As the call for the listing of the telecommunications and
power firms gets more strident, Nigerians have been told to allow their mission
statements dictate the pace of business decisions.
According to the Chief Executive Officer of the Nigerian
Stock Exchange (NSE), Mr. Oscar Onyema, companies should be allowed to ship in
and ship out of the bourse in line with their corporate objectives.
“We have to allow companies to list if it meets their
strategic objectives, and allow them to leave if it no longer meets their
strategic objectives”, he said
Addressing capital market community recently, Onyema
disected the market and came up with the notion that better days lie ahead.
Excerpts:
Role in economy
The Nigerian Stock Exchange (NSE), as you know, provides a
platform for investors and savers to accumulate savings and our job is to
provide an efficient platform that allows buyers and sellers to come together,
that allows issuers to be able to raise capital. Our job is not to
under-perform or outperform the economy. Having said that, equities markets all
over the world are indicators of an economy.
As you know, we do not completely reflect what is available
in the economy. So, for example, we don’t have utilities listed on the
exchange, we don’t have telecoms companies listed yet. So, it is still a
developing market that will continue to strive to better reflect activities in
the economy. But it will never be a one for one. There will be a correlation
that shows general direction but you shouldn’t expect it to be one for one;
even the most advanced economies with the deepest market do not show you that
correlation.
Quoted companies
We have to allow companies to list if it meets their
strategic objectives, and allow them to leave if it no longer meets their
strategic objectives. So for us, we have to create a market place that
continues to service the needs of investors and issuers and to make it
attractive for issuers to come to this market and to stay.
For example, Coca Cola Bottling Company wanted to make
serious investment. So they asked the domestic investors to bring money and the
money wasn’t forthcoming. So, they had to get the money elsewhere where the
investors are willing to bring up the money.
We don’t go to AGM and scare companies to list. So, it is
the responsibility of the platform, market participants and everybody to create
an environment that is conducive for issuers to come and raise money here and
to stay here. For our part, we have a sale and retention programme to maintain
contact with various issuers at various levels from a purely business
perspective outside the regulatory perspective. And so we continue to innovate
from the product perspective to make it attractive for them to be able to
participate in the market.
Corporate governance
On suspension of the corporate governance code and the
impact it will have on investors’ confidence, quite frankly, if you look at the
feedback we have received from investors and issuers, we think the code needs
some more work. It needs to be consistent with other existing laws and other
codes. I do not think the confidence of investors will be negatively impacted
because the corporate governance code has been suspended. I think if there is
anything, it will be positively impacted because you need to have a code that
is well vetted by everybody and is supported by the majority of the people if
you are looking for that kind of positive impact.
Collaboration
We work very much in collaboration to support the government
wherever we can. For example, in the recently announced Whistle blower Policy
in the fight against corruption, we worked very closely with the government to
build that portal and to make it available for use for Nigerian citizens. So,
we make our expertise available wherever we can in order to help. Also, in
order to find creative ways of borrowing money, we introduced the idea of the
green bond to the government which they have taken up. Another one is the
retail Federal Government savings bond and again we made that proposal to the
Federal Government and they took it on board . So we are working very closely
with the government. As you know, being a market, we are very much in support
of market solutions to a number of these structural issues and challenges that
we face.
PFAs
With regards to how attractive the market is without Pension
Fund Administrators (PFAs), we believe that the pension fund industry today
probably accounts for the largest group of domestic investors in the country.
However, their portfolio allocation is based on guidelines as provided by
PenCom. The allocations are made within their guidelines to protect pensioners’
assets and look for where they will get maximum returns. That is why the
Exchange has taken an approach to make sure we provide the list of products so
that investors can have a menu to choose from. So, just because they are not
necessarily in equities does not mean the market is unattractive. The market is
attractive and covers equities, fixed
income and exchange traded fund.
On the question that the shine has been taken off the
capital market to the money market, I would like to believe investors are
rational human beings and anybody that is investing is investing for returns.
Given the economic conditions and what is going on in the debt and money market
and people’s perception of risk, they will choose the market they want to
invest in. For us, it is important we provide a credible list of products and
services they can take advantage of to meet their objectives, which is to get
the highest returns with the lowest risk; that is if they are rational
investors.
Fragmentation
On the registration of other exchanges, our view is this,
for a developing market such as ours, you do not want to fragment the market
because you don’t even have enough liquidity in one market but that question is
better addressed towards the regulators that are registering exchanges. The
exchange itself has to make sure it is in a robust position to continue to
provide services at fees that are competitive and will keep investors and
issuers in these exchanges. However, we do not believe we should fragment the
market, so in turn it is very important for the regulators to have a level
playing field and that the regulations are clear as to what areas the market
can play.
Demutualisation
Demutualisation of the NSE is an ongoing project and there
are certain things that need to happen before you conclude it, including member
consensus, getting appropriate legislative framework and regulatory approval
before one moves forward to do it. And so, the plan is very well articulated
and the implementation is ongoing as indicated. If one of the prerequisites is
a member vote, then we would want to make sure that you have a credible member
list that is auditable, and that took some time to accomplish. Nevertheless, that has been done
now and we hope to see more public progress in the implementation of the
demutualisation project.
Market makers
As to whether there are still market makers in the market,
yes, we have market makers across all our products; we have market makers in
equities, fixed income and exchange traded funds. On the equities market makers
programme, I would say we are not completely satisfied with the level of
performance. Having said that, I want to re-emphasise that the work of market
makers is not to stop the market from moving in any direction it wants to move,
but to make sure that there is continuity in the market. So, if the market is
going up, it doesn’t go from N1 to N10 but it goes from N1 to N2 and so on till
it gets N10. So, there is continuity in the market. That is the job of the
market makers. And we think more can be done in that space and as a result, one
of the things we are doing this year is doing a comprehensive review of market
makers programmes and coming out with a more tightened over sized review to make sure they meet the
expectations of the market.
WACMIC
West African Capital Market Integration Council (WACMIC) is
a programme designed to facilitate cross border trading within the West African
region and we believe we have done enough work to facilitate phase one and we
have seen some trades between Ghana and Nigeria. There is a challenge with the
French speaking West African countries where the rules have not been approved
by the regulators yet. And so it is difficult for any trading to occur without
the underlined regulatory framework and that has als
o delayed the
implementation of phase 2 even though work is going on to fine-tune it. Phase2
is passporting phase where, instead of going through a broker in the foreign
country, you go directly. So that work is still ongoing and I can assure you
that the technical and governing committees are working very hard to get the
WACMIC project to its logical conclusion.
Short selling
We have a framework for securities lending and short selling
at the exchange and initially it was limited to institutional participation.
When we did not see a lot of activities in that space, we extended it to retail
participation by creating new rules and framework to facilitate that.
So, if you go to any authorised securities lending agent,
you can actually borrow security and you can short sell in the market. Rules,
technologies and framework are primed to support that, so, it is now left for
market participants to take advantage of it.
Late submission of financials
On late submission of financials and quality of financials
submitted, the NSE has done a lot of work in this space and we will keep
working towards that. Since we started five years ago, we had to work first of
all to gather statistics to engage with the companies before the due date and
to improve on the percentage of compliance rate. We also made it easier for the
submission by introducing the x-issuer portal. It is now electronic submission
with appropriate template for these submissions.
The rules around submission was also tightened to make
penalties higher and all of these were done to make companies comply, hence we
will continue to monitor the situation and to engage with issuers to report on
time and to report with more eligibility but you know, we can take the horse to
the river, but we can’t force it to drink water.
Choice of market to invest

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