Nigeria’s foreign reserves, a critical buffer for the nation’s external payments and exchange rate stability, have come under fresh pressure, shedding approximately $547 million in just 15 days of March 2026.
According to official data released on the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) website, the country’s gross external reserves fell from $50.03 billion on March 11 to $49.48 billion by March 26, slipping below the psychologically important $50 billion threshold.
The decline was not a sudden plunge but a steady, almost daily erosion—reflecting ongoing drawdowns rather than a one-off shock. Day-by-day figures paint a clear picture of gradual depletion:
– March 11: $50.03 billion
– March 12: $50.01 billion
– March 13: $49.97 billion
– March 16: $49.87 billion
– March 17: $49.83 billion
– March 18: $49.79 billion
– March 23: $49.61 billion
– March 24: $49.57 billion
– March 25: $49.53 billion
– March 26: $49.48 billion
This consistent downward trajectory marks a reversal of the positive momentum seen earlier in the year. In January 2026, reserves had climbed by about $509 million in the first 22 days, buoyed by improved inflows at the time. By mid-February, gross reserves had even touched a 13-year high of around $50.45 billion, offering roughly 9–10 months of import cover and signalling growing confidence in the CBN’s reforms under Governor Olayemi Cardoso.
The CBN has yet to issue a detailed statement explaining the latest drop. However, analysts and historical patterns point to a familiar mix of pressures in the foreign exchange market. The steady drawdown suggests the central bank may have been intervening to meet payment obligations, settle import demands, or smooth volatility in the naira.
Nigeria’s reserves have long been sensitive to global oil price swings, domestic policy shifts, and external shocks. Higher international crude prices in recent weeks—driven partly by geopolitical tensions in the Middle East—have not yet translated into sufficient dollar inflows to offset outflows. Some experts link the decline to capital flight triggered by global uncertainty, as investors seek safer havens amid rising tensions.
This episode echoes past volatility. In October 2018, for instance, reserves dropped by $1.1 billion in two weeks amid similar FX market strains. Yet the current slide stands out because it interrupts what had been a broadly improving trend since late 2025, when aggressive FX reforms, resolution of backlog obligations, and better reserve management helped lift gross reserves from around $40 billion toward the $51 billion target projected for end-2026.
The latest figures come as the CBN continues to liberalise the FX regime. Just days ago, on March 25–26, the apex bank removed restrictions that had required international oil companies to temporarily retain a portion of their export proceeds in Nigeria, allowing fuller and faster repatriation of dollar earnings. While the move aims to boost market confidence and liquidity over time, its immediate impact on reserves may be limited.
For ordinary Nigerians, the implications are tangible. Foreign reserves serve as the backbone for defending the naira, financing essential imports, and maintaining investor confidence. A sustained decline could renew pressure on the local currency, potentially feeding into inflation or raising the cost of foreign goods and services—especially at a time when many households are still grappling with the effects of broader economic reforms.
Market watchers note that while the drop is modest in percentage terms (about 1.1%), its consistency over consecutive sessions has raised eyebrows. Some analysts warn that without stronger non-oil inflows, improved oil production, or higher remittance channels, reserves could face continued headwinds.
As Nigeria navigates this latest test of its external buffers, all eyes remain on the CBN for clarity on the drivers and on whether fresh policy measures or improved oil receipts can restore the upward trajectory seen earlier in 2026. For an oil-dependent economy still rebuilding after years of FX shortages, every movement in these dollar reserves carries weight far beyond the balance sheet.
WHAT YOU SHOULD KNOW
Nigeria’s foreign reserves dropped by $547 million in just 15 days (March 11–26, 2026), sliding from $50.03 billion to $49.48 billion in a steady daily drawdown.
This marks a clear reversal of the positive trend recorded earlier in January 2026, driven primarily by ongoing foreign exchange market obligations and interventions, with no official explanation yet from the CBN.
It underscores the persistent vulnerability of Nigeria’s external buffers to outflows despite recent reforms.























