Global Economy
Earlier
this week, the US Federal Reserve (Fed) kept interest rates constant at
5.25%-5.50%.
The
Fed has struggled to determine whether rates may be tight enough to control
inflation, or whether a resilient US economy may need still more restraint.
Current inflation remains far above the Fed
target rate of 2%, and annual inflation, was higher by 3.4% YoY in September
2023 for the third month in a row.
Excluding
volatile food and energy costs, it was 3.7% YoY, little changed from August.
Similarly, the Bank of England’s policy makers left their key interest rate
unchanged at 5.25% for the second straight meeting and stressed they do not
expect to cut rates soon.
The
decision to hold the benchmark rate steady was backed by six members of the
Monetary Policy Committee, while three voted for a rise in the key rate to
5.5%.
Elsewhere,
according to China's National Bureau of Statistics, the official manufacturing
Purchasing Managers’ Index (PMI) dropped to 49.5 points in October 2023 from
50.2 points in September 2023.
The
non-manufacturing PMI, which covers the services and construction industries,
fell to 50.6 this month, the lowest level since China lifted its Covid-19
restrictions in December 2022.
The
PMI reading above 50 indicates expansion, while anything below that level shows
contraction.
Domestic Economy
During
the week, the federal government held a meeting with domestic refinery
operators to discuss crude oil availability for local refining.
They
emphasized the importance of meeting domestic crude obligations, especially for
the 650,000 barrel per day Dangote refinery, to avoid national embarrassment.
Gbenga
Komolafe, CEO of the Nigerian Upstream Petroleum Regulatory Commission,
mentioned the goal of turning the nation into a net exporter of refined
products.
The
NUPRC has requested crude oil producers to provide information on committed and
uncommitted crude volumes in their regions, although some producers have not
yet responded.
Notably,
NNPCL has pledged to give six million barrels of crude oil to Dangote Refinery
in December 2023.
Equities and stock recommendation
This
week was a historic week at the Nigerian equities market, as the benchmark
index crossed 70,000 points for the first time ever on Wednesday 1st November
2023, when it recorded 70,581.76 points.
This
contributed significantly to the bullish end of the week, as the NGX ASI gained
by 4.56% WoW to close at 70,196.77 points.
Consequently,
the market’s year-to-date (YtD) returns settled at 36.97%, a surge from last
week’s 31.00%. We believe that the positive sentiment this week was fueled by
the release of positive Q3:2023 earnings reports by companies particularly in
the Banking and Telecommunication sectors.
All
the sectors under our coverage closed positive except for the Oil and Gas
sector, which closed flat. Specifically, the Insurance (+7.96% WoW), Banking (+2.67%
WoW), Industrial Goods (+0.73% WoW) and Consumer Goods (+0.47% WoW) sectors
recorded positive returns.
The
top gainers for the week were MBENEFIT (+29.3% WoW to NGN0.53), JAPAULGOLD
(+28.3% WoW to NGN1.27) and AIRTELAFRI (+27.8% WoW to NGN1790.00).
On
the other hand, RTBRISCOE (-14.0% WoW to NGN0.43), BETAGLAS (-10.15% WoW to
NGN59.95) and MEYER (-9.9% WoW to NGN2.74) led the losers’ chart.
We
expect investors to sustain their bargain-hunting activities as they look for
tickers with attractive valuations following the release of Q3:2023 earnings
results.
Fixed Income
The
Treasury Bills market closed the week on a bearish note as average yield surged
by 7.14% WoW to settle at 14.29%.
Similarly,
the secondary bond market ended the week negative as the average yield
increased by 74bps WoW to settle at 15.61%.
This
is following selloffs across all ends of the curve. Overall, the Naira Fixed
income market closed the week bearish as average yield jumped by 3.94% WoW to
settle at 14.95%.
In
the coming week, we expect the bearish sentiment to persist majorly on the back
of tight liquidity in the system.
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