholeheartedly for Clinton<br />

and some even probably didn’t<br />

vote for her. Some believe that<br />

had Clinton made Sanders her<br />

running mate, just as Barrack<br />

Obama did with Joe Biden, a<br />

fellow primaries contestant, she<br />

might have won the election.<br />

That example has some<br />

salience in Atiku’s case. Although<br />

he won the PDP’s presidential<br />

primaries overwhelmingly, there<br />

are many in the party, including<br />

influential state governors, who<br />

are not enthusiastically supporting<br />

him. A recent report in<br />

Premier Times in which a PDP<br />

governor said Atiku might lose if<br />

“he fails to address the concerns<br />

of party leaders over a plethora<br />

of issues”, including his controversial<br />

choice of Peter Obi<br />

as his running mate, is enough<br />

to dampen enthusiasm of PDP<br />

supporters. Atiku certainly can’t<br />

gain momentum, let alone win<br />

the election, if his party is not<br />

solidly behind him.<br />

Then, finally, there are doubts<br />

about the credibility of Atiku’s<br />

manifesto commitments. Few<br />

believe he can deliver on his<br />

radical manifesto promises. Atiku<br />

certainly needs a landslide victory<br />

to be able to push through<br />

his proposed political, economic<br />

and institutional reforms, including<br />

large-scale privatisation and<br />

political restructuring. Without<br />

a landslide, which is near-impossible,<br />

or a unity government,<br />

which is desirable but unlikely,<br />

Atiku’s promises are seen as pies<br />

in the sky.<br />

So, yes, Atiku has the vision;<br />

he also, apparently, has the competence.<br />

But he is dogged by<br />

several factors undermining his<br />

campaign, some created by his<br />

desperate opponents, the APC,<br />

others by his own party, and yet<br />

others by his own controversial<br />

personality. But can he turn all<br />

these around? Well, we have to<br />

wait and see!<br />

facebook.com/businessdayng<br />

@Businessdayng<br />

fivethings<br />

for your new week<br />

Fascinating business facts<br />

20%<br />

Expectedly, alarm bells are ringing at OPEC capitals<br />

around the world as treasury managers of countries<br />

making up the cartel watch, almost helplessly, the<br />

unstoppable plunge in global oil prices that will have far<br />

reaching consequences for social cohesion and peace in<br />

especially countries like Nigeria which depend heavily on<br />

oil revenues.<br />

The price of the global benchmark grade, Brent has fallen<br />

from $86 per barrel which it attained on October 3, to<br />

below $55 Friday. Analysts say this could wipe out almost<br />

20% from Nigeria’s expected oil revenues which could fall<br />

to a mere $49bn in <strong>2019</strong> when the country holds crucial<br />

elections.<br />

0.8%<br />

There is more than a week left until the new year, but at<br />

this point, it’s almost certain European stocks will post<br />

the worst year since 2008. The Stoxx Europe 600 dropped<br />

0.8 percent on Friday in London, taking this year’s loss<br />

to 14 percent. Meanwhile, the blue-chip Euro Stoxx 50<br />

is less than 1 percent away from entering a bear market<br />

after hitting the threshold earlier.It’s a testimony to how<br />

fragile sentiment is that even news of Chinese stimulus<br />

couldn’t lift the gloom, with U.S. futures pointing to a<br />

third day in the red on Wall Street. Tensions between<br />

America and China are simmering again after China<br />

demanded that the U.S. withdraw espionage charges<br />

against Beijing officials. A government shutdown also<br />

looms in the U.S.<br />

2%<br />

Embattled South African President Cyril Ramaphosa has<br />

asked his finance minister to begin the process to set<br />

up a council of economic advisers. South Africa which<br />

has just emerged from recession is asking itself if it is “not<br />

stuck in a thinking mode which is not relevant to the actual<br />

conditions in South Africa?” the finance minister said. Government<br />

officials are meeting in Pretoria to present policy<br />

proposals to raise the level of economic growth in South<br />

Africa’s where annual expansion hasn’t exceeded 2 percent<br />

since 2013.<br />

85%<br />

@Businessdayng<br />

Global battery prices have fallen 85 percent since 2010,<br />

BloombergNEF reports in its annual Lithium-Ion Battery<br />

Price Survey, and with storage forecast to grow<br />

to 14 times its current level by 2030 as millions of electric<br />

vehicles hit the roads.<br />

BNEF predicts demand will total 1,851 gigawatt-hours in<br />

2030, up from the current 132. EV batteries are expected to<br />

account for 84 percent of that.<br />

$11.7bn<br />

Africa’s troubled aviation sector is on the verge of a massive<br />

make over after it was announced that Boeing Co and<br />

Nigeria based Green Africa Airways have committed for up<br />

to 100 737 MAX 8 aircraft, in a deal that carries a list price of $11.7<br />

billion. The deal is the largest aircraft agreement from Africa the<br />

commitment is evenly split into 50 firm aircraft and 50 options,<br />

it added. The 737 MAX 8 is the fastest-selling airplane in the<br />

Boeing fleet, accumulating more than 4,800 orders from over<br />

100 customers worldwide. It is estimated that airlines in Africa<br />

will require 1,190 new airplanes as the continent boosts both<br />

intra-continental and intercontinental connectivity over the next<br />

couple of decades, Boeing said, citing its 20-year Commercial<br />

Market Outlook.<br />

Published by BusinessDAY Media Ltd., The Brook, 6 Point Road, GRA, Apapa, Lagos. Advert Hotline: 08034743892. Subscriptions 01-2950687, <strong>07</strong>045792677. Newsroom: 08169609331<br />

Editor: Patrick Atuanya. All correspondence to BusinessDAY Media Ltd., Box 1002, Festac Lagos. ISSN 1595 - 8590.

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