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Economy

Domestic Bourse Bounces Back by 0.22% as Naira Stuns Dollar

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nigerian bourse

By Dipo Olowookere

Investors found solace in Nigerian stocks on Friday following news that the Naira was regaining its value against the Dollar in the unofficial market segments.

The information made Naira-denominated investments attractive again as speculators, who had earlier hoarded the foreign currency, pushed the greenback into the market after the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) started to clear outstanding matured FX futures.

This strengthened the Nigerian Exchange (NGX) Limited by 0.22 per cent yesterday due to the buying pressure, especially from equities in the consumer goods sector.

The consumer goods index was the lifesaver on the last trading session of the week, growing by 0.37 per cent, as the energy counter remained flat.

However, the banking space went down by 0.82 per cent, the industrial goods sector depreciated by 0.65 per cent, and the insurance counter decreased by 0.26 per cent.

When the closing gong was struck at 2:30 pm, the All-Share Index (ASI) gained 154.49 points to settle at 70,196.77 points versus Thursday’s closing value of 70,042.28 points, and the market capitalisation expanded by N75 billion to end at N38.557 trillion versus the preceding day’s N38.482 trillion.

International Breweries outperformed yesterday, gaining 9.64 per cent to close at N4.55, ABC Transport rose by 8.86 per cent to 86 Kobo, Champion Breweries expanded by 8.82 per cent to N3.70, Royal Exchange appreciated by 8.00 per cent to 54 Kobo, and AIICO Insurance increased by 7.14 per cent to 75 Kobo.

On the flip side, Prestige Assurance lost 8.89 per cent to trade at 41 Kobo, Tantalizers depreciated by 8.89 per cent to 41 Kobo, Chams shed 8.18 per cent to finish at N2.02, DAAR Communications declined 8.00 per cent to 23 Kobo, and NEM Insurance slumped by 5.88 per cent to N5.60.

The bears and the bulls shared the spoils during the trading session, as the market breadth index was flat with 26 price gainers and 26 price losers.

However, the activity chart was mixed as the trading value surged by 50.82 per cent to N9.2 billion from N6.1 billion, while the trading volume shrank by 21.90 per cent to 410.4 million shares from 525.5 million shares and the number of deals contracted by 23.34 per cent to 6,436 deals from 8,396 deals.

The stock with the highest volume of trade was Fidelity Bank, with 61.1 million units valued at N514.2 million, followed by Japaul with 47.8 million units worth N58.0 million. UBA exchanged 30.9 million units worth N636.5 million, GTCO transacted 29.9 million units valued at N1.1 billion, and AIICO Insurance sold 25.3 million units for N17.8 million.

Dipo Olowookere is a journalist based in Nigeria that has passion for reporting business news stories. At his leisure time, he watches football and supports 3SC of Ibadan. Mr Olowookere can be reached via [email protected]

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Economy

CBN Reduces Interest Rate by 50 Basis Points to 26.50%

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African central banks Interest Rate Cut

By Adedapo Adesanya

The Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) has cut the interest rate by 50 basis points to 26.50 per cent from 27 per cent.

Nigeria’s apex bank announced this during its two-day 304th Monetary Policy Committee (MPC) meeting, which concluded on Tuesday in Abuja.

This comes after the country’s interest rate cooled in January to 15.10 per cent from 15.15 per cent, according to the National Bureau of Statistics (NBS), strengthening the case for a reduction.

The CBN Governor, Mr Yemi Cardoso, said all members of the MPC unanimously agreed upon the decision.

“The committee decided to reduce the monetary policy rate by 50 basis points to 26.50 per cent,” he said.

Mr Cardoso stated that the liquidity ratio was maintained at 30 per cent, and the standing facilities corridor was adjusted to +50 to -450 basis points around the monetary policy rate.

He said the committee retained the Cash Reserve Ratio (CRR) at 45 per cent for commercial banks and 16 per cent for merchant banks, while the 75 per cent CRR on non-TSA public sector deposits was equally maintained.

The CBN uses the MPR, which works as the benchmark interest rate, to manage inflation, macroeconomic stability, and liquidity.

Last November, the MPC retained the Monetary Policy Rate (MPR) at 27.00 per cent. The last time the apex bank cut interest rates was in September last year, to 27 per cent from 27.50 per cent after a series of easing in inflation.

