Tag: Foreign inflows

  • UK investors drive 65%of Nigeria’s foreign inflows

    UK investors drive 65%of Nigeria’s foreign inflows

    Nigeria attracted about 65 per cent of its current foreign capital inflows from United Kingdom investors over the past year, with investments including $7.5million into Babban Gona and $40.5million into Johnvent Industries, the Federal Government has said.

    The Federal Ministry of Industry, Trade and Investment, in the document titled ‘2025: A Defining Year for Nigeria’s Industry, Trade and Investment’, stated that investors from the United Kingdom contributed significantly to the rising investment inflows in the country.

    The document reviewed reforms and outcomes under the Renewed Hope Agenda of President Bola Tinubu. According to the ministry, the strong UK inflows followed the activation of the UK–Nigeria Enhanced Trade and Investment Partnership and broader reforms aimed at restoring investor confidence and improving market access.

     “UK investors now account for approximately 65 per cent of recent inflows, including $7.5million into Babban Gona and $40.5million into Johnvent Industries,” the Minister of Trade & Investment, Jumoke Oduwole, stated. She described the investment growth as evidence of renewed confidence in Nigeria’s reform trajectory.

    The ministry noted that 2025 marked a defining phase in Nigeria’s economic repositioning, as coordinated reforms across investment attraction, trade expansion, and institutional strengthening translated policy intent into measurable outcomes.

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    It noted that Nigeria recorded a decisive turnaround in investment attraction under President Tinubu, with the government responding strategically to global economic headwinds and “clearly signalling that Nigeria is open for business.”

    It added that Nigeria significantly strengthened its investment facilitation architecture during the year, shifting from passive promotion to an active, systems-driven model that reduced information gaps, improved project visibility and enhanced the bankability of investment pipelines.

    As a result, the ministry said four priority projects valued at $13.7billion progressed, representing a conversion rate of over 25 per cent from the $50.8billion worth of signed Memoranda of Understanding.

    “Through structured deal origination, the Federal Ministry of Industry, Trade & Investment (FMITI) has proactively built a de-risked pipeline exceeding $5billon across priority sectors,” the ministry stated, adding that the approach supported investors “from first engagement to firm commitment.”

    The ministry linked the growing UK inflows to sustained bilateral engagements and trade modernisation efforts, noting that Nigeria deepened investment pipelines through high-level missions to the UK and other key economies.

    It said these engagements reshaped investor perceptions and strengthened Nigeria’s relevance within global investment circles, delivering “tangible gains” in deal quality and investor confidence.

    Beyond foreign capital, the ministry highlighted progress in export-led growth, reporting that non-oil exports grew by 21 per cent to $12.8billion in the first half of 2025, nearly double the $6.5billion target.

    The growth contributed to a N12trillion trade surplus in the period, while overall trade value expanded by 14 per cent, driven by targeted trade reforms, improved export processes and increased value addition.

    Nigeria’s leading non-oil exports included cocoa and cocoa derivatives, sesame seeds, cashew nuts, shea butter, ginger, hibiscus flower, rubber, palm oil derivatives, fertilisers, cement and liquefied natural gas.

    The ministry noted that it worked with the Nigerian Export Promotion Council to train 27,352 exporters, certify 200 micro, small and medium enterprises for international trade and support 3,047 farmers through the distribution of hybrid seedlings.

    Furthermore, it stated that Special Economic Zones generated over $500milio in export revenues and created more than 20,000 direct jobs through the Nigerian Export Processing Zones Authority and the Oil and Gas Free Zones Authority.

    On macroeconomic performance, the ministry said bold reforms, including foreign exchange liberalisation, fuel subsidy removal and monetary tightening, helped restore investor confidence.

    It noted that the Nigerian Exchange ranked fifth among the world’s top-performing stock exchanges in 2025 and fourth in Africa, as combined foreign portfolio investment and foreign direct investment reached nearly $14billion between the first quarter and third quarter, surpassing total inflows in 2024.

    Foreign portfolio investment led the recovery, rising to $12.99billion, while foreign direct investment increased by 700 per cent quarter-on-quarter in Q3 2025 to reach $936million year-to-date.

    On domestic capital, the ministry said the Federal Government rolled out investment retention and expansion strategy anchored on Nigerian investors, whom it described as “the first and most enduring vote of confidence in the economy.”

    It cited the hosting of Nigeria’s first Domestic Investors Summit, where 75 per cent of investor issues were resolved on the spot and all were closed within five working days, as a shift from ad-hoc engagement to an execution-driven model.

