• About Us
  • Advertise
  • Privacy & Policy
  • Contact Us
  • Terms and Conditions
Wednesday, April 22, 2026
Verily News
No Result
View All Result
  • News
    • Breaking News
    • Global News
  • Politics
    • Political Analysis
    • Government & Policies
  • Business & Economy
    • DIY and FAQ
    • Product Reviews
  • Entertainment
    • Sports
    • Movie
    • Music
  • Technology
  • Trends
  • Fact-Check
    • Investigative Reports
  • Opinion
  • Share your story
  • News
    • Breaking News
    • Global News
  • Politics
    • Political Analysis
    • Government & Policies
  • Business & Economy
    • DIY and FAQ
    • Product Reviews
  • Entertainment
    • Sports
    • Movie
    • Music
  • Technology
  • Trends
  • Fact-Check
    • Investigative Reports
  • Opinion
  • Share your story
No Result
View All Result
No Result
View All Result
Home Business & Economy

Naira Hits N1,490 at Parallel Market as Exchange Rate Gap Reaches 11-Month High

January 18, 2026
in Business & Economy
Reading Time: 4 mins read
0
Naira
Share on FacebookShare on TwitterShare on Linkedin
Spread the love

Nigeria’s naira slumped to N1,490 against the dollar in the parallel market this week, opening the widest rift with the official exchange rate in nearly a year and signaling fresh turbulence in Africa’s largest economy despite modest improvements in foreign reserves.

The spread between the two markets reached N73 by the close of trading Friday—the most significant divergence since February 2025—underscoring persistent structural weaknesses in Nigeria’s foreign exchange architecture even as the Central Bank attempts to stabilize the currency through reserve accumulation.

While the official market showed marginal strength, with the naira appreciating to N1,417.95 per dollar from N1,424.5 the previous week, street traders in Abuja’s parallel market told a starkly different story. The currency weakened from N1,477 on January 9 to between N1,489 and N1,490 by week’s end, according to data compiled by Nairametrics Research and confirmed by the Central Bank of Nigeria.

The dichotomy reflects what currency analysts describe as a market under siege from demand-side pressures that official interventions have struggled to contain. Despite the CBN’s efforts to project stability through the regulated channel, ordinary Nigerians seeking dollars for travel, education, or business transactions face dramatically different realities in the unofficial market.

The week brought a rare piece of encouraging news: Nigeria’s foreign exchange reserves edged upward to $45.8 billion from $45.6 billion, according to CBN figures. Central Bank officials attribute the modest $200 million increase to improved oil export revenues and portfolio investment inflows—a welcome development for an economy heavily dependent on petroleum receipts.

Yet the reserve improvement has done little to ease pressure on the currency. Market observers note that while external buffers are strengthening incrementally, demand for foreign exchange continues to outstrip available supply across both official and parallel channels.

“The reserves are moving in the right direction, but the fundamentals haven’t changed,” said one Lagos-based currency dealer who requested anonymity. “Everyone needs dollars, and there simply aren’t enough to go around.”

The widening gap carries particular significance for those who remember February 2025, when Nigeria’s currency markets descended into chaos. On February 5 of last year, the official rate collapsed to N1,499 per dollar while the parallel market soared to N1,605—a disparity that briefly saw the regulated market trading weaker than street rates, an unusual inversion that highlighted the depth of the crisis.

The current N73 spread represents the most severe divergence since that turbulent period, raising concerns that Nigeria may be sliding back toward the instability that characterized the early months of 2025.

At year-end 2025, the gap had already begun widening significantly, with the parallel market closing at approximately N1,470 per dollar against the official rate of N1,429. The deterioration has accelerated in recent weeks despite seasonal expectations of improved dollar liquidity in the first quarter.

Currency specialists view the expanding differential as more than a statistical curiosity. The gap creates profitable arbitrage opportunities for those with access to both markets, effectively rewarding well-connected individuals and businesses who can purchase dollars at official rates and resell them at parallel market premiums.

More significantly, the divergence reflects growing numbers of Nigerians unable to access foreign exchange through legitimate channels, forcing them into the unregulated Bureau de Change segment, where rates respond more directly to supply shortages.

“When the gap widens like this, it tells you that official allocations aren’t meeting market needs,” explained a forex analyst at a Lagos investment firm. “People are being rationed out of the official market and have no choice but to pay premium rates on the street.”

Historically, prolonged disparities between the two markets have exerted gravitational pull on the official rate, eventually forcing the CBN to allow devaluation to narrow the spread. The central bank has responded to similar episodes with direct dollar sales and other interventions designed to close the gap and restore confidence in the managed exchange rate system.

As the trading week closes, all eyes turn to the CBN’s next move. Will policymakers deploy reserves to defend the official rate and narrow the spread through market interventions? Or will they allow the gap to persist, risking further erosion of confidence in Nigeria’s dual exchange rate system?

The stakes extend beyond currency markets. A persistently weak naira drives up import costs, fueling inflation that has already strained Nigerian households. It also influences business planning, investment decisions, and the broader economic expectations that shape Nigeria’s growth trajectory.

For now, the numbers tell a story of an economy caught between competing pressures—modest reserve growth offering hope on one hand, relentless currency depreciation stoking anxiety on the other. As one market trader put it succinctly: “The official numbers look better, but nobody’s celebrating when you need N1,490 to buy a dollar on the street.”

