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NGX Starts Week With 0.11% Loss as Investors’ Wealth Leaks N62bn

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NGX 30 Index

By Dipo Olowookere

The first trading session of this week at the Nigerian Exchange (NGX) Limited ended on a bearish note on Monday with a 0.11 per cent loss.

Business Post reports weak investor sentiment resulted in sell-offs at the bourse yesterday, especially in the financial and industrial goods sectors.

According to data obtained from Customs Street, the insurance space closed lower by 1.22 per cent during the session as the industrial goods index fell by 0.53 per cent, and the banking counter weakened by 0.11 per cent.

However, the energy and the consumer goods counters witnessed bargain-hunting, resulting in their respective indices growing by 0.44 per cent and 0.02 per cent.

At the close of business, the All-Share Index (ASI) was down by 103.23 points to 98,107.52 points from 98,210.75 points, and the market capitalisation decreased by N62 billion to N59.472 trillion from N59.534 trillion.

On Monday, the market breadth index was negative after 19 stocks appreciated and 36 stocks depreciated, with the laggards’ chart led by Secure Electronic Technology due to a 10.00 per cent decline in its share price to 63 Kobo.

Guinea Insurance lost 8.93 per cent to trade at 51 Kobo, Deap Capital shed 8.40 per cent to N1.09, DAAR Communications fell by 7.02 per cent to 53 Kobo, and RT Briscoe declined by 6.12 per cent to N2.30.

On the flip side, Golden Guinea Breweries and the NGX Group appreciated by 10.00 per cent each to sell for N5.94 and N27.50 apiece, Tantalizers grew by 9.92 per cent to settle at N1.33, Africa Prudential soared by 9.72 per cent to N11.85, and Coronation Insurance increased by 9.35 per cent to N1.17.

During the session the trading volume and value went down by 58.11 per cent and 26.29 per cent, respectively, while the number of deals jumped by 31.43 per cent.

This was because the bourse recorded a turnover of 436.0 million shares worth N12.9 billion in 9,489 deals yesterday compared with the 1.0 billion shares valued at N17.5 billion traded in 7,220 deals last Friday.

FCMB led the activity chart after the sale of 61.7 million equities for N575.2 million, Access Holdings exchanged 51.1 million shares valued at N1.2 billion, UBA traded 27.2 million stocks worth N914.5 million, GTCO transacted 24.5 million shares valued at N1.3 billion, and Fidelity Bank sold 24.1 million equities worth N377.7 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

Crude Oil Prices Climb 2% as Middle East Ceasefire Prospects Fade

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Crude Oil Prices

By Adedapo Adesanya

Crude oil prices rose more than 2 per cent on Monday after US President Donald Trump said the ceasefire with Iran was “on life support,” leaving ‌the Strait of Hormuz largely closed with no clear end in sight to the war.

Brent crude futures went up by $2.92 or 2.88 per cent to $104.21 a barrel, while the US West Texas Intermediate (WTI) crude futures increased by $2.65 or 2.78 per cent to settle at $98.07 a barrel.

President Trump on Monday said the ceasefire with ​Iran was “on life support,” after dismissing Iran’s response to a US peace proposal as “stupid.”

This came after the US floated a proposal ⁠aimed at reopening negotiations with Iran. The Middle East country on Sunday released a response focused on ending the war on all fronts, including one where America’s top ally, Israel, is fighting Iran-backed ​Hezbollah militants.

Iran also demanded compensation for war damage, emphasised its sovereignty over the strait, and called on the US to end its naval blockade, guarantee no further ​attacks, lift sanctions and remove a ban on Iranian oil sales.

After this, President Trump dismissed the offer in a social media post as “totally unacceptable.”

He also emphasised that the US continues to monitor Iran’s enriched uranium stockpiles via Space Force surveillance and warned of further strikes if a real end to the nuclear issue is not reached.

The war has impacted oil output by the Organisation of the Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC) as it declined to its lowest level since 2000, with production falling by 830,000 barrels per day to an average of 20.04 million barrels per day in April, according to a Reuters survey published Monday.

Kuwait, Saudi Arabia, and Iraq all saw significant output decreases as they were forced to shut in production due to the war, which started in late February.

The United Arab Emirates (UAE) was the only Gulf member that was able to increase production in April. The UAE was able to leverage the Fujairah terminal on the Gulf of Oman to bypass the bottleneck, allowing it to export more crude than its peers. The Emirate is targeting a production capacity of 5 million barrels per day by 2027 after it exited OPEC and OPEC+ this month.

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Nigerian Exchange YtD Gain Crosses 60% After 2.33% Surge

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Nigerian Exchange Limited

By Dipo Olowookere

A 2.33 per cent surge recorded by the Nigerian Exchange (NGX) Limited on Monday pushed its year-to-date (YtD) gain to 60.97 per cent.

