As of February 17, 2026, Nigeria’s financial landscape presents a startling contradiction. While banks and institutional investors are flush with record-breaking liquidity, the “real economy”—comprising manufacturers, farmers, and small business owners—is facing a severe credit drought.
The recent Treasury Bill (NT-Bill) auction on February 4, 2026, served as a clear indicator of this disconnect. Investors flooded the market with ₦4.59 trillion in bids for securities worth only ₦1.15 trillion—an oversubscription of nearly 400%. This “flight to safety” reveals that capital is being diverted away from productive enterprises and into risk-free government debt.
1. The “Crowding Out” Effect: Banks vs. Businesses
The primary driver of this imbalance is the government’s massive appetite for domestic borrowing to fund the 2026 budget deficit, which is projected at ₦23.85 trillion to ₦25.27 trillion.
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Risk-Free Returns: With one-year Treasury Bill yields holding steady above 20% (true yield), commercial banks find it more profitable and safer to lend to the government than to a manufacturer facing power outages and high logistics costs.
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Shrinking Private Credit: While government borrowing jumped significantly, credit to private companies has struggled to maintain pace. Banks now earn an estimated 40% of their interest income from government securities.
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Micro-Credit Crisis: Small businesses, unable to secure bank loans, are forced toward microfinance lenders with interest rates reaching 5% monthly (80% annually when compounded).
2. The PMI Paradox: Two Different Stories
Data for January 2026 reveals a split in the economic narrative, depending on which index is tracked:
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The CBN View (Composite PMI: 55.7): The Central Bank’s index suggests a 14th consecutive month of expansion, driven by services and a resilient agricultural sector.
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The Stanbic IBTC View (Headline PMI: 49.7): For the first time in January history, this index fell below the 50-point mark (contraction). This survey highlights stagnant new orders and a contraction in wholesale and retail trade, reflecting softened consumer demand.
3. Institutional Bottlenecks: Pension Funds & DFIs
The “trapped” money isn’t just in banks; it’s also tied up in institutional regulations:
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Pension Funds: With over ₦25 trillion under management, a vast majority remains parked in government bonds and bills due to strict low-risk mandates.
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Development Finance Institutions (DFIs): Organizations like the Bank of Industry (BoI) face criticism for “phantom approvals”—loans that are approved on paper but rarely disbursed due to administrative or liquidity constraints at the agency level.
Nigeria’s Financial Disconnect (Feb 2026)
4. The “Three-Phase” Path to Reform
Experts, including Dr. Muda Yusuf of the CPPE, suggest a coordinated shift in policy:
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Immediate: Impose mandatory lending quotas (e.g., 20% of portfolios) specifically for manufacturing and agro-processing.
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Medium-Term (1-3 Years): Diversify pension fund regulations to allow 15-20% investment in infrastructure bonds or manufacturing-focused private equity.
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Long-Term: De-risk the sector by fixing the “Big Three” infrastructure hurdles: Power, Ports, and Transport.
“Liquidity alone doesn’t create prosperity. Nigeria has money—it’s just trapped in the wrong places. Stock markets are soaring while factory floors are going quiet.” — Economic Analysis, February 2026.
