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NASD Unlisted Security Index Jumps 0.33% to 3,650.94 Points

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NASD Unlisted Security Index

By Adedapo Adesanya

The NASD Over-the-Counter (OTC) Securities Exchange improved by 0.33 per cent on Monday, January 26 on the back of renewed appetite for unlisted stocks by investors.

This moved the NASD Unlisted Security Index (NSI) higher by 11.84 points to 3,650.94 points from the 3,639.10 points it ended when the market last opened for business.

In the same vein, the market capitalisation of the alternative stock exchange increased by N7.08 billion to end N2.184 trillion compared with last Friday’s closing value of N2.177 trillion.

Eight securities witnessed movements during the first trading day of this week, with five in the green side and three in the red zone.

FrieslandCampina Wamco Nigeria Plc led the gainers group after  it recorded a price appreciation of N3.47 Kobo to sell at N69.70 per share versus N66.23 per share, Air Liquide Plc added N1.54 to close at N16.94 per unit versus N15.40 per unit, Afriland Properties Plc rose by N1.43 to N16.03 per share from N14.60 per share, IPWA Plc gained 20 Kobo to trade at N2.17 per unit versus N1.97 per unit, and Acorn Petroleum Plc surged by 1 Kobo to N1.30 per share versus last Friday’s N1.29 per share.

On the flip side, Central Securities Clearing System (CSCS) Plc dropped 14 Kobo to close at N40.67 per unit versus N40.81 per unit, UBN Property Plc shrank by 9 Kobo to N2.00 per share from N2.09 per share, and Industrial and General Insurance (IGI) Plc lost 6 Kobo to close at 63 Kobo per unit versus 69 Kobo per unit.

Yesterday, the trading volume slipped by 33.3 per cent to 6.8 million units from 10.2 million units, as the trading value declined by 17.3 per cent to N156.7 million from N189.5 million, and the number of deals decreased by 10.2 per cent to 44 deals from 49 deals.

At the close of trades, CSCS Plc was the most active stock by value (year-to-date) with 14.2 million units worth N575.9 million, followed by FrieslandCampina Wamco Nigeria Plc with 915,905 units sold for N61.7 million, and MRS Oil Plc with 296,801 units traded for N59.3 million.

CSCS  Plc was also the most active stock by volume (year-to-date) with 14.2 million units valued at N576.0 million, trailed by Geo-Fluids Plc with 7.7 million units worth N52.4 million, and Mass Telecom Innovation Plc with 6.3 million units worth N2.5 million.

Adedapo Adesanya is a journalist, polymath, and connoisseur of everything art. When he is not writing, he has his nose buried in one of the many books or articles he has bookmarked or simply listening to good music with a bottle of beer or wine. He supports the greatest club in the world, Manchester United F.C.

Economy

Nigeria’s Inflation Eases Further to 15.1% in January 2026

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Nigeria’s Headline Inflation

By Adedapo Adesanya

Nigeria’s headline inflation rate eased further to 15.10 per cent in January 2026, down from 15.15 per cent in December 2025, continuing the moderation that started in the latter months of 2025.

According to the National Bureau of Statistics (NBS), Consumer Price Index (CPI) declined to 127.4 points in January 2026, reflecting a 3.8-point decrease from the preceding month of December 2025, which came in as 131.2 points.

The data, which is the first of the year, beat analysts’ expectations, which had expected an 18 per cent growth. Instead, the January 2026 print showed a decrease of 0.05 per cent compared to the December 2025 Headline inflation rate.

On a year-on-year basis, the inflation rate was 12.51 per cent lower than the rate recorded in January 2025 (27.61 per cent). This shows that the Headline inflation rate (year-on-year basis) decreased in January 2026 compared to the same month in the preceding year.

On a month-on-month basis, the Headline inflation rate in January 2026 was -2.88 per cent, which was 3.42 per cent lower than the rate recorded in December 2025 (0.54 per cent). This means that in the review month, the rate of increase in the average price level was lower than the rate of increase in the average price level in December last year.

The percentage change in the average CPI for the twelve months ending January 2026 over the average for the previous twelve-month period was 21.97 per cent, showing a 4.37 per cent increase compared to 17.59 per cent recorded in January 2025.

Nigeria’s food inflation rate in January 2026 was 8.89 per cent on a year-on-year basis. This was 20.73 percentage points lower compared to the rate recorded in January 2025 (29.63 per cent).

On a month-on-month basis, the Food inflation rate in January 2026 was -6.02 per cent, down by 5.66 per cent compared to December 2025 (-0.36 per cent).

