Nigerian Equities Lose ₦832bn As Investors Turn To Oversold Stocks

Capital Market Records N6bn Gains As CBN Maintains Rate

The Nigerian stock market closed last week deep in negative territory, with investors losing about ₦832 billion in market value as persistent sell-offs dragged down key performance indicators.

Data from the Nigerian Exchange (NGX) revealed that market capitalization fell to ₦87.94 trillion from ₦89.94 trillion the previous week, trimming year-to-date gains to 35.03%.

The NGX All-Share Index (ASI) shed 0.94% week-on-week, closing at 138,980.01 points compared to 140,295.49 points in the prior week. Market watchers attributed the decline to risk-off sentiment driven by macroeconomic uncertainties, profit-taking, and weak buying appetite.

Stockbrokers noted that overall trading activity slowed, with the total number of deals down 17.43% to 117,791. Traded volume also dipped by 2.66% to 3.11 billion units, though market turnover rose by 5.53% to ₦90.20 billion, reflecting a bias toward high-value counters.

Market breadth was particularly weak, settling at 0.30x as only 19 gainers were recorded against 63 decliners. The selloff was broad-based, with five out of six sectoral indices closing negative.

The Industrial Goods Index was the hardest hit, sliding 2.08% as large-cap stocks came under heavy pressure. The Banking Index followed with a 1.52% decline, while the Consumer Goods, Oil & Gas, and Insurance indices lost 1.18%, 0.77%, and 0.36%, respectively.

The only exception was the Commodities Index, which posted a marginal 0.04% uptick.

On the stock level, top gainers included Sovereign Insurance (+14.2%), NSLTech (+12.9%), Cornerstone Insurance (+12.4%), NCR (+10.0%), and SCOA (+10.0%). Meanwhile, DAAR Communications (-21.1%), UPDC (-13.8%), AIICO (-13.6%), Champion Breweries (-13.3%), and PZ Cussons (-13.3%) ranked among the worst performers.

Analysts at Cowry Asset Limited expect the bearish sentiment to persist in the near term, although bargain-hunting in oversold stocks may trigger selective recoveries. They noted that macroeconomic pressures, including high inflation, foreign exchange volatility, and policy uncertainty, will continue to weigh on overall market momentum.