The Central Bank has not yet commented publicly on this week’s developments or indicated whether fresh interventions are planned.

WHAT YOU SHOULD KNOW

Nigeria’s naira fell to N1,490 per dollar in the parallel market this week, creating a N73 gap with the official rate—the widest divergence in 11 months.

The official market showed the naira at N1,417.95 per dollar on Friday, a slight improvement from N1,424.5 the previous week. But street traders in Abuja reported rates between N1,489 and N1,490, up from N1,477 on January 9.

The widening spread marks the largest gap since February 2025, when the official rate hit N1,499 and the parallel market reached N1,605.

Tags: CBNExchange rateNairaParallel Market
Share197Tweet123Share34
Previous Post

NDLEA Captures Fugitive Drug Kingpin Linked to Murder of Officers After 12 Years

Next Post

Nigerian Stock Market Surges 44% in Mid-January Rally as Equities Drive Historic Growth

Related Posts

Oil

Global Oil Prices Fall

by Victoria Ogbadu
April 21, 2026
0

Crude oil prices tumbled more than $1 during Tuesday’s early trading session, as energy markets pivoted from the immediate shock...

Cash

CBN and NCC Sign New MoU

by Victoria Ogbadu
April 21, 2026
0

The Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) and the Nigerian Communications Commission (NCC) on Monday signed a landmark Memorandum of Understanding...

Dangote Sugar Plans Massive Rights Issue

Dangote Sugar Plans Massive Rights Issue

by Victoria Ogbadu
April 20, 2026
0

Dangote Sugar Refinery Plc has secured shareholder approval to raise up to ₦500 billion through a Rights Issue, one of...

NPA

NPA Retirees Threaten to Shut Down All Ports (See Why)

by Victoria Ogbadu
April 20, 2026
0

Retired workers of the Nigerian Ports Authority (NPA) have issued a stern warning that could bring the nation’s critical maritime...

Flutterwave

FG Eyes $75 Million Stake in Flutterwave Listing

by Victoria Ogbadu
April 20, 2026
0

Nigeria's Federal Government is considering a $75 million stake in Flutterwave's $250 million public offering (IPO), marking an unprecedented sovereign...

Load More
Next Post
NGX

Nigerian Stock Market Surges 44% in Mid-January Rally as Equities Drive Historic Growth

Museveni Secures Seventh Term as Uganda Election Is Overshadowed by Violence, Internet Blackout

Uganda President Museveni Brands Opposition “Terrorists” After Securing Seventh Term

Senegal vs Morocco AFCON Final

Senegal Shock Morocco to Clinch AFCON Title After Extra-Time Drama

Photo of Vice President Kashim Shettima

Shettima Leads Nigerian Delegation to Davos as Country Makes Historic Debut at 2026 World Economic Forum

Senegal players celebrating after beating Morocco 1-0 to win the Africa Cup of Nations final match

FULL LIST: AFCON 2025 Award Winners as CAF Confirms Senegal’s Champions

Photo of abuja city gate

FCTA Removes 607 Beggars, Mentally Challenged Persons From Abuja Streets

ATM

Nigerian ATM Withdrawals Triple to N36.34 Trillion Despite New Banking Fees

Photo of Kayode Egbetokun

IGP Denies Arrest of Peaceful Protesters, Says Ekpoma Suspects Linked to Looting, Vandalism

Dollar

Dollar Tumbles as Trump's Greenland Tariff Threat Triggers Market Turbulence

Oil

Oil Markets Retreat as Iran Tensions Ease, Though Global Supply Concerns Linger

  • Trending
  • Comments
  • Latest
cbn governor olayemi cardoso

CBN Approves Merger Between Two Banks

February 23, 2026
2027: APC Governors Endorse Next Senate President After Akpabio

APC Governorship Candidate Joins ADC

March 16, 2026
NNPC Increases Petrol Price

NNPC Reduces Fuel Price

March 17, 2026
Kenya Airways

Viral video: Drama at Airport as Nigerian Woman Clashes with Kenya Airways Over Visa Issue

0
NLC

NLC Suspends Nationwide Protest Over Telecom Tariff Hike

0
VeryDarkMan

VeryDarkMan Vows to Uncover Truth in Mercy Chinwo and Ex-Manager’s Controversy

0
Labour Party

Tension As Labour Party Leadership Battle Escalates

April 22, 2026
Oil

Oil Dips as Iran Ceasefire Doubts Bite

April 22, 2026
Photo of NEC meeting

Minister Quits for Governorship Race

April 22, 2026
Verily News

Copyright © 2025 Verily News.

Navigate Site

  • About Us
  • Advertise
  • Privacy & Policy
  • Contact Us
  • Terms and Conditions

Follow Us

No Result
View All Result
  • News
    • Breaking News
    • Global News
  • Politics
    • Political Analysis
    • Government & Policies
  • Business & Economy
    • DIY and FAQ
    • Product Reviews
  • Entertainment
    • Sports
    • Movie
    • Music
  • Technology
  • Trends
  • Fact-Check
    • Investigative Reports
  • Opinion
  • Share your story

Copyright © 2025 Verily News.

This website uses cookies. By continuing to use this website you are giving consent to cookies being used. Visit our Privacy and Cookie Policy.
Get Breaking News Alerts on WhatsApp