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Economy

NSE Market Index Slightly Drops 0.01% Amid Dull Activity

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Volatility Index for Nigerian Stock Market

By Dipo Olowookere

Transactions at the local stock market remained bearish on Tuesday in the absence of any positive news to stir buying pressure.

News of the reduction in the benchmark interest rate by 0.50 percent to 13.50 percent by the Monetary Policy Committee (MPC) of the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) today came when the market had already closed for the day’s business.

Investors are optimistic that this development would trigger a buying pressure tomorrow, but at the close of transactions today, the market slightly went down by 0.01 percent, leaving the All-Share Index (ASI) down by 3.46 points to close at 31,038.86 points.

However, the market capitalisation increased at the close of trading by N95 billion to N11.671 trillion from N11.576 trillion.

It was observed that the losses printed by stocks in the banking and consumer goods sectors dragged the market down on Tuesday.

While the banking index depreciated by 0.38 percent, the consumer goods index shed 0.54 percent.

Business Post reports that the market breadth ended negative as a result of the 20 price losers and 18 price gainers registered today.

Presco closed as the day’s biggest price loser after recording a N3.50k loss to settle at N64.50k per share.

It was followed by Nigerian Breweries, which lost N2.50k to close at N67 per unit, and Ecobank, which dropped 45 kobo to end at N13.05k per share.

PZ Cussons fell by 30 kobo to close at N10.20k per share, while Union Bank lost 15 kobo to finish at N6.90k per unit.

At the other side, Mobil Oil Nigeria sat comfortably on the gainers’ chart with N3 added to its share price to close at N170 per unit.

Dangote Cement rose by N1.50k to end at N190 per share, while Cadbury Nigeria appreciated by 95 kobo to settle at N10.85k per share.

Unilever Nigeria increased its share value by 50 kobo today to close at N39 per unit, while Dangote Flour garnered 35 kobo to close at N11.45k per share.

An analysis of the activity chart showed that the volume and value of shares transacted on Tuesday went down by 14.83 percent and 55.16 percent respectively.

A total of 143.7 million shares worth N1.7 billion were traded in 3,457 deals today compared with the 168.7 million equities worth N3.8 billion transacted in 3,048 deals the previous session.

Shares of FBN Holdings caught the attention of investors at the market today, with a total of 29.7 million units sold for N243.3 million.

Access Bank traded 16.3 million units worth N106.1 million, while UBA exchanged 11.8 million units valued at N91 million.

Furthermore, Transcorp traded 9.1 million shares for N11.3 million, while Vitafoam sold 8.1 million units worth N32 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 dipo.olowookere@businesspost.ng

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Economy

Trump’s Tariffs: US Faults Nigeria’s Import Ban on Beef, Poultry, Juice, Others

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Orange Fruit Juice

By Adedapo Adesanya

The United States has lamented Nigeria’s import ban on 25 different products, particularly in agriculture, pharmaceuticals, beverages, and consumer goods, as it rationalised the recent decision to slap a 14 per cent retaliatory tariff.

The United States Trade Representative, in a statement on Monday posted on its X platform, said Nigeria’s restrictions on items like beef, pork, poultry, fruit juices, medicaments, and spirits limit US market access and reduce export opportunities.

“These policies create significant trade barriers that lead to lost revenue for US businesses looking to expand in the Nigerian market,” it wrote.

Last week, the administration of President Donald Trump imposed various tariffs ranging between 10 per cent and 65 per cent on different countries across the world, including Nigeria which got a 14 per cent tariff on its exports to the US.

In response, the Nigerian Minister of Trade, Industry, and Investment, Mrs Jumoke Oduwole, said Nigeria would take a pragmatic approach and will boost non-oil exports to deal with the drawbacks from the US move.

She also said Nigeria will be willing to negotiate and will be speaking with the World Trade Organisation (WTO) on the way forward.

On his part, the Minister of Finance, Mr Wale Edun, said that the Economic Management Team (EMT) would meet to assess the likely impact of the 14 per cent tariff on goods exported from Nigeria to the US.

He said the EMT will afterwards, make recommendations to cushion its impact on the nation’s economy.

The Minister also said the federal government will boost non-revenue as a means of cushioning the adverse effects to trade tariffs imposed on countries by President Trump.

