By Boluwatife Oshadiya | April 13, 2026
Key Points
- Benchmark Nigerian bond yield rises 10bps to 15.89% week-on-week
- Sell pressure concentrated at short end of yield curve
- Mid-to-long tenor bonds attract selective investor demand
Main Story
Nigeria’s sovereign bond market closed weaker last week, with benchmark yields rising by 10 basis points to 15.89% in the secondary market, as investors trimmed exposure amid sustained sell pressure.
Market data reviewed by analysts show that the uptick from 15.79% was largely driven by heavy sell-offs at the short end of the curve, particularly in Mar-2027 and Feb-2031 maturities, reflecting a broader risk-off sentiment among fixed-income investors.
Despite the bearish tone, selective buying interest persisted across mid-to-long duration instruments. Bonds such as May-2033, June-2033, and January-2042 recorded yield declines, indicating continued demand from institutional investors seeking to lock in long-term naira returns.
Analysts note that yields on government bonds remain below those of short-term instruments, including Treasury bills and OMO securities, as the Debt Management Office continues efforts to reduce borrowing costs. This has narrowed the attractiveness of bonds for short-term players, while pension funds and asset managers maintain long-duration positioning.
What’s Being Said
“The pressure on the short end reflects liquidity rotation into higher-yielding short-term instruments,” said a Lagos-based fixed income analyst.
“However, long-term investors are still taking positions in bonds where yields remain relatively attractive in real terms,” added an asset manager at a leading pension firm.
What’s Next
- Primary market bond auction results will shape near-term yield direction
- Monetary policy signals from the Central Bank could influence fixed-income flows
- Treasury bill and OMO yields remain key competition for investor liquidity
The Bottom Line:
Rising yields signal weakening demand in the bond market’s short end, but sustained institutional interest in long-duration assets suggests confidence in Nigeria’s long-term rate outlook remains intact.


