    Nigeria’s Minister of Industry, Trade and Investment, Dr. Jumoke Oduwole, also led company visits across manufacturing, agro-processing, electric vehicles and industrial clusters to resolve bottlenecks and support reinvestment.

    The ministry further said Nigeria advanced its leadership under the African Continental Free Trade Area, securing appointment as Co-Champion of the AfCFTA Protocol on Digital Trade alongside Kenya and South Africa.

    Looking ahead, the ministry said it would build on the momentum in 2026 by focusing on execution and verifiable impact, with investor playbooks in priority sectors such as solid minerals, digital trade, the creative economy and climate-smart industrialisation.

    “Collectively, these results affirm that 2025 marked a decisive inflexion point for Nigeria, restoring investor confidence, strengthening competitiveness, expanding exports, and laying the foundation for sustained and inclusive growth,” the ministry stated.

  • Foreign inflows rise by 53 per cent

    Foreign inflows rise by 53 per cent

    Foreign investors are showing stronger appetite for Nigeria as inflows from foreign sources into the foreign exchange (forex) market rose to the highest level in more than five years.

    Latest report at the Nigerian Autonomous Foreign Exchange Market (NAFEM) yesterday indicated that monthly inflows to the forex market rose by 53.5 per cent to $4.74 billion in January 2025, from $3.09 billion recorded in December 2024.

    The surge was particularly driven by inflows from foreign sources, which jumped to its highest level in more than five years, with an increase of 192.1 per cent from $790.3 million in December 2024 to $2.31 billion in January 2025.

    Foreign sources accounted for 48.8 per cent of total inflows into the forex market while collections from local sources accounted for 51.2 per cent.

    Inflows from foreign sources underscored increased investors’ appetite for Nigerian investments.

    Foreign portfolio investments (FPIs) transactions grew by 213 per cent between December 2024 and January 2025. This moderated decline in inflows from other corporates and foreign direct investments (FDI), which dropped by 45.4 per cent and 36.5 per cent respectively.

    Inflows from local sources inched up by 5.6 per cent from $2.3 billion in December 2024 to $2.43 billion in January 2025, driven by increases across all segments.

    Also, inflows from individuals rose by 33.2 per cent while inflows from the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN)  and exporters and importers improved by 20.1 per cent and 20.9 per cent respectively. However, inflows from non-bank corporates dropped by 10.7 per cent.

    Analysts said the upsurge in inflows underlined increased market confidence and improved trade opportunities at the Nigerian capital market.

    “Barring any shock, we anticipate forex inflows to remain robust in the short term due to improved market confidence, which has been bolstered by the adoption of the Electronic Foreign Exchange Market System (EFEMS),” Cordros Capital stated.

    FPI transactions at the Nigerian Exchange (NGX) had more than doubled from N410.62 billion in 2023 to N852.03 billion in 2024.

    The increase in foreign transactions supported resilient domestic demand to push NGX to its highest-ever turnover of N5.587 trillion in 2024. It had recorded N3.578 trillion in 2023.

    Nigerian equities market started this year on a bullish note with net capital gain of N1.95 trillion in January 2025. Most analysts expected the market to record a double-digit return for the year.

    Aggregate market value of all quoted equities at the NGX closed January  2025 at N64.709 trillion as against N62.763 trillion recorded as the year’s opening value.

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    The All Share Index (ASI)- the common value-based index that tracks all share prices at the NGX, posted average return of 1.53 per cent in January 2025, rising from the year’s opening index of 102,926.40 points to close at 104,496.12 basis points.

    Nigeria’s recent $2.2b Eurobond had recorded 300 per cent oversubscription with investors staking $9 billion on the country’s first Eurobond in more than two years. Nigeria offered two tenors of a six and half years and 10 years Eurobonds, with both medium-tenor and long-tenor bonds massively oversubscribed.

    The strong international demand allowed Nigeria to tighten its coupon rates with the guidance rates for the 6.5 years and 10 years bonds at 9.625 per cent and 10.375 per cent respectively, a substantial discount to initial guidance.

    Experts have attributed the upbeat at the stock market to the increasing attractiveness of the Nigerian market to foreign investors, the ongoing economic reforms, resilient earnings by Nigerian companies, exchange rate differential,  banking recapitalisation and the reform in the oil sector.

    Managing Director, AIICO Capital, Dr Femi Ademola, said Nigerian equities have become very attractive to both foreign and domestic investors.

    “The equities market has become very attractive, mostly due to the devaluation of the currency, which make the shares very cheap, especially to foreign investors. “