Market analysts had argued for higher interest cuts due to results seen in the CBN’s inflation targeting framework. Meanwhile, some say the 50 basis points reduction will offer a temporary reprieve as inflation heads for a single-digit target in the coming months.

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Economy

Grey to Cut Cross-Border Payment Costs with New USD Offering

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grey fintech

By Adedapo Adesanya

A cross-border payments solutions company, Grey has expanded its business banking platform to include US Dollar corporate accounts, bulk international payments, and USDC stablecoin support, all integrated into a single system.

The company is positioning itself as a low-cost, faster alternative to traditional international banking, particularly for businesses in emerging markets as it enables companies to open US Dollar accounts, receive global payments, and send payouts to 170+ countries, including bulk transfers, within minutes.

Grey aims to solve common cross-border payment challenges, particularly the high transfer costs that often range between 6 and 7 per cent of transaction value, prolonged settlement cycles that can stretch across several days, and the limited access many businesses face when trying to open and operate foreign currency accounts. In addition, companies frequently contend with hidden intermediary fees and poor foreign exchange transparency, both of which undermine cost predictability and effective cash flow management.

By integrating USD business accounts and USDC stablecoin functionality into its platform, Grey enhances its value proposition around faster settlement, clearer pricing structures, improved cost efficiency, and broader global accessibility. The expanded capabilities enable businesses to manage international transactions with greater speed, transparency, and operational control.

“Businesses may operate without borders today, but access to reliable global banking remains uneven, particularly for companies in high-growth markets,” said Mr Idorenyin Obong, Co-founder and Chief Executive Officer of Grey. “We’re closing that gap and enabling businesses to move money faster, with greater transparency and control, wherever their clients or partners are based.”

“When payments are delayed, or costs are unpredictable, growth stalls,” added Mr Joseph Femi Aghedo, Chief Operating Officer and Co-founder of Grey. “Grey eliminates those friction points, giving businesses a faster, simpler way to manage payroll, supplier payments, and partner payouts across borders. Adding USD and stablecoin capabilities makes these benefits accessible to even more customers.”

Established in Africa in 2020, Grey has a presence in key markets, including the United States, the United Kingdom, and Europe, and has recently expanded its services and operations into Latin America and Southeast Asia.

Since its inception, the company has consistently enhanced its services to empower digital nomads worldwide, regardless of location. Grey’s offerings include multi-currency accounts, low-cost international money transfers, a virtual USD card, expense management tools, and robust security measures.

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Economy

Quidax, Lisk to Unlock Stablecoins, On-chain Financial Opportunities

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Quidax

By Aduragbemi Omiyale

A partnership designed to expand access to stablecoins and on-chain financial opportunities for everyday users and businesses has been entered into between Quidax and Lisk.

The partnership provides a critical gateway for the developer community, as builders on the Lisk network can now leverage Quidax’s robust digital asset infrastructure to access stablecoins and local currencies at competitive rates.

This institutional-grade infrastructure is designed to power “future-forward” financial products, ranging from neobanks and cross-border payment platforms to regional exchanges and global fintech solutions. It will also allow Quidax customers to trade and move value seamlessly using USDT, USDC, LSK, and Ether (ETH) on the Lisk network.

The collaboration will also accelerate the adoption of Web3 solutions that solve real-world financial challenges for millions of customers across Africa by combining Quidax’s deep local liquidity and compliant framework with Lisk’s scalable L2 technology.

In 2024, Quidax became the first crypto exchange to receive a provisional operating license from Nigeria’s Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC).

“The partnership with Lisk enables us to extend our platform to serve more people and cater to the increasing demand from products and services that want to integrate our stablecoin and digital assets product to build products across Africa,” the Chief Infrastructure Officer at Quidax, Mr Morris Ebieroma, said.

Also commenting, the Ecosystem Lead for Africa at Lisk, Ms Chidubem Emelumadu, said, “Africa represents one of the most critical frontiers for blockchain innovation, where the demand for reliable and inclusive financial tools is urgent.

“Our partnership with Quidax expands access to stablecoins and on-chain financial opportunities for everyday users and businesses. At the same time, it gives founders building on Lisk the critical infrastructure they need to create solutions that can scale meaningfully across the continent,” she added.

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