• About Us
  • Advertise
  • Privacy & Policy
  • Contact Us
  • Terms and Conditions
Friday, June 19, 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

Nigeria’s Current Account Surplus Falls 65%

March 19, 2026
in Business & Economy
Reading Time: 3 mins read
0
Nigeria's
Share on FacebookShare on TwitterShare on Linkedin
Spread the love

Nigeria’s external sector faced renewed strain in Q4 2025, as the Central Bank of Nigeria reported a sharp 65.5% drop in the current account surplus to $1.40 billion from $4.06 billion in Q3.

The overall balance of payments (BOP) also weakened, posting a surplus of only $2.67 billion compared with $4.60 billion three months earlier.

Provisional figures released by the apex bank on Wednesday paint a picture of an economy still overwhelmingly tethered to volatile crude oil revenues, even as remittances and short-term foreign capital provided some breathing room.

The goods account, the largest component of the current account, bore the brunt of the deterioration. Its surplus shrank 60.93% to $1.77 billion from $4.53 billion in Q3, as total exports fell to $13.36 billion from $15.31 billion.

Crude oil exports, Nigeria’s lifeline, dropped 20.54% to $6.77 billion. Refined petroleum exports also slipped 13.97% to $1.97 billion. Meanwhile, non-oil imports surged 24.93% to $8.77 billion, widening the import bill and squeezing the trade position further.

The primary income account (dividends and interest paid to foreign investors) widened its deficit by 47.30% to $3.27 billion—a clear sign of profit repatriation by foreign portfolio and direct investors.

Services outflows narrowed modestly to $3.32 billion from $3.95 billion, offering slight relief. However, the real cushion came from the secondary income account, where diaspora remittances climbed to $6.21 billion, helping to prevent an outright current-account deficit.

On the financial side, net borrowing rose to $1.96 billion (from $0.79 billion), while portfolio investment inflows more than doubled to $5.27 billion, reflecting renewed foreign interest in Nigerian bonds and equities.

Foreign direct investment, however, disappointed, falling to $1.11 billion from $1.46 billion—underscoring that long-term capital remains cautious.

The one unambiguously positive note: external reserves continued their upward march, climbing 6.97% to $45.75 billion by end-December 2025, up from $42.77 billion in September. (Gross reserves stood at approximately $45.71 billion for the year-end, according to related CBN disclosures.)

The CBN itself was blunt in its statement:

“Provisional balance of payments (BOP) statistics for Q4 2025 show a lower current account surplus of US$1.40 billion, which was significantly lower than the US$4.06 billion and US$4.98 billion recorded in the preceding quarter (Q3 2025) and corresponding period of 2024, respectively.”

For the full year 2025, Nigeria still posted an overall BOP surplus of roughly $4.23 billion, down from $6.83 billion in 2024—but the sharp Q4 deceleration is a loud warning bell.

Analysts will be watching three things closely in 2026:

  1. OPEC+ production cuts ease, and domestic oil output rebounds above 1.5 million barrels per day.
  2. If the naira’s relative stability and CBN’s FX reforms can keep non-oil imports in check.
  3. If the strong remittance and portfolio inflows of late 2025 prove durable.

Until Nigeria diversifies its export base beyond crude and refined products, these quarterly swings will remain the norm rather than the exception. The external sector is stabilizing—but it is far from secure.

WHAT YOU SHOULD KNOW

Nigeria’s external accounts weakened sharply in Q4 2025, with the current account surplus plunging 65.5% to just $1.4 billion. The single most important takeaway is this: falling crude oil export earnings remain the dominant driver of Nigeria’s external vulnerability.

Despite support from strong remittances ($6.21bn), surging portfolio inflows, and rising reserves ($45.75bn), the 20.5% drop in oil receipts and surging non-oil imports exposed once again how heavily the economy still depends on a single, volatile commodity.

Until export diversification takes hold, these sharp quarterly swings will continue to threaten external stability.

Tags: CBNcurrent account surplusNigeria
Share200Tweet125Share35
Previous Post

Messi Hits 900th Career Goal

Next Post

Tinubu, Akpabio Dragged To Court

Related Posts

naira

Naira Slips Further as Parallel Market Gap Widens

by Victoria Ogbadu
June 19, 2026
0

The naira extended its losing streak yesterday, weakening against the dollar across both the parallel and official segments of the...

Guidelines

FG Unveils Transition Guidelines for Tax Acts 2025

by Victoria Ogbadu
June 19, 2026
0

The Federal Government has formally issued implementation guidelines governing the transition from Nigeria's repealed tax laws to the Tax Acts...

Oil

Global Oil Prices—19th June 2026

by Victoria Ogbadu
June 19, 2026
0

Oil prices rebounded on Friday as peace efforts to end the Iran war hit an early snag, with Israeli strikes...

NGX

NGX Introduces New Trading Volume Rules

by Victoria Ogbadu
June 18, 2026
0

The Nigerian Exchange (NGX) is preparing to introduce one of its most significant trading reforms in recent years, a tiered...

PETROL

NMDPRA Data Shows Nigeria’s Petrol Supply Rose 6.8% in May

by Victoria Ogbadu
June 18, 2026
0

Nigeria's petrol import bill climbed sharply in May, even as the country's domestic refining industry continued its remarkable expansion, new...

Load More
Next Post
FG (TInubu) To Stop Salaries Of Unverified Workers

Tinubu, Akpabio Dragged To Court

EFCC

EFCC Returns ₦3.9 Billion Recovered Fraud Proceeds to NNPC

Oil

Oil Prices Rocket Past $112

PDP Flag

Presidential Aspirant Meets Makinde Over PDP Crisis

Kano Government Reveals Emir To Lead Durbar Ado Bayero Reacts As Kano Govt Confirms Emir Sanusi Will Lead Sallah Durbar

Ado Bayero Reacts As Kano Govt Confirms Emir Sanusi Will Lead Sallah Durbar

UEFA Champions League

Full List: Champions League Quarter-Finals Set

Photo of Abubakar Malami

“I Have No Regrets” – Malami

JAY-Z

JAY-Z Changes Name Again

Naira

Naira Sustains Momentum, Forcing the Euro Down to ₦1,556

Morocco Ready to Host WAFCON Amid AFCON Controversy

Morocco Ready to Host WAFCON Amid AFCON Controversy

  • 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
FG (TInubu) To Stop Salaries Of Unverified Workers

Former lawmaker rejects Tinubu’s national honour

June 19, 2026
naira

Naira Slips Further as Parallel Market Gap Widens

June 19, 2026
YCee

YCee Opens Up on Years-Long Music Hiatus, Says He’s Back

June 19, 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