This means that the local stock market has gained over 60 per cent this year. This performance has been triggered by a strong appetite for domestic equities, especially from investors with hot money.

Yesterday, the All-Share Index (ASI) rose by 5,705.59 points to 250,481.42 points from 244,775.83 points, and the market capitalisation expanded by N3.160 trillion to N160.254 trillion from N157.094 trillion.

Business Post observed that all the key sectors of the bourse ended in green, with the banking index growing by 4.67 per cent. The industrial goods space increased by 4.32 per cent, the consumer goods counter improved by 0.74 per cent, the insurance sector advanced by 0.59 per cent, and the energy segment soared by 0.03 per cent.

Investor sentiment was bullish as Customs Street ended with 57 price gainers and 21 price losers, implying a positive market breadth index.

The quintet of Livestock Feeds, Integrated Energy Insurance, RT Briscoe, FTN Cocoa, and Union Homes REIT chalked up 10.00 per cent each to sell for N8.80, N2.86, N16.50, N9.13, and N77.00, respectively.

On the flip side, Prestige Assurance lost 10.00 per cent to quite at N1.44, University Press declined by 9.09 per cent to N4.00, Tantalizers slumped by 7.69 per cent to N4.20, NPF Microfinance Bank crashed by 6.25 per cent to N6.00, and Mutual Benefits went down by 5.72 per cent to N4.12.

During the session, market participants traded 1.5 billion equities worth N68.5 billion in 94,834 deals versus the 1.1 billion equities valued at N55.0 billion transacted in 69,996 deals last Friday, indicating a rise in the trading volume, value, and number of deals by 36.36 per cent, 24.55 per cent, and 35.49 per cent, respectively.

At the close of transactions, Veritas Kapital was the busiest stock with a turnover of 194.6 million units valued at N299.1 million. Access Holdings sold 172.1 million units for N4.2 billion, First Holdco exchanged 132.0 million units worth N9.8 billion, FCMB traded 123.9 million units valued at N1.4 billion, and Champion Breweries transacted 83.0 million units worth N1.3 billion.

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Economy

Weak Investor Participation Shrinks NAFEM Inflows to $2.86bn in April

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fx inflows nigeria

By Adedapo Adesanya

Total inflows into the Nigerian Autonomous Foreign Exchange Market (NAFEM) fell sharply in April 2026 as geopolitical tensions and weaker participation from both domestic and foreign investors impacted liquidity in the FX market.

Data from the FMDQ Securities Exchange showed that total foreign exchange inflows declined by 30.1 per cent month-on-month to $2.86 billion in April, down from $4.09 billion recorded in March.

The decline was driven by reduced inflows from the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN), exporters, importers, foreign portfolio investors and non-bank corporates, reflecting growing investor caution amid rising tensions in the Middle East and uncertainty surrounding the US-Iran conflict.

Local inflows, which accounted for 42.8 per cent of total market inflows, dropped by 38.7 per cent to $1.22 billion from $2.00 billion in March.

The steepest decline came from the CBN, whose interventions in the market fell by 83 per cent month-on-month. Inflows from exporters and importers declined by 19.3 per cent, non-bank corporates by 18.2 per cent, while inflows from individuals fell by 33.3 per cent.

Foreign inflows, which contributed 57.2 per cent of the total, also weakened by 21.9 per cent to $1.63 billion compared to $2.09 billion in March.

A breakdown of the foreign component showed that foreign portfolio investment (FPI) inflows dropped by 17.8 per cent, foreign direct investment (FDI) plunged by 78.9 per cent, while inflows from other corporates declined by 54.6 per cent.

Despite the drop in inflows, the local currency posted a modest gain against the US Dollar during the week, appreciating by 1.2 per cent to close at N1,360/$1, supported largely by offshore investor inflows that helped offset domestic demand pressures.

However, the local currency ended the week slightly weaker at the official market, depreciating by 0.22 per cent to N,361.40 per Dollar while gaining 44 basis points at the parallel market to close at N1,363.15/$1.

In the forwards market, the Naira strengthened across all tenors, with the one-month contract appreciating by 1.2 per cent to N1,384.53 to the Dollar, the three-month contract by 1.2 per cent to N1,424.08/$1, the six-month contract by 1.3 per cent to N1,478.39/$1, and the one-year contract by 1.5 per cent to N1,586.56/$1.

Nigeria’s gross external reserves continued their downward trend, declining by $40 million to $48.33 billion as of May 7, 2026. This marked the eighth consecutive week of decline, attributed to sustained CBN interventions, debt service obligations, subdued oil receipts and foreign capital outflows.

Meanwhile, crude oil prices rose in the international market as renewed hostilities between the US and Iran in the Strait of Hormuz raised concerns over potential supply disruptions.

Brent Crude gained 1.2 per cent to $101.30 per barrel while the US West Texas Intermediate (WTI) rose 0.5 per cent to $95.28 per barrel.

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