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Nigeria's Economic Headwinds Intensify as Current Account Surplus Plummets Amid Domestic Institutional Turmoil
ABI Analysis
·
Nigeria
macro
Sentiment: -0.85 (very_negative)
·
18/03/2026
Nigeria's macroeconomic stability faces mounting pressures as new data reveals a significant deterioration in the nation's external position, coinciding with deepening institutional fractures that threaten operational continuity across critical sectors. For European investors and entrepreneurs with exposure to Africa's largest economy, these converging challenges demand immediate strategic reassessment. The Central Bank of Nigeria's latest Balance of Payments report delivers sobering news: the country's current account surplus contracted sharply by 26 percent year-on-year, declining from $19.03 billion in 2024 to $14.04 billion in 2025. This substantial erosion—representing a loss of nearly $5 billion in external earnings—signals fundamental vulnerabilities in Nigeria's foreign exchange generation capacity. For context, this surplus remains Nigeria's critical buffer against currency volatility and external shocks, making this contraction particularly concerning for investors dependent on stable naira valuations and predictable remittance flows. The deterioration reflects multiple underlying pressures. Crude oil export revenues, historically Nigeria's primary foreign exchange source, remain subject to volatile global commodity pricing and production constraints. Simultaneously, the nation grapples with persistent inflation, which has eroded competitiveness in non-oil export sectors and undermined domestic purchasing power. Manufacturing output growth has stalled, while agricultural productivity continues underperformance despite sector reformation efforts. Compounding these external challenges, Nigeria's institutional landscape
Gateway Intelligence
European investors should immediately implement hedging strategies for naira exposure, as the 26-percent current account contraction signals elevated currency depreciation risk through 2025. Simultaneously, reassess timeline expectations for projects dependent on university-educated workforces or requiring political stability—labor disputes and governance fragmentation suggest extended implementation delays. Consider reallocating capital toward sectors with hard-currency revenue generation (telecoms, oil services, export agriculture) while reducing exposure to domestic-demand-dependent industries until macroeconomic stabilization becomes evident.
Sources: Vanguard Nigeria, Vanguard Nigeria, Vanguard Nigeria, Vanguard Nigeria, Vanguard Nigeria, Vanguard Nigeria