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Tinubu applauds NGX’s ₦100trn boom, calls for greater local investment

 

By Cross Udo, Abuja

President Bola Tinubu has commended corporate Nigeria, citizens, and capital market stakeholders for propelling the Nigerian Exchange (NGX) to surpass the historic ₦100 trillion market capitalisation milestone.

The President described this achievement as a powerful inspiration for investors in the money and capital markets.

Tinubu, in a statement by his spokesman, Bayo Onanuga, called on Nigerians to intensify investments in the domestic economy, assuring that 2026 will deliver even more substantial returns as his administration’s reforms yield sustained gains.

The President, in the statement, was quoted as saying: “With the NGX surpassing the ₦100 trillion mark, Nigeria is ushering in a new era of economic vitality and renewal.

“In 2025, as many global markets grappled with stagnation or modest recoveries, the NGX All-Share Index surged, closing the year with a 51.19 per cent return—outpacing the prior year’s 37.65 per cent and ranking among the world’s top performers. Year-to-date gains have exceeded benchmarks such as the S&P 500, the FTSE 100, and several BRICS+ emerging markets.

“Nigeria has evolved from an overlooked frontier market into a prime destination for value-driven investment. The stock market’s robust performance mirrors our broader economic health and investor confidence.

“Listed companies across sectors have shone brightly: blue-chip industrials localising supply chains, and a resilient banking sector driving innovation. This is just the beginning. A strong pipeline of listings—from indigenous energy firms and tech unicorns to telecoms and infrastructure players—will further elevate market capitalisation and broaden democratic ownership of the economy.

“This milestone reflects the tangible benefits of our reforms. After initial challenges, inflation has bent downward: from a 24-month peak of 34.8 per cent in December 2024, it fell to 14.45 per cent by November 2025, with projections of 12 per cent in 2026 and below 10 per cent before year-end.

“This trajectory promises improved living standards and faster GDP growth. The current account surplus hit $16 billion in 2024, rose to $16.94 billion in 2025, and is forecast at $18.81 billion in 2026.

“Non-oil exports jumped 48 per cent to ₦9.2 trillion by Q3 2025, with African exports up 97 per cent to ₦4.9 trillion and manufacturing exports rising 67 per cent year-on-year in Q2.

“Foreign reserves have topped $45 billion, poised to exceed $50 billion by Q1 2026, bolstering Naira stability amid reduced volatility and speculation.

“Infrastructure advances include expanding rail networks, key arterial roads, revitalised ports, and transformative projects like the Lagos-Calabar, Sokoto-Badagry superhighways.

“Healthcare facilities are upgrading, curbing medical tourism; NELFUND supports students, and universities gain more research funding.

“Nation-building demands hard work, sacrifice, and focus. The ₦100 trillion milestone signals to the world that Nigeria’s economy is resilient and dynamic.

“As your President, I commit to unrelenting efforts for an equitable, transparent, high-growth economy, supercharged by our tax and fiscal reforms now fully in effect from January 1,” Tinubu concluded.

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