The Nationwide Bureau of Statistics has disclosed that African buyers, excluding these from Nigeria, contributed a notable $285.11m in overseas capital to Nigeria within the third quarter of 2024.
This contribution accounted for 22.76 per cent of the entire overseas capital influx into the nation, highlighting the numerous position performed by African nations within the capital importation panorama.
An evaluation of the newest capital importation report of the NBS famous a decline in Africa’s general contribution in comparison with the second quarter of 2024 and the identical interval final yr.
The NBS knowledge indicated that the entire capital contribution from Africa in Q3 2024 amounted to $285.11m, a 43.73 per cent decline in comparison with Q2 2024, which recorded $506.68m.
On a year-on-year foundation, Africa’s contribution additionally fell by 16.77 per cent from $342.55m in Q3 2023.
The important thing African contributors in Q3 2024 have been Mauritius, the Republic of South Africa, Ghana, and Morocco.
Mauritius remained a big supply of overseas capital with an influx of $97.63m, although this mirrored a pointy decline of 61.05 per cent from the $250.70m recorded in Q2 2024.
The drop was even steeper year-on-year, with Mauritius contributing $226.18m in Q3 2023, marking a 56.85 per cent decline.
The Republic of South Africa contributed $185.03m in Q3 2024, representing a considerable year-on-year development of 59.02 per cent in comparison with $116.37m in Q3 2023.
Nevertheless, on a quarter-on-quarter foundation, South Africa’s contribution fell by 27.73 per cent from the $255.98m recorded in Q2 2024.
Ghana contributed $2.35m in Q3 2024 for the primary time in current quarters, signalling a renewed curiosity from Ghanaian buyers.
Morocco additionally emerged as a minor contributor, recording $0.10m in capital inflows through the interval.
In distinction to the declining tendencies from different African international locations, overseas capital influx from Nigerian buyers confirmed important development.
The nation contributed $10.84m to its overseas capital inflows in Q3 2024, reflecting a outstanding improve of 261.33 per cent year-on-year from $3m in Q3 2023.
On a quarter-on-quarter foundation, the overseas capital influx from Nigerian buyers surged by 198.63 per cent from $3.63m recorded in Q2 2024.
Whereas Africa accounted for 22.76 per cent of Nigeria’s complete capital influx, the report highlighted important contributions from different continents, significantly Europe, North America, and Asia.
Europe remained the biggest contributor to Nigeria’s overseas capital, pushed by inflows from the UK and the Netherlands.
The UK maintained its dominance with $502.6m in Q3 2024, although this marked a big decline from $1.12bn recorded in Q2 2024.
The Netherlands additionally featured prominently, contributing $121.92m in Q3 2024.
Nevertheless, this dropped sharply from $577.82m in Q2 2024, reflecting cautious funding tendencies.
From North America, the US confirmed constant development, recording $163.86m in Q3 2024, up from $81.5 m in Q2 2024.
This displays elevated investor confidence in the US regardless of world financial uncertainties.
Whereas African inflows declined, contributions from Asian international locations have been extra notable in Q3 2024, significantly from Saudi Arabia, China, and Singapore.
Saudi Arabia emerged as a robust contributor with $28.01m, which marked a 48.65 per cent decline from $54.55m in Q2 2024.
China’s inflows stood at $9.58m in Q3 2024, barely down from $10.63m in Q2 2024, reflecting a 9.88 per cent decline quarter-on-quarter.
Singapore, which contributed $5.63m, additionally noticed a notable drop from its Q2 2024 influx of $13.49m, translating to a 58.26 per cent decline.
The NBS report highlights a decline in general overseas capital influx into Nigeria in Q3 2024, totalling $1.25bn, representing a 51.89 per cent drop from the $2.60bn recorded in Q2 2024.
This drop highlights a pointy contraction in overseas investments regardless of an general annual improve of 91.35 per cent from Q3 2023.
Though Africa’s contribution to Nigeria’s overseas capital inflows stays important, the decline in inflows from Mauritius and South Africa has affected the continent’s general share.
In distinction, Europe and North America have proven regular efficiency, reinforcing their place as main overseas capital sources in Nigeria.
Additionally, the notable rise in contributions from Nigerian buyers highlights rising home investor confidence, suggesting a possible shift within the nation’s capital dynamics.