The Nigerian Naira has achieved a significant milestone this week, breaking through crucial resistance levels against the British pound sterling and continuing its remarkable bullish trajectory that began last month, marking a dramatic reversal of fortune for Africa’s largest economy.
Nigerian Currency Demonstrates Unexpected Strength
In what currency analysts are calling one of 2025‘s most surprising turnarounds, the Naira closed the week’s final trading session at approximately N1,885-N1,890 per pound in both interbank and official markets. Throughout the week, exchange rates fluctuated within a relatively tight band of N1,877 to N1,896 per pound, demonstrating unusual stability for the historically volatile currency.
The parallel market, traditionally characterized by higher premiums due to limited official forex access, saw rates stabilize comfortably below the N1,950 per pound threshold—a development that suggests improving market confidence and reduced arbitrage opportunities between official and unofficial channels.
CBN Reforms Bear Fruit
Market observers attribute the Naira’s resurgence to the Central Bank of Nigeria’s market-oriented reforms, which have begun to yield tangible results after months of implementation. The local currency has staged what analysts describe as an “amazing comeback” in 2025, defying widespread predictions of continued depreciation that dominated forecasts at the end of 2024.
“What we’re witnessing is the fruit of structural reforms,” commented a senior forex dealer who requested anonymity. “Improved foreign reserves and enhanced dollar inflows have provided a critical safety net for the currency, even as it remains vulnerable to oil price fluctuations.”
Against the US dollar, the Naira has maintained its position below the psychologically important N1,450 mark, settling at approximately N1,435-N1,438 in official markets as of November 7. The currency closed at N1,435.03, representing a marginal 0.22 percent decline from the previous session but still reflecting impressive year-to-date gains of 7-14 percent against the greenback.
The Naira’s trading range in 2025 tells a story of volatility tamed: from a high of N1,607-N1,624 per dollar in May to current lows of N1,425-N1,444, demonstrating the CBN’s increasing success in managing exchange rate pressures.
UK-Nigeria Trade Relations Flourish
The currency movements occur against a backdrop of strengthening economic ties between Nigeria and the United Kingdom. Bilateral trade in goods and services reached £8 billion in the twelve months ending in Q2 2025 (July 2024 to June 2025), representing an 11.1 percent increase—or £793 million—from the previous comparable period.
This robust trade relationship, underpinned by post-Brexit agreements, Commonwealth partnership frameworks, and deep historical connections, continues to provide fundamental support for currency flows between the two nations.
Global Currency Markets in Turmoil
The Naira’s strength comes even as global currency markets experienced significant turbulence this week. The British pound sterling itself came under severe pressure, testing the critical 1.30 support level against the US dollar early in the week before recovering to 1.31 by Friday’s close.
The pound’s difficulties stemmed from a perfect storm of factors: a resurgent US dollar climbing to five-month highs against major currencies, safe-haven flows triggered by a dramatic sell-off in global equity markets, and growing concerns about overvalued technology stocks, particularly in the artificial intelligence sector.
The “sell everything” mentality that gripped markets saw investors liquidating positions across asset classes, with even traditional safe havens like gold being sold to cover losses in plummeting tech stocks.
Central Bank Divergence
Adding to currency market complexity, the Bank of England held interest rates steady at 4 percent while signaling an almost certain rate cut in December—a stance now fully priced into forward curves and short-dated gilt yields. This dovish pivot has weighed heavily on sterling for the past month.
In contrast, expectations for further US Federal Reserve rate cuts have diminished significantly following stronger-than-expected economic data. ADP private payroll figures showed 42,000 jobs added in October—nearly double the 25,000 forecast—while the ISM Services PMI jumped to 52.4, driven by robust new orders.
These divergent monetary policy trajectories initially pushed the GBP/USD pair to challenge the psychologically crucial 1.3000 level before a midweek reversal, sparked by declining US Treasury yields and renewed concerns about a protracted government shutdown in Washington.
Data Drought Ahead
Looking forward, the ongoing US government shutdown—already the longest in American history—threatens to create a significant data vacuum that could amplify market volatility. Critical releases including Nonfarm Payrolls, Jobless Claims, the Producer Price Index, Consumer Price Index, and Retail Sales figures for October remain postponed pending resolution of the funding impasse.
Market participants will likely focus on private sector data releases and Federal Reserve official commentary to fill the information gap. In the UK, Tuesday’s employment data is expected to provide crucial direction for pound traders navigating the December rate cut expectations.
Cautious Optimism for Naira
While the Naira’s recent performance has exceeded expectations, economists caution that sustained stability will require continued structural reforms, particularly diversification away from oil dependency. The currency remains inherently vulnerable to global crude price fluctuations, which continue to dominate Nigeria’s foreign exchange earnings.
Nevertheless, for now, Nigerian monetary authorities can take satisfaction in a currency turnaround that few predicted—and one that stands in stark contrast to the turbulence affecting traditional safe-haven currencies in developed markets.
WHAT YOU SHOULD KNOW
The Nigerian Naira has defied expectations, breaking key resistance levels against the British pound (settling at N1,885-N1,890/£) and gaining 7-14% against the US dollar year-to-date, now trading below N1,450/$—a dramatic reversal attributed to the Central Bank of Nigeria’s market-oriented reforms and improved foreign reserves.
Strong UK-Nigeria Trade Growth: Bilateral trade between both nations reached £8 billion (up 11.1%), providing fundamental support for currency stability.
Global Context Matters: The Naira’s strength is particularly notable given that major currencies like the pound sterling faced significant pressure from a resurgent US dollar, equity market turmoil, and diverging central bank policies.
While Nigeria’s currency recovery is impressive and demonstrates the effectiveness of CBN reforms, long-term stability depends on continued structural changes—particularly diversification away from oil dependency—as the Naira remains vulnerable to global crude price fluctuations. For now, however, Nigeria has achieved what many thought impossible: a sustained currency appreciation in 2025.























