NGX market loss deepens as profit-taking, inflation concerns and lower oil prices weigh on investor sentiment and market performance
Investors on the Nigerian Exchange (NGX), global central banks, energy traders and financial regulators navigated a turbulent week marked by falling crude oil prices, persistent inflation concerns and a significant selloff in equities that erased billions of naira from market value.
Also read: NGX suffers fresh decline on heavyweight selloffs
The NGX Market Loss reflected broader uncertainty across financial markets as an interim peace agreement between the United States and Iran eased geopolitical tensions in the Middle East, triggering a sharp decline in oil prices while central banks maintained a cautious stance on interest rates.
Global markets initially welcomed the diplomatic breakthrough, which enabled the movement of previously stranded crude shipments through the Strait of Hormuz.
The development significantly reduced geopolitical risk premiums that had supported oil prices for months.
As a result, Brent crude fell 13.53 per cent to $80.43 per barrel, while West Texas Intermediate declined 15.17 per cent to $76.41 per barrel.
The drop provided relief for inflation-sensitive economies but also raised concerns for oil-exporting nations such as Nigeria, where government revenues remain heavily dependent on crude exports.
Despite improving energy market conditions, major central banks remained firmly focused on inflation.
In the United States, the Federal Open Market Committee, led by newly appointed Chairman Kevin Warsh, left benchmark interest rates unchanged within a target range of 3.50 per cent to 3.75 per cent.
Policymakers signalled that borrowing costs could remain elevated for an extended period as inflation continued to hover at 4.20 per cent.
The Bank of England adopted a similar approach, maintaining its benchmark rate at 3.75 per cent despite inflation easing to 2.80 per cent. Policymakers cited lingering pressures in services and transportation costs as reasons for caution.
Financial analysts noted that the continuation of a “higher-for-longer” interest rate environment is keeping borrowing costs elevated across global debt and capital markets, limiting investor appetite for risk assets.
The cryptocurrency market also reflected the cautious mood. Bitcoin posted a marginal gain of 0.39 per cent to $63,133.53, while Ethereum rose 3.07 per cent to $1,701.45.
Market observers attributed the subdued performance to reduced speculative demand amid expectations of prolonged monetary tightening.
In Africa, inflation trends remained mixed.
South Africa’s inflation rate accelerated to 4.50 per cent year-on-year in May, exceeding the preferred range of the South African Reserve Bank. Rising transportation costs and fuel-related pressures contributed significantly to the increase.
Nigeria continued to face its own inflation challenges. According to recent National Bureau of Statistics data, headline inflation rose for a third consecutive month to 15.93 per cent, while food inflation climbed to 16.96 per cent.
Transportation costs also increased by 17.09 per cent year-on-year, reflecting persistent supply chain and logistics pressures.
Against this backdrop, the Nigerian stock market recorded one of its weakest performances in recent weeks.
The NGX Market Loss saw the All-Share Index decline by 3.59 per cent week-on-week to 235,941.27 points from 244,738.74 points.
Market capitalisation fell by the same margin to N153.37 trillion, wiping approximately N5.45 trillion from investor holdings.
Profit-taking activity dominated trading, with 87 listed equities recording losses. Trading volume also weakened significantly, declining by 29.98 per cent to three billion units, while market breadth deteriorated sharply.
Several heavyweight stocks led the downturn. Dangote Cement declined by 7.36 per cent, while First HoldCo shed 20.29 per cent of its market value.
Despite the bearish sentiment, regulators advanced measures aimed at strengthening long-term market efficiency.
The Nigerian Exchange proposed a new three-tier trading framework that would replace the existing uniform 100,000-unit threshold for price movements with a more flexible price-dependent system.
Market participants believe the change could improve liquidity and price discovery, particularly among premium-listed equities.
Meanwhile, the Central Bank of Nigeria unveiled draft regulations requiring financial holding companies to maintain a 20 per cent capital buffer above the combined capital requirements of their subsidiaries.
The proposed rule is expected to trigger fresh capital-raising activities across the banking sector through rights issues, private placements and other funding mechanisms over the next two years.
While easing geopolitical tensions have improved the outlook for global energy markets, investors remain focused on inflation, interest rates and economic growth prospects.
Also read: NGX All-Share index surpasses 201,000 points as investors gain ₦1.97tn
Analysts say the coming weeks will likely determine whether recent market weakness represents a temporary correction or the beginning of a broader revaluation across equities and fixed-income assets.
Victory Emmanuel is a journalist and contributor to Freelanews.com, covering news, business, and public affairs.






















