President Bola Tinubu’s economic reforms are fueling the biggest bond rally in emerging markets, as Nigeria’s debt surges with 26% returns this year—outpacing global peers.
Why Investors Are Flocking Back
Stable Naira: Volatility dropped from 23% to 4.6% since December.
Slowing Inflation: Down for 3 straight months to 22.2% (June 2025).
Revenue Surge: Govt income up 43% in H1 2025, with tax reforms boosting collections.
Moody’s Upgrade: Nigeria lifted from Caa1 to B3—now on the cusp of “investable” status.
“The optics are finally constructive,” says Matthew Reed (Bank of Africa UK). “Currency stability removes a major hurdle for global investors.”
The Tinubu Effect
Since May 2023, tough reforms have reset Nigeria’s fiscal health:
-
Axe on fuel subsidies – Freed up budget space
-
Free-floating naira – Reduced forex distortions
-
Deficit control – Current account now in surplus
What’s Next?
Rate cuts likely as inflation cools further
More credit upgrades if reforms hold
Sustained bond demand – “Naira debt is still undervalued,” says Ninety One’s Aurelie Martin
Key Stats Driving the Rally
8.6% – July bond returns (best in Bloomberg’s EM index)
40% – Losses recovered from 2024 crash
30% GDP boost – After rebasing improved debt ratios
The Bigger Picture
This rally signals growing global confidence in Nigeria’s economy—but challenges remain:
Inflation still high at 22.2%
Structural reforms (power, logistics) needed to sustain growth
“Nigeria’s trajectory is positive, but the work isn’t done,” warns PineBridge’s Joseph Cuthbertson.