The total amount invested by foreign investors in the Nigerian securities between January and August 2013 stood at N747bn.
This amount comprises the inflows and outflows of Foreign Portfolio Investments for the period under review.
Investigations by our correspondent on
Friday at the NSE showed that between January and March 2013, the
foreign transactions totalled N217.57tn, representing 42.7 per cent of
the N510.1bn worth of transactions recorded in the first three months of
the year.
For April to June, a total of N365.07bn
worth of foreign transactions was recorded, while for the month of July,
the total amount of FPIs in the NSE was N93.71bn.
The amount for July and August stood at
N164.59bn, which is higher than the N150.24bn recorded at the end of
June, according to the latest figures provided by NSE on its website.
This is, however, a marked improvement over the FPI inflows and outflows recorded at the end of the first quarter, this year.
The report also put the total inflows of
FPI within the period under consideration at N31.12bn, representing a
marginal decline compared N31.81bn in inflows recorded at the end of the
previous month.
The total outflow in the month under consideration was N39.76bn, compared to N61.90bn recorded in July 2013.
The FPI represents the passive holdings
of securities and other financial assets, which may not entail active
management or control of the securities’ issuer. It is usually
positively influenced by high rates of return and reduction of risk
through geographic diversification.
The return on FPI is normally in the form of interest payments or non-voting dividends.
The Chief Executive Officer of the NSE,
Mr. Oscar Onyema, said foreign investors had continually been showing
interest in the Nigerian market, owing to the various reforms carried
out in the Exchange in the last few years.
He added that the reforms had impacted
positively on the market, which he noted was an attractive factor to the
foreign investors who were usually on the lookout for strong emerging
markets to invest.
Onyema also explained that the NSE was
glad to note that there had been increased participation by the local
investors who had begun to return to the market after their huge exit
following the global meltdown and the and the banking crisis in 2009.
He said, “Last year, the NSE recorded a
local participation of 44 per cent, while foreign participation
accounted for 56 per cent of activities in the same year. The rally we
saw in the market in 2012 was on the back of foreign investments.
“It is also good that our local
investors have started to return to the market and we are very hopeful
that we will see more of this as the year runs out, we at the Exchange
are bullish that the market would pick up further this year.”
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