Nigerian
stocks surged to a 4-month high on Monday after equity index provider MSCI
increased the weight of Africa's biggest economy.
MSCI increased
the weight in the index to 19 per cent, from 12 per cent, making it the second
biggest after Kuwait. It added oil firm Forte Oil and pan-African lender
Ecobank. Forte surged the maximum allowed 10 per cent. Ecobank added 6.85 per
cent Listing in such indexes brings in investors who track them.
Nigeria is
struggling with a weak currency and beset by political risk over upcoming
elections and the abduction of over 200 schoolgirls by Islamist group Boko
Haram. Its stock market is flat on the year to date in dollar terms.
"We are seeing
increased buying activities from foreign investors. The market reacted
positively on the back of the index news," said Akinbamidele Akintola,
vice president, Africa equity sales at Renaissance Capital.
Nigerian stocks
rallied 3 per cent on Friday ahead of the rejig and rose again on Monday to hit
four-month highs. The index of Nigeria's top five oil and gas firms climbed
7.15 per cent, helping the index rise above 40,000 points, a level last seen in
January.
Average traded
volumes hit 72 million dollars on Friday, compared with an overall average of
between 20 million dollars to 30 million dollars this year, Renaissance
Capital's Akintola said.
A youthful
population, high economic growth rate and an expanding middle class have drawn
investors to frontier markets in recent years, leading them to significantly
outperform emerging and developed markets in terms of returns.
Foreign
portfolio inflows into Nigeria's equity market rose 65.1 per cent to 356.50
billion naira in the first quarter as domestic investors reduced their
exposure.

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