NGX Losses N476bn in Single Session
The Nigerian equities market retreated on Wednesday as a wave of profit-taking in banking heavyweights halted a recent rally. The All-Share Index (ASI) shed 37 basis points to close at 200,925.75 points, wiping ₦476.73 billion off the total market value. While the year-to-date return remains a healthy 29.12 percent, the session’s bearish turn suggests that investor appetite is cooling. Analysts noted that the buying momentum seen earlier in the week was simply too thin to absorb the volume of shares hitting the floor as traders locked in gains.
Selling pressure hit the banking sector hardest, with the Banking Index sliding 0.98 percent. Institutional investors appear to be taking chips off the table following a sustained period of appreciation in “Tier-1” lenders. Significant price drops in Zenith Bank, United Bank for Africa (UBA), and First Bank Holdco led the decline. Other laggards included Fidson Healthcare, Transcorp, and Lafarge Africa, as the cautious sentiment spread across high-cap stocks.
Despite the overall gloom, the insurance and consumer goods sectors offered a rare bit of green on the boards. The Insurance Index rose 0.76 percent, buoyed by price appreciation in Guinea Insurance and Mansard, while Consumer Goods gained 0.38 percent. This selective “bargain hunting” in undervalued stocks prevented a total market collapse. However, these gains were too small to counteract the gravitational pull of the banking sell-off, leaving the total market capitalisation at ₦128.98 trillion.
Trading activity showed a marked lack of conviction, with both volume and value plunging by over 55 percent. Only 537.99 million units were moved, valued at ₦25.39 billion, a sharp drop that reflects a “wait-and-see” approach among major fund managers. When volume dries up during a price dip, it often signals that investors are hesitant to enter new positions until they see a clearer support level. The near-term outlook remains clouded by macroeconomic uncertainty and high interest rates in the fixed-income market.
The Nigerian Exchange (NGX) is currently caught between the desire for quick profits and the long-term potential of its blue-chip firms. With the Central Bank of Nigeria maintaining a hawkish stance to curb inflation, the equities market faces stiff competition from treasury bills and bonds. For many retail investors, the volatility of the last few sessions has been a sobering reminder that “upward trajectories” are rarely linear. The market is now looking for a fresh catalyst to reignite interest.
The coming days will test the resilience of the 200,000-point psychological threshold. If the banking sector fails to find a floor, the wider index could see further erosion toward the 195,000-mark. For now, the “hard news” for the NGX is that the easy gains of the first quarter are over. Investors must now navigate a landscape where selective picking and disciplined entry points are the only ways to survive the bearish pressure.
