- Nigeria’s stock market rose 0.61% on Wednesday, pushing year-to-date gains to 41.11%.
- Trading activity slowed, with volumes and turnover both down 19%.
- Banking stocks led gains, with the NGX Banking Index up 54% this year.
- Investors remain upbeat on reforms, despite liquidity and economic risks.
The benchmark index on the <a href="https://usglobalxpress.com/shell-nine-banks-empower-nigerian-oil-service-firms-with-3-billion-msme/” title=”Shell, Nine Banks Empower Nigerian Oil Service Firms with $3 Billion – MSME”>Nigerian Exchange rose 0.61% to close at 219,586.20, lifting year-to-date returns to 41.11%
The index is now up 4.91% over the and 10.34% in the last month, underscoring strong momentum in local equities
Trading activity, however, weakened. Investors exchanged 683.6 million shares valued at N36.1 billion (about $26.2 million), down 19% in both volume and turnover from the previous session
The number of deals also fell 16%, suggesting more selective positioning rather than broad-based participation
The market’s total value stood at N141.4 trillion (about $105 billion), reinforcing Nigeria’s position as one of the largest equity markets in the frontier universe
Gains were concentrated in select consumer and industrial names. Transcorp Hotels, Vitafoam Nigeria, UAC of Nigeria, and Chemical and Allied Products all rose by the daily maximum of 10%
On the losing side, Neimeth International Pharma fell 10%, with additional declines in smaller mortgage and transport-linked stocks
Trading remained heavily skewed toward financials
First HoldCo led volumes with 76.6 million shares, followed by United Bank for Africa, Access Holdings, and Guaranty Trust Holding Company, a pattern that highlights the banking sector’s role as the market’s primary liquidity driver
Sector indices reflected that trend. The NGX Banking Index gained 2.03% on the day and is now up 54.03% this year, outpacing the broader market
Other key indices, including premium and pension stocks, have posted year-to-date gains above 58%, signaling strong demand for large-cap and institutional-grade names
The broader rally comes as investors respond to policy reforms aimed at stabilizing Nigeria’s currency and improving market transparency
With returns now outpacing many emerging and frontier peers, Nigerian equities are increasingly drawing attention from global investors, though liquidity constraints and macro risks remain in focus