Nigeria attracted $10.37 billion in capital importation in the first quarter of 2026, according to data released by the National Bureau of Statistics (NBS), underscoring a renewed but uneven recovery in foreign investor appetite for Africa’s largest economy.
The inflow reflects a combination of portfolio investments, foreign direct investment (FDI), and other short-term capital placements, with portfolio flows continuing to dominate. Analysts say this pattern highlights a cautious return of global investors, who are increasingly selective amid lingering macroeconomic volatility and currency market adjustments.
The latest figures suggest that Nigeria’s ongoing policy recalibration, particularly reforms in the foreign exchange market and monetary tightening by the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) is beginning to restore a degree of investor confidence. However, market participants caution that structural constraints, including inflationary pressures, infrastructure gaps, and regulatory uncertainty, continue to weigh on long-term investment decisions.
Foreign portfolio investment, typically the most volatile component of capital importation, is believed to have played a central role in the Q1 2026 surge. These inflows are often driven by short-term opportunities in fixed income securities and money market instruments, particularly as yields remain attractive relative to other emerging markets.
FDI, while smaller in scale, remains a key indicator of long-term investor commitment. Economists note that sustained growth in this segment will depend on deeper reforms in power supply, logistics, and business environment efficiency areas that have historically constrained Nigeria’s competitiveness.
The NBS data arrives at a time when policymakers are attempting to stabilise the naira and improve liquidity in the foreign exchange market. While recent reforms have narrowed the gap between official and parallel market rates, volatility persists, influencing investor risk perception.
Market analysts say the challenge for Nigeria is no longer solely attracting capital, but retaining it. “The quality and stickiness of inflows matter as much as the headline figure,” one Lagos-based economist noted, pointing to the need for consistent policy signalling and institutional credibility.
Despite the headwinds, the Q1 2026 performance marks a notable benchmark for Africa’s most populous nation, suggesting that global investors are beginning to reassess Nigeria’s risk-reward profile in a shifting emerging market landscape.
Whether this momentum is sustained will depend on the government’s ability to translate macroeconomic reforms into tangible improvements in productivity, stability, and investor protection over the coming quarters.



