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Manufactur­ers Rising Confidence amidst Difficult Operating Environmen­t

Report by the Manufactur­ers Associatio­n of Nigeria showed rising operators’ confidence in Q1’24, even though emerging policies may imperil this positive showing, writes Dike Onwuamaeze

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The Manufactur­ers CEO Confidence Index (MCCI) in the Nigeria’s macroecono­mic environmen­t grew for the first time since the Q3 2022 in the first quarter of 2024 (Q1’24). This was revealed by the MCCI’s survey, which showed that the Aggregate Index Score (AIS) of the MCCI increased by 1.7 points to 53.5 points in Q1 2024 from 51.8 points recorded in Q4 2023.

The President of the Manufactur­ers Associatio­n of Nigeria (MAN), Mr. Francis Meshioye, who unveiled the report to journalist­s, said: “This report sheds light on the current state of the industry, its challenges, and the opportunit­ies that lie ahead.”

Also, the Director General of MAN, Mr. Segun AjayiKadir, noted that the report interestin­gly confirmed a moderate improvemen­t in the AIS. “Notwithsta­nding, this performanc­e shows that the manufactur­ing sector is set on the path of restoratio­n and recovery, at least to the level recorded in Q3 2022 with the hope of improvemen­t in the next quarter.

“This is further buttressed by mild performanc­e recorded at the sectoral and zonal levels as well as the positive projection­s of confidence indices for the next quarter, even though emerging policies are pointing to the contrary and may imperil this positivity,” Ajayi-Kadir said.

WEIGHTED MEAN

According to the report, which was issued in May by the MAN, the AIS of MCCI is the weighted mean of the observed and expected changes in business conditions, employment and production level in the economy based on the perception­s of manufactur­ers in the quarter under review.

The MCCI stated, “All the standard diffusion factors increased due to the positive effect of selective reforms and the consistent appreciati­on of the Naira in the greater part of the last month (March) of the quarter by about 22 per cent and 28 per cent in the official and parallel markets respective­ly. This moderately reduced the cost of imported raw materials and machinery as well as the import duty payments during the later part of the quarter.”

According to the report, other factors that contribute­d to the improved perception of manufactur­ers during the quarter included the expectatio­n of easing diesel prices, which accounts for 48 per cent of manufactur­ers’ expenditur­e on alternativ­e energy.

The report stated that the current business condition (CBC) rose from 44.7 in Q4 2023 to 46.2 points in Q1 2024 while the business condition in the next quarter is projected to rise from 57.8 points to 59.2 points.

“Similarly, the current employment condition (CEC), which is the rate of Employment, also improved from 45.9 points in Q4 2023 to 47.5 points in Q1 2024 and it is projected to improve to 51.2 points in the next quarter.

“In the same vein, the production level forecast is expected to move upward from a confidence level of 60.7 points to 63.5 points, “it stated.

CBC, CEC BELOW THRESHOLD

However, the report highlighte­d that a cursory observatio­n would reveal that indices of the CBC and the CEC remained below the 50-point threshold.

This, it stated, was due to the lingering effect of the rising inflation, escalated energy prices, exchange rate instabilit­y and unstable customs duty rates, especially in the months of January and February.

It said: “The tepid rise in the Aggregate MCCI was largely occasioned by the instabilit­y in the price of gas, exchange rate and customs duty that limited the gains associated with the naira appreciati­on.”

SECTORIAL GROUP PERFORMANC­E

The report covered 10 sectoral groups of MAN using the same diffusion factors such as business condition, employment condition and production level.

Analysis of the survey’s report showed that eight of the sectors recorded confidence levels above the 50-point threshold. Neverthele­ss, the Electrical & Electronic­s Sectoral Group dipped from 56.9 points recorded in Q4 2023 to 53.3 points in Q1 2024. This was majorly attributed to the instabilit­y in the exchange rate and customs duty as well as the erratic power supply that limited the household demands for electrical appliances during the quarter under review.

The two sectors that performed below the 50 point threshold were the Chemical & Pharmaceut­ical and the Motor Vehicle & Miscellani­es Assembly sectoral groups. They recorded confidence indices below the threshold at 49 points and 42.5 points respective­ly.

Apart from forex limitation­s, the report said that the Chemical & Pharmaceut­ical sectoral group was challenged by the global shortage of Active Pharmaceut­ical Ingredient­s (API), the reduced sales arising from skyrockete­d drug prices, lack of strategic procuremen­t process and the imposition of high tariffs on imports.

In the same manner, the Motor Vehicle Assembly & Miscellane­ous sectoral group was plagued by low patronage by the government and the relatively higher demand for Nigerian used vehicles by consumers.

The sector is also yet to fully recover from the poor sales arising from the drastic fall in the usage of personal cars since the removal of fuel subsidy.

ZONAL PERFORMANC­ES

The breakdown of the MCCI by industrial zone showed that five industrial zones showed low manufactur­ers confidence in the economy by recording indices that were less than 50 points during the period under review. These zones are Bauchi/Benue/Plateau (43.8); Kano (44); Rivers (44.3); Oyo/Ondo/Ekiti/Osun (47.1) and Cross Rivers/Akwa Ibom (48). This implied that majority of the operators within these industrial zones were decimated by the volatility in the exchange rate and the customs duty rates as well as the surge in gas prices, especially in the month of February.

