The naira has come under renewed pressure as slowing foreign exchange inflows and a decline in Nigeria’s external reserves test the stability achieved following the Central Bank of Nigeria’s exchange rate unification reforms. The currency’s recent weakening reflects a combination of external factors, including reduced portfolio investor appetite for emerging market assets, and domestic challenges such as lower oil receipts and persistent demand for imported goods.
From a macro-fiscal perspective, reserve depletion limits the CBN’s capacity to defend the currency without resorting to administrative controls that would undermine the credibility of the floated exchange rate regime. The bank has signalled a preference for market-determined rates, but sustained reserve declines could force a policy recalibration. For businesses, renewed naira weakness increases imported input costs, pressures profit margins, and complicates financial planning. For households, it translates into higher prices for imported consumer goods, including food, pharmaceuticals, and electronics.
The slowing inflows highlight Nigeria’s continued dependence on a narrow base of foreign exchange sources. Portfolio investment, foreign direct investment, and diaspora remittances have all shown volatility, while oil export receipts remain subject to global price fluctuations and production constraints. The Tinubu administration’s reform agenda, including tax modernisation and fiscal consolidation, aims to address these structural vulnerabilities, but results will take time to materialise. In the interim, the naira’s trajectory will depend heavily on the CBN’s reserve management strategy and the pace of new inflows from multilateral partners and bilateral sources.




