one hundred US dollars notes.
… Hit 8-year high of $45.9bn
Nigeria’s gross foreign exchange (FX) reserves have surged to $45.9 billion, marking their highest level since August 2018.
This milestone, achieved in January 2026, signals a significant stabilization of the nation’s external balance sheet and provides the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) with a massive “war chest” to defend the Naira and support the ongoing economic expansion.
The rapid accumulation of reserves is the result of a “perfect storm” of orthodox monetary policies and market conditions:
The “Refinery Effect”: With the Dangote Refinery meeting over 70% of domestic fuel demand, the CBN has effectively ended the $1.2 billion monthly drain previously required for petroleum imports.
Crude Oil Volume Recovery: Under the NUPRC’s “Volume Recovery Mandate,” Nigeria’s crude production has stabilized above 1.5 million barrels per day (mbpd), significantly boosting dollar inflows from oil royalties and taxes.
Foreign Portfolio Investment (FPI) Inflows: High-interest rates (with the MPR at 27.25% in late 2025) lured yield-hungry global investors back into Nigerian Treasury Bills and OMO (Open Market Operation) bills, injecting billions in “hot money” into the reserves.
The $45.9 billion figure provides a psychological and fundamental boost to the currency markets:
Reduced Volatility: With reserves at this level, the CBN has the firepower to intervene in the Nigerian Autonomous Foreign Exchange Market (NAFEM) to smooth out volatility and prevent speculative attacks on the Naira.
Import Cover: Nigeria now boasts over 9 months of import cover, well above the international benchmark of 3 months, enhancing the country’s sovereign credit rating.
Investor Confidence: The “reserves rally” is expected to trigger a further decline in Nigeria’s Eurobond yields as international lenders perceive a lower risk of default.
Analysts forecast that if oil prices remain above $60 and domestic production climbs near the 2.0 million bpd target, Nigeria could see its reserves touch $50 billion by the fourth quarter of 2026. Those would be levels last seen in 2009, under the Presidency of Umaru Musa Yar’Adua.
MoneyCentral estimates that reserves have been rising at a pace of roughly $500 million a month over the past year based on CBN data.

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