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NEWS YOU CAN TRUST I **WEDNESDAY 02 JANUARY 2019 I VOL. 15, NO 215 I N300
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What the big 5 investment banks think of Nigeria, EM in 2019 H T
COMMODITIES
Wheat farmers bank on govt support for price stability, off-take TEMITAYO AYETOTO
LOLADE AKINMURELE
he central theme in the investment outlooks for 2019 by Goldman Sachs, Bank of America Merrill Lynch, Morgan Stanley and CitiL-R: Basirat Adegbesan, mother of the first baby of the year; Bolanle Ambode, wife of the Lagos State governor, carrying the baby of the year; Jide Idris, commissioner for health, Lagos State, and Femi Onanuga, special adviser to the Lagos State governor on primary health care, during the 2019 baby of the year born 12:00am, weighs 3.7kg, at Lagos Island Maternity in Lagos, yesterday. Pic by Olawale Amoo
group is for a recovery in emerging market assets, particularly, equities. JP Morgan Chase, however, was the only one of the five investment banks surveyed by BusinessDay to adopt a cautious stance, as it cast a worrying look
on the impact of a stronger dollar in the early part of the year and volatile oil prices. While global growth accelerated, 2018 was harsh to emerging market assets, including Nigerian equities. Although the naira was relatively unscathed
compared to other currencies, Nigerian equities lost 18 percent, as foreign capital fled emerging markets on the back of rising interest rates in the United States and slower global growth. Continues on page 4
aving trudged through a year that saw prices decline by 10.3 percent to N130,000 per metric tonne and limited off-taking channel controlled by flour millers, Nigeria’s wheat farmers are banking on the federal governments intervention to open a new chapter in price stability and off-taking of the cereal grain. The lack of price stability and adequate off-taking has been a source of concern for farmers as the benchmark price fixed by millers only pared the profitability on local production, according Salim Saleh the President Wheat Farmers Association of Nigeria (WFAN). In 2017, millers and farmers related on the basis of N145, 000 metric tonne agreement but this was slashed to N130, 000 in what appeared an expensive deal when import particularly from the US at that time was cheaper at $218 (N78, 480) per metric tonne. “There is no stability for wheat Continues on page 4
Inside CBN inflation attitudes survey points to weaker economy P. 2