According to the latest NBS data released on Wednesday, March 25, 2026, Nigeria’s “Capital Importation” engine is accelerating. Total inflows for Q4 2025 reached $6.44 billion, a robust 26.61% year-on-year jump. While the headline figure suggests a triumphant return of foreign confidence, a “look under the hood” reveals a lopsided recovery dominated by short-term financial bets rather than long-term industrial building.
1. The Portfolio Paradox: 85% “Hot Money”
The most critical takeaway from the report is the extreme concentration of capital types:
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The Leader: Portfolio Investment (FPI) accounted for a staggering $5.49 billion (85.14%).
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The Laggard: Foreign Direct Investment (FDI)—the kind that builds factories and creates permanent jobs—contributed a meager $357.80 million (5.55%).
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The Preference: Investors are currently treating Nigeria as a high-yield “money market.” They are piling into Bonds ($1.97B) and Money Market Instruments ($3.08B), drawn by high interest rates and improved FX liquidity, but they remain hesitant to “sink roots” into the real sector.
2. Sectoral Concentration: The Banking Fortress
The data confirms that the Banking Sector is the primary gateway and recipient of foreign capital, soaking up $3.85 billion (nearly 60%) of all inflows.
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The Real Sector Struggle: Production and Manufacturing managed only $308.93 million (4.79%).
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The Silent Sectors: Agriculture, Telecoms, and Oil & Gas recorded negligible inflows, suggesting that the “Economic Reset” has yet to convince investors that the operational risks in these sectors have been fully mitigated.
3. The London-Lagos Pipeline
The United Kingdom remains Nigeria’s most vital financial lifeline, providing 57.94% ($3.73 billion) of all imported capital. This explains the strategic importance of President Tinubu’s recent state visit to London and Governor Cardoso’s “fireside chats” in the UK capital. The U.S. and South Africa follow as distant second and third place contributors.
4. The Dominant Custodians
On the institutional level, three banks handle the vast majority of Nigeria’s foreign capital traffic:
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Stanbic IBTC: $2.23 Billion (34.58%)
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Standard Chartered: $1.85 Billion (28.75%)
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Citibank: $840.72 Million (13.05%) These three institutions alone control over 76% of the capital importation market share, acting as the “Super-Highways” for foreign currency entering the country.
