A report by one of Nigeria’s leading commodities players, AFEX, has predicted that high food prices, which have been caused by inflationary pressure, would continue to spike in 2022. AFEX in its annual commodities outlook report 2022 said a combination of rising inflationary pressure, a possible naira devaluation in the parallel market, and increased demand pressure on commodities in the country, would increase the price of grains during the new 2021/2022 trading season. Speaking at the report launch in Lagos, AFEX’s Vice President, Financial Markets, Oluwafunto Olasemo, explained that, “the AFEX Annual commodities outlook is a yearly outlook that is shared at the start of each year to provide some perspective on how the commodities market performed in the previous year and how commodities may perform in the New Year. “The report’s primary objective is to close a data gap in Africa’s commodity sector and to give solid market intelligence to major stakeholders in the commodities value chain.†Reviewing the previous year, the report showed that after the COVID-19-induced lockdowns were lifted in 2021, the Nigerian agriculture sector expanded by an average of 1.60 percent in the first three quarters of the year. According to the firm, although this expansion was lower than the 1.72 percent recorded in 2020, it depicted some resilience compared to other significant sectors such as industry and services as agriculture contributed an average of 25.35 percent to Nigeria’s GDP in 2021. “Among other commodities, sesame seeds, fermented cocoa beans, cashew nuts, ginger, crude palm kernel oil, soybean, frozen shrimps and prawns drove overall agriculture exports between 2016 and 2021 and agriculture exports generated N1.79 trillion cumulatively for the country. During the same period, Nigeria’s overall agriculture import cost was N3.78 trillion with a trade imbalance of N1.99 trillion, making Nigeria still a net food importer. Global food prices maintained a northward trend from July 2020 up until May 2021, reaching record highs adding to pressure on household budgets. Extreme weather conditions and COVID-19 induced disruptions in supply activities, all contributed to pressured prices, income losses and exacerbated food insecurity in 2021,†the report said. Providing further outlook for the new year, AFEX predicts that the new Omicron variant will have negligible impact on Nigeria’s commodity supply chain. The report indicates that the naira’s depreciation against the US dollar and the CFA Franc has raised demand for most staple commodities, particularly sorghum, as this would also help export commodities including cocoa, sesame, ginger, and cashew. “We believe other upside risks to domestic commodity prices this year are insecurity, FX rate deterioration, government policies. Also, the inability to close the supply shortfall by increasing harvest from dry season farming is a potential risk to pressured prices in 2022, â€AFEX said.