The Nigerian Exchange (NGX) edged higher in Tuesday’s trading session, marking a quiet but notable day on the bourse as surging transaction volumes offset subdued price movements across the broader market.
The All Share Index (ASI) inched up a marginal 0.01 percent to settle at 149,459.11 points, adding 21.23 basis points, while market capitalization rose by the same percentage to close at N95.28 trillion. Despite the modest gains in headline indices, the session was characterized by extraordinary liquidity, with investors exchanging over 1.026 billion shares worth N21.83 billion across 23,701 deals.
Access Corp Dominates Trading Activity
The day’s trading was overwhelmingly dominated by Access Holdings Corporation Plc, the parent company of Nigeria’s largest bank by assets. Investors traded a staggering 385.834 million units of Access Corp shares valued at N7.72 billion in 1,372 separate transactions, accounting for nearly 38 percent of total market volume and over 35 percent of the session’s traded value.
Remarkably, despite this intense activity, the stock price remained flat at N20.00 per share, suggesting balanced buy and sell pressures as institutional and retail investors repositioned their holdings in the Tier 1 lender.
Sharp Surge in Market Liquidity
Compared to Monday’s session, trading volume jumped by an impressive 85.52 percent, while traded value increased by 64.48 percent—a clear indication that investors are actively rotating capital and seeking opportunities amid Nigeria’s evolving economic landscape. However, the number of deals declined by 18.01 percent, suggesting that larger block trades dominated the session rather than smaller retail transactions.
“The significant increase in volume and value, particularly concentrated in Access Corp, shows that institutional money is moving,” noted a market analyst who requested anonymity. “This kind of liquidity surge often signals either portfolio rebalancing or strategic positioning ahead of corporate actions or earnings releases.”
Banking and Consumer Goods Sectors Lead Activity
Trading activity was concentrated in banking and consumer goods stocks, sectors that have historically attracted institutional interest due to their liquidity and fundamental strength. Beyond Access Holdings, other financial services firms, including Sterling Financial Holdings, FCMB Group, and First HoldCo, drew strong investor attention.
Champion Breweries followed Access Corp on the volume chart, trading 111.78 million shares valued at N817.82 million, while Sterling Bank moved 85.49 million shares worth N589.88 million. FCMB Group and First HoldCo rounded out the top five most actively traded stocks.
Market Breadth Turns Positive
Of the 129 equities that participated in trading, market breadth closed positive with 31 gainers outpacing 26 losers—a sign of cautious optimism among investors despite persistent concerns about macroeconomic headwinds.
Leading the gainers was Aluminium Extrusion Industries (ALEX), which surged by the maximum daily limit of 10 percent to close at N9.35 per share. Guinness Nigeria posted an equally impressive rally of 9.98 percent to N263.40, as investors returned to select consumer stocks with strong brand equity and pricing power. MeCure Industries and Multiverse Mining & Exploration also posted near-limit gains of 9.95 percent each.
On the declining side, Haldane McCall led losers with a steep 9.93 percent drop to N3.72 per share, while LivingTrust Mortgage Bank and Veritas Kapital Assurance both fell 9.09 percent, reflecting profit-taking pressure in smaller-cap stocks.
Sectoral Performance Mixed
Sectoral indices presented a mixed picture. The NGX Insurance Index rose 0.36 percent, while the Consumer Goods Index advanced 0.21 percent, extending its remarkable year-to-date gain beyond 100 percent—a testament to the sector’s resilience amid inflationary pressures.
The NGX Pension and Premium indices also closed marginally higher. However, the NGX Top 30 Index dipped 0.08 percent, and the Main Board Index edged down 0.01 percent, suggesting that gains were not uniformly distributed across the market’s largest companies.
Outlook: Cautious Optimism Prevails
With the NGX maintaining a year-to-date return of 45.21 percent, investors remain positioned for continued gains, though selectivity has become increasingly important as valuations stretch and economic uncertainties persist.
Market watchers expect liquidity to remain robust in the near term as investors continue rotating into fundamentally sound, high-volume stocks with strong institutional backing. However, selective profit-taking is likely to persist, particularly in stocks that have enjoyed outsized gains in recent months.
“The market is at an interesting juncture,” said one equity strategist. “Strong liquidity and positive sentiment are keeping indices supported, but investors are becoming more discerning about where they deploy capital. The focus is clearly on quality and liquidity.”
As Nigeria navigates ongoing currency reforms, inflation management, and monetary policy adjustments, the exchange’s performance will likely continue to reflect both domestic investor confidence and international sentiment toward frontier markets.
For now, Tuesday’s session suggests the Nigerian Exchange remains resilient, with institutional activity providing a solid foundation even as the broader market consolidates recent gains.
WHAT YOU SHOULD KNOW
The Nigerian Exchange posted a marginal 0.01% gain on Tuesday, but the real story was the dramatic 85.52% surge in trading volume—driven almost entirely by Access Corp, which accounted for 385.8 million shares traded despite its price remaining flat at N20.00. This exceptional liquidity spike signals strong institutional repositioning in Nigeria’s banking sector, while the market’s impressive 45.21% year-to-date return continues to attract investor interest.
With 31 gainers against 26 losers, sentiment remains cautiously optimistic, though selective profit-taking suggests investors are becoming more discerning about quality and value at current price levels.
Massive institutional money is moving in Nigerian banks, particularly Access Corp, indicating strategic positioning ahead of potential catalysts—watch this space for upcoming corporate developments.























