Economy
Inflation slows to 21.88% in July even as food prices climb
Headline inflation eased for a fourth straight month in July to 21.88% from 22.22% in June following an update to the CPI basket and base year. However, food inflation ticked higher to 22.74%, underscoring persistent pressure on household budgets. The Central Bank maintained the policy rate at 27.5%, signalling a preference to consolidate disinflation trends while monitoring exchange-rate and supply-side risks.
Source: https://www.reuters.com/world/africa/nigerias-inflation-eases-july-food-price-rise-2025-08-15/
Economy
Naira Rebounds To ₦1,363.5/$
The naira on Friday strengthened to close at ₦1,363.5 per dollar at the official foreign exchange market.
The development followed a sharp depreciation at the start of the week, according to data tracked on the Central Bank of Nigeria’s (CBN) website.
The currency fell to ₦1,425 per dollar on Monday, down from ₦1,398 per dollar recorded the previous Friday.
Monday’s drop marked its weakest closing level since January 12, 2026, when it last traded at the same rate.
By Tuesday, the naira appreciated to ₦1,390.5 per dollar. Further gains were recorded on Wednesday, when the currency traded at ₦1,373.5 per dollar.
The recovery continued on Thursday, with the naira strengthening to ₦1,370 per dollar.
The currency gained more than ₦60 within four trading days after the early-week slide, extending the recovery on Friday to close at ₦1,363.5 per dollar.
The Central Bank of Nigeria said the country’s improving external reserve position could help cushion the naira against prolonged pressure.
According to the apex bank, Nigeria’s net foreign exchange reserves rose to $34.80 billion at the end of 2025, reflecting improved external liquidity.
The governor of the apex bank, Olayemi Cardoso, said ongoing monetary and foreign exchange reforms are aimed at strengthening market confidence and improving liquidity.
Economy
Nigeria Recorded ₦2.28 Trillion VAT in Q3 2025 – NBS
Economy
Naira Closes in the Red at ₦1,341.35/$
The foreign exchange (FX) market witnessed increased demand during Thursday’s trading session, driven by risk-off sentiment among Foreign Portfolio Investors (FPIs).
The heightened demand tilted the market toward the bid side, exerting upward pressure on rates. As a result, benchmark rates weakened across the board, shedding ₦3.24 to settle at ₦1,341.35/$.
The official window recorded increased dollar demand during the session, largely attributed to risk-off sentiment among FPIs.
The stronger demand tilted the market toward the bid side, exerting additional pressure on the naira across official benchmarks.
-
NFEM VWAP: Fell by ₦3.24 to close at ₦1,341.35/$.
-
CBN Closing Rate: Declined by ₦6.00, ending the day at ₦1,346.00/$.
Throughout the session, intraday trades fluctuated between a high of ₦1,350.00 and a low of ₦1,332.00.
Market analysts suggest that the naira’s near-term direction will continue to be influenced by prevailing supply-and-demand dynamics, as the apex bank maintains efforts to stabilise the foreign exchange market.
-
Entertainment7 months agoSean Kingston sentenced to 3½ years in prison over $1 million fraud
-
Health8 months ago
Nigerian nurses stage seven‑day warning strike over pay, staffing
-
Economy7 months agoNigeria approves plan to refinance ₦4tn power-sector debt
-
Energy7 months agoDangote Refinery to deploy 4,000 gas‑powered trucks for distribution
-
Education8 months agoJAMB sets 2025/26 university cut‑off at 150, bars under‑16
-
Crime & Justice1 month agoBREAKING: Two Chinese Directors Jailed 46 Years Each Over ₦3.4bn, $2.5m Crypto Fraud in Lagos
-
Crime & Justice1 month agoEFCC Arraigns One for ₦20m Fraud in Maiduguri
-
EFCC1 month agoEFCC Arraigns Ex-BSIEC Chairman, 10 Others Over Alleged ₦1.1bn Election Funds Fraud