The decline can be attributed to the rate of decrease in the average prices of water yams, eggs, green peas, groundnut oil, soya beans, palm oil, maize (corn) grains, guinea corn, beans, beef meat, melon (egusi) unshelled, cassava tuber, and cow peas (white).

The NBS data showed that the average annual rate of food inflation for the twelve months ending January 2026 over the previous twelve-month average was 20.29 per cent, which was 18.18 percentage points lower compared with the average annual rate of change recorded in January 2025 (38.47 per cent).

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Economy

Terrahaptix Secures Additional $22m from Investors, Valuation Hits $100m

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Terrahaptix

By Adedapo Adesanya

Nigerian defence technology startup, Terra Industries, has extended its funding round to $34 million after securing an additional $22 million from investors, making it a $100 million company.

The new capital round was led by venture firm Lux Capital, with injections from the chief executive officer of Lagos-based unicorn Flutterwave, Mr Gbenga Agboola, as well as angel investors such as American actor Jared Leto and Jordan Nel.

The company said in a statement on Monday that the round was completed in under two weeks.

This comes weeks after it raised $11.75 million in January. That funding round was led by 8VC founded by the co-founder of Palantir Technologies Inc., Mr Joe Lonsdale. Other investors included Valor Equity Partners, Lux Capital, SV Angel, Leblon Capital GmbH, Silent Ventures LLC, Nova Global and angel investors, including Mr Meyer Malka — the managing partner of Ribbit Capital.

Some of the investors in the new round included 8VC, Nova Global, Silent Ventures, Belief Capital, Tofino Capital, and Resilience17 Capital, founded by Flutterwave CEO.

Terrahaptix, founded by Mr Nathan Nwachukwu and Mr Maxwell Maduka, will use the new funding to expand Terra’s manufacturing capacity as it expands into cross-border security and counter-terrorism.

The extension also comes amid growing international expansion. Earlier this month, Terra announced a partnership with Saudi industrial giant AIC Steel to launch a manufacturing hub in Saudi Arabia focused on producing infrastructure security systems.

In the coming weeks, the company also plans to unveil a mega factory, an indication of the company’s growth and importance, particularly as the need for security has risen in recent years, as groups such as Islamic State and al-Qaeda are gaining ground in Africa, converging along a swathe of territory that stretches from Mali to Nigeria.

According to Mr Nwachuku, the initial $11.75 million raise created significant momentum for the company, enabling it to close the additional $22 million in just under two weeks.

He added that beyond capital, the investors were selected for their experience building similar hard-tech and defence-focused companies.

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Economy

Analysts Predict 18% Inflation Rate for January 2026

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inflation food prices

By Adedapo Adesanya

Analysts have projected that Nigeria’s headline inflation could rise to about 18 per cent in January, defying the downward trend recorded in 2025.

The forecast comes ahead of the first Consumer Price Index (CPI) data release by the National Bureau of Statistics (NBS) of 2026 due on Monday.

Headline inflation closed December at 15.15 per cent year-on-year, while the annual average eased sharply to 23.33 per cent from 33.18 per cent in 2024.

According to analysts at Cowry Research, the recent CPI normalisation has created a lower base for January comparisons, making a temporary uptick in headline inflation likely in January and possibly February. It projects inflation to trend within the 17.8 per cent to 18.7 per cent range in 2026, driven by election-related spending pressures and fading base effects, even as structural reforms support a medium-term disinflation path.

Similarly, analysts at Quest Merchant Bank said the lower base effect could push January inflation to around 18 per cent to 19 per cent. They, however, expect inflation to resume a broadly disinflationary trajectory over the course of the year, supported by softer energy prices, stable exchange rate conditions and easing food costs.

Last year’s deceleration was driven largely by base effects after the stats office normalised its CPI computation methodology. Unlike previous rebasing exercises that used a single month as the base period, the agency calculated the base using the average of all months in 2024. The rebasing also involved reweighting several categories and expanding the inflation basket to 934 items from 740.

In December alone, the NBS published two separate inflation figures for December after the CPI methodology tweaking caused the headline rate to more than double.

Nigeria’s inflation data are closely monitored by the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) as it transitions toward an inflation-targeting monetary policy framework.

The CBN has already factored in the CPI rebasing and related computational issues in its three-year inflation forecast.

The apex bank is targeting a slowdown in inflation to around 13 per cent by next year, despite current price pressures and statistical adjustments.

The Monetary Policy Committee (MPC) will meet next week, and today’s inflation report will form the basis for whether there will be a cut or hold in the interest rates.

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