Nigeria’s external capital inflows surged dramatically in 2025, nearly doubling from the previous year, yet the composition of that money tells a story of persistent structural weakness.
Foreign direct investment (FDI), the kind that builds factories, creates lasting jobs, and transfers technology, accounted for just 3.97% of total capital imported, according to the latest Capital Importation Report released by the National Bureau of Statistics (NBS).
Total capital importation reached $23.22 billion in 2025, a sharp 88.6% jump from $12.32 billion in 2024. On paper, that looks like a major vote of confidence in Africa’s largest economy.
In reality, the overwhelming majority of the fresh money came from foreign portfolio investors chasing quick returns in the nation’s debt and equity markets rather than committing to long-term projects on the ground.
FDI inflows rose modestly in absolute terms to $923.01 million, up $248.30 million or 36.8% from $674.71 million the year before. Yet its share of total inflows actually shrank from 5.48% in 2024 to 3.97% in 2025. The gap widened because portfolio investment exploded: $19.74 billion flowed through portfolio channels in 2025—more than double the $8.38 billion recorded in 2024—and now accounts for a staggering 85.03% of all capital imported.
In plain terms, more than eight out of every ten dollars that entered Nigeria last year were portfolio funds, the most mobile and flight-prone form of capital. By contrast, FDI inflows were just 4.7% the size of portfolio inflows. Even the strongest quarter for FDI ($357.80 million in Q4) was still smaller than the weakest quarter for portfolio investment ($5.20 billion in Q1).
The quarterly breakdown reveals how lopsided the inflows remained throughout the year. Portfolio investment dominated every quarter: 92.25% in Q1, 82.02% in Q2, 80.70% in Q3, and 85.14% in Q4. FDI, meanwhile, stayed in single-digit territory for most of the year — 2.24% in Q1, 2.79% in Q2 — before showing some life in the second half at 4.93% in Q3 and 5.55% in Q4.
That late-year pickup in FDI is the one bright spot in the data. In nominal terms, direct investment accelerated noticeably after June: Q3 saw $296.25 million and Q4 a record $357.80 million for the year.
Together, the second half delivered $654.05 million, or roughly 70.9% of the full-year FDI total. Q4 alone accounted for nearly 39% of annual FDI. Still, even this improved momentum was not enough to shift the overall picture. The entire 2025 FDI haul of $923 million remained smaller than the portfolio inflows recorded in any single quarter.
A closer look inside the FDI numbers shows the improvement was narrow. Equity capital — the core component reflecting actual ownership stakes in Nigerian businesses — dominated at $868.29 million, or 94.1% of total FDI. “Other capital” (mainly intercompany loans and trade credits) remained small but grew from $9.20 million in 2024 to $54.72 million in 2025, with the bulk of the increase ($50.48 million) concentrated in the second half.
Analysts at Nairametrics, which first highlighted the NBS figures, noted that while total inflows strengthened markedly, the bulk of the increase came from foreign portfolio investors rather than the long-term direct investors typically associated with factory investment, business expansion, and durable job creation.
The implications for Nigeria’s economy are significant. Portfolio flows are notoriously volatile; they can exit as quickly as they arrive when global interest rates shift or domestic sentiment sours. FDI, by contrast, tends to be “sticky” capital that supports real economic transformation.
The continued heavy tilt toward portfolio money—even as absolute FDI volumes improved—underscores the challenge policymakers face in attracting the kind of investment that can reduce unemployment, diversify the economy away from oil, and build productive capacity.
As the 2026 data cycle begins, the question hanging over Nigeria’s capital importation story is whether the modest second-half momentum in FDI can be sustained and scaled—or whether the country will remain overwhelmingly dependent on the more fickle embrace of portfolio investors.
For now, the numbers show that while the doors to foreign capital swung wide open in 2025, only a narrow crack was reserved for the kind of investment that truly puts down roots.
WHAT YOU SHOULD KNOW
Nigeria’s total capital importation nearly doubled to $23.22 billion in 2025, but the key takeaway is this: Foreign Direct Investment (FDI) remained marginal at just 3.97% of inflows, while volatile portfolio “hot money” dominated with a massive 85.03% share.
Despite a 36.8% rise in absolute FDI to $923 million—with momentum building strongly in the second half—the economy continued to rely overwhelmingly on short-term, flight-prone funds rather than long-term investments that drive factories, jobs, and sustainable growth.























