Nigerian Exchange Sheds N110bn As Investor Sentiment Weakens

Stock Exchange Closes Trading Week With N30bn Gain

The Nigerian Exchange (NGX) shed more than N110 billion in market value as investor confidence continued to slip, dragging the year-to-date performance down to 40.86%.

The All-Share Index recorded another decline, pressured by losses across major sectoral indices. The persistent retreat highlights the cautious trading stance adopted by investors who are still processing the long-term implications of the recently introduced capital gains tax, despite policy clarifications issued by authorities.

Sentiment remained poor across several blue-chip counters, especially within the financial services sector. The benchmark index dropped by 173.26 basis points, closing at 144,986.51, while total market capitalization dipped by ₦110.19 billion — a 0.12% slide — settling at ₦92.21 trillion.

Stockbrokers confirmed that investors collectively lost about ₦110 billion. Market activity showed a mixed performance: the total traded volume climbed by 5.72%, but the value of trades fell sharply by 45.89%.

Data from Atlass Portfolio revealed that roughly 381.23 million units, valued at ₦16,717.22 million, were exchanged across 21,827 transactions.

TANTALIZER dominated market activity, accounting for 16.08% of total traded volume. It was trailed by STERLINGNG (8.59%), UNIVINSURE (7.69%), VERITASKAP (6.91%), and ACCESSCORP, which contributed 4.23%.

On the value chart, ARADEL took the lead, representing 19.23% of the total transaction value. NCR topped the gainers’ log with a 9.95% jump, closely followed by UPL (+9.80%), TANTALIZER (+9.79%), CAVERTON (+9.57%), UNIONDICON (+9.52%), and UNIVINSURE (+9.24%). More than twenty other stocks also closed in the green.

A separate group of twenty-eight equities depreciated as sell pressure spread across the market. LIVINGTRUST led the losers’ list with a 9.90% decline, followed by MCNICHOLS (-9.00%), LIVESTOCK (-7.75%), REGALINS (-6.56%), UPDC (-6.14%), and DAARCOMM (-5.94%).

Consequently, market breadth closed negative, with 26 gainers and 28 losers. Sectoral indices delivered a mixed outcome: Banking, Consumer Goods, and Oil & Gas fell by 0.90%, 0.02%, and 0.04%, respectively, while the Insurance index posted a mild 0.13% uptick.

The industrial goods and commodity indices ended flat. Overall market sentiment remained subdued, mirroring the negative price trend. Although trading volume rose 5.72% to 381 million units, both the volume of deals and total traded value slumped by 21.98% and 45.89%, closing at 21,827 deals and ₦16.71 billion, respectively.