Mr Edun also assured that while the adverse effect on Nigeria will be through an oil price plunge, the government is intensifying efforts to ramp up oil production and boost non-oil revenues.

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Economy

Nigeria, Japan Launch Naira-based Venture Fund for Startups

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flow of naira notes

By Adedapo Adesanya

Nigeria and Japan have launched a strategic venture capital initiative that will channel Naira-denominated investments into high-growth startups, shielding them from currency risks while unlocking access to long-term concessional financing.

The Minister of Finance and Coordinating Minister of the Economy, Mr Wale Edun, met with officials from the Nigeria Sovereign Investment Authority (NSIA) and the Japan International Cooperation Agency (JICA) to finalise the framework of the fund, which has now received formal approval from the Japanese government.

Speaking on the development, Mr Edun welcomed the development, calling it a timely response to Nigeria’s youthful demography.

He said this fund provides critical financial backing across the capital structure—from equity to debt—and is aligned with President Bola Tinubu’s Renewed Hope Agenda for inclusive economic growth, he stated.

On his part, NSIA CEO, Mr Aminu Umar-Sadiq confirmed that the initiative satisfies two key conditions set by the Minister: mitigating foreign exchange volatility by investing in Naira and securing first-loss or grant capital to de-risk private investment.

“With JICA’s support, this is not just a proposed solution—it’s a fully approved, ready-to-launch initiative,” Mr Umar-Sadiq said.

Adding his input, JICA Director General, Mr Takao Shimokawa announced that diplomatic agreements would be signed within weeks, with full implementation expected thereafter.

By combining international concessional financing with domestic currency stability, the fund marks a new model for venture capital in Africa, aimed squarely at empowering the next generation of Nigerian innovators.

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Economy

Nigeria’s Economic Management Team to Assess Impact of Trump’s Tariffs

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One-Trillion Dollar Economy

By Adedapo Adesanya

The Minister of Finance, Mr Wale Edun, has said the country’s Economic Management Team (EMT) would meet to assess the likely impact of the 14 per cent tariff on goods exported from Nigeria to the United States.

Mr Edun made the disclosure while speaking at an event organised by the Ministry of Finance Incorporated (MOFI) on Monday.

The Trump administration recently imposed various tariffs ranging between 10 per cent and 65 per cent on different countries across the world, including Nigeria which got a 14 per cent tariff on its exports to the United States.

He said the EMT will afterwards make recommendations to cushion its impact on the nation’s economy, noting that the federal government will boost non-revenue as a means of cushioning the adverse effects to trade tariffs imposed on countries by President Trump.

Mr Edun stated that while the adverse effect on Nigeria will result in an oil price plunge, the government is intensifying efforts to ramp up oil production and boost non-oil revenues.

The Finance Minister noted that the US, which is at the centre of the tariff war had on April 2, announced that it would exempt mineral exports, including oil.

“Therefore, it’s the price effect, the oil price effect that may affect Nigeria. And it is the job and responsibility of the economic management team of President Bola Ahmed Tinubu, amongst others, to look at the various scenarios that might play out.

“There’s global uncertainty at a huge level, so nobody knows exactly what will happen- the announcement that has been made. We’re not sure what will be delayed, what will be reversed, or what will be implemented.

“So, it is not an announcement that the budget is being reviewed. It’s an announcement that it is our responsibility to look at the various scenarios and options and advise government accordingly.”

Mr Edun also highlighted plans to look at budget adjustment, expenditure prioritisation as well as innovative non-debt financing strategies.

According to him, Nigeria had recorded a trade surplus in the last three years (2022-2024) with the US.

“Nigeria-US Trade has been in surplus in the last 3 years (2022-2024). Nigeria’s exports to the US were N1.8 trillion, N2.6 trillion and N5.5 trillion in 2022-2024, respectively.

“Fortunately, oil and mineral exports accounted for 92 per cent. Implying oil and minerals exports amounted to N5.08 trillion in value while non-oil was just N0.44 trillion.

“Consequently, the tariff effect on exports is negligible if we sustain our oil and minerals export volume.

“The adverse effect on Nigeria will be through oil price plunge. We are intensifying efforts to ramp up crude oil production to curtail any price effect

“We are also focusing on non-oil revenue mobilisation by FIRS and Customs, budget adjustment and prioritisation where possible, and also and innovative non-debt financing strategies,” the Minister said.

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