Credit extension to Nigeria’s private sector fell to an 18-month low in September 2025, reflecting mounting liquidity pressures and a more cautious risk appetite among banks, according to new data from the Central Bank of Nigeria. Private Sector Credit (PSC) declined by 4.35 per cent, dropping to ₦72.5 trillion from ₦75.9 trillion in August, underscoring a sharp slowdown in lending activity at a time when businesses are facing rising costs and softer consumer demand. The decline highlights the cumulative impact of higher cash reserve requirements, tighter monetary conditions, and structural challenges within the financial system.
Analysts argue that the contraction in lending is exerting significant pressure on companies across key sectors, including manufacturing, services, and agriculture, which rely heavily on bank financing to maintain operations, invest in capacity expansion, and manage working capital. Businesses are now operating in an environment where borrowing costs have increased, access to credit is constrained, and the margin for error in cash flow management is narrower. The slowdown comes at a time when inflationary pressures remain elevated, further eroding real returns and limiting firms’ ability to invest in productive assets.
Economists have also warned that rising government borrowing could exacerbate the private sector’s funding challenges. With the federal government increasing domestic debt issuance to finance budgetary deficits, banks are being crowded out, diverting funds away from lending to businesses towards government securities that offer lower risk and relatively attractive yields. This phenomenon, commonly referred to as “crowding out,” reduces the availability of long-term credit for private investment and slows economic dynamism, particularly in sectors that are capital-intensive or reliant on modernisation.
The data also highlight Nigeria’s long-standing financing gaps relative to regional peers. The country’s credit-to-GDP ratio remains around 19.9 per cent, substantially below the sub-Saharan African average, which typically exceeds 40 per cent in economies with more mature banking systems. This structural shortfall in access to credit underscores the vulnerability of the private sector to liquidity shocks and demonstrates the challenges that Nigerian businesses face in mobilising investment capital without resorting to high-cost alternative financing options.
The current environment raises fresh concerns over the country’s growth outlook. Private sector investment is a key driver of employment, productivity gains, and industrial diversification. A constrained lending environment risks slowing business expansion, limiting job creation, and reducing the economy’s capacity to generate sustainable output growth. Sectors dependent on imported inputs may also face heightened operational stress, as limited access to foreign exchange and bank financing compounds cost pressures.
Financial analysts note that the slowdown in private sector credit may also have implications for Nigeria’s broader macroeconomic stability. Reduced lending can dampen aggregate demand, limit consumption, and constrain fiscal revenues derived from corporate profits. In addition, tighter liquidity conditions may increase the risk of loan defaults and non-performing assets, which can feed back into the banking system and reduce overall confidence in financial intermediation.
Policy observers argue that addressing these challenges will require a combination of monetary, fiscal, and structural interventions. The Central Bank may need to calibrate reserve requirements and lending incentives to ensure banks continue to support productive sectors without compromising financial stability. At the same time, targeted credit programmes, particularly those aimed at SMEs, could help bridge financing gaps and stimulate private investment. Improving the overall efficiency of credit allocation and reducing barriers to long-term lending are also critical for enhancing the resilience of Nigeria’s financial sector.
In summary, the September 2025 data from the CBN signal a contraction in private sector credit at a time of heightened economic uncertainty. The decline reflects both immediate liquidity pressures and deeper structural constraints in Nigeria’s banking system, highlighting the urgent need for policy interventions to sustain private investment, support business expansion, and ensure the economy remains on a growth trajectory amid tightening financial conditions.