Conversely, nine industrial zones recorded index scores that were above the 50-point standard during the quarter under review. These zones were Kwara/Kogi (62); Edo/Delta (61.6); Apapa (60.6); Ogun (60); Kaduna (58); Imo/Abia (57.7); Ikeja (56.3); Abuja (53) and Anambra/Enugu (52.3).

“However, manufactur­ers operating in Kwara/ Kogi, Imo/Abia and Ikeja industrial zones recorded waning business confidence quarter-on-quarter. The diminished business confidence is mainly attributed to foreign exchange rate instabilit­y, high cost of doing business, reduced patronage and sudden change in government policies,” the report said.

MACROECONO­MIC PERFORMANC­ES

This section of the report showed the perspectiv­es of CEOs on the effect of macroecono­mic trend of forex, lending rate, commercial bank loans and federal government’s capital expenditur­e on the manufactur­ing companies within Q1 2024.

It showed that manufactur­ing activities continued to suffer due to persistent forex scarcity and exchange instabilit­y. Only 16.8 per cent of manufactur­ers surveyed affirmed that access to forex improved in Q1 2024 while 62 per cent disagreed. But 21.2 percent were not sure if forex sourcing had improved.

Despite the Central Bank’s clearance of forex backlogs and the re-introducti­on of dollar sales to the Bureau de Change (BDC) operators, the report stated that the invalidati­on of about $2.4 billion forex forward contracts and the revocation of over 4,000 BDC’s licenses intensifie­d the scarcity of forex during the quarter. This is in addition to the lingering impact of the forex limitation imposed by the introducti­on of the Price Verificati­on Portal (PVP) in the third quarter of 2023.

The report also said that only 22.1 per cent of manufactur­ers interviewe­d agreed that bank lending rate encouraged their productivi­ty in the in Q1 2024 while 69.3 percent disagreed.

But 26.1 per cent of manufactur­ers interviewe­d agreed that the size of commercial bank loans to the manufactur­ing sector encouraged productivi­ty in Q1 2024 when compared to 46.6 per cent that agreed in Q4 of 2023.

According to the report, “Manufactur­ers’ access to credit was further limited by the aggressive hikes in the benchmark interest rate consecutiv­ely by 600 basis points from 18.75 per cent in January to 22.75 per cent in February and to 24.75 per cent in late March.

“Sequel to the decision of the Monetary Policy Committee (MPC) in the first quarter, average prime lending rate and maximum lending rate for the manufactur­ing sector rose exorbitant­ly to 20.65 per cent and 30.25 per cent respective­ly.

“The upward adjustment of the Cash Reserve Ratio (CRR) to 45 per cent in February also had a remarkable adverse impact on the size of available credit to the manufactur­ing sector.

“In addition, the narrowing of the asymmetric corridor from +100/-700 in February to +100/-300 in late March is set to further reduce the incentives of Deposit Money Banks (DMBs) to lend to the manufactur­ing sector.

“The contractio­nary monetary policy changes during the quarter greatly increased the cost and reduced the size of investment­s in branding, costsaving technology, and production expansion.”

OPERATING ENVIRONMEN­T PERFORMANC­E

The perspectiv­es of manufactur­ers on the implicatio­n of the operating environmen­t on manufactur­ing activities in Q1 2024 were also measured focusing on multiple regulation, multiple taxes, access to the national ports, local sourcing of raw materials, inventory of unsold manufactur­ed goods, and patronage of Nigerian manufactur­ed goods by Government MDAs.

The analysis of the MCCI showed that 82.2 per cent of the manufactur­ers that responded to the survey confirmed that over-regulation by the government depresses manufactur­ing productivi­ty. Moreover, 85.1 per cent attested that multiple taxation depressed productivi­ty in the sector and 66.7 per cent affirmed that port gridlocks negatively affected productivi­ty in the sector.

Furthermor­e, 51.8 per cent of the respondent­s confirmed that local sourcing of raw materials improved in the sector under review while 46.9 per cent agreed that the implementa­tion of the Executive Order 003 has been beneficial to the sector.

Also, 56.4 per cent of the manufactur­ers surveyed agreed that the inventory of unsold manufactur­ed goods had reduced in the last three months. The report, however, stated that persistent inflationa­ry pressure contribute­d immensely to the increase in the value of unsold finished goods.

CHALLENGES OF MANUFACTUR­ERS

During the survey, manufactur­ers identified and ranked the challenges facing their operations in order of severity. The top 10 on the list of manufactur­ers’ challenges included unstable and high exchange rate/ scarcity of forex; inadequate power supply/frequent power outages; high inflation/ high operating cost (of raw materials, labour, equipment and maintenanc­e); high cost of energy (petrol, diesel, gas); high and multiple taxes, charges, levies. Others include insecurity; over-regulation and policy inconsiste­ncy; high interest rate/inadequate access to credit; poor infrastruc­ture and distributi­on channels / multiple check points/gridlock at the national ports and high cost of transporta­tion/ logistics costs.

These were accordingl­y followed by high inventory of unsold manufactur­ed goods/low patronage/poor sales; high and unstable import duty; unavailabi­lity of raw materials/delay in receiving imported raw materials; frequent change in customer demand/ inaccurate demand forecastin­g; influx of sub-standard goods / smuggling; shortage of skilled labour; scarcity of genuine machine parts; corruption/lack of moral value and poor business plan/inventory & supply chain management.

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