The continued rally of the Nigerian naira will be underpinned by a sustained current account surplus, stable or rising reserves, strong structural FX supply, including exports, remittances, and a tight, credible macro policy to curb speculative demand, according to Tilewa Adebajo, chief executive officer of Lagos-based consultancy CFG Advisory.

Adebajo, who spoke to this reporter, added that the government will need to ramp up domestic oil production to save the currency, which recorded its best year in 13 years, gaining 7.5 percent last year from global shocks.

“At today’s lower production levels, the naira remains highly exposed to oil prices; a meaningful, sustained drop in Brent would quickly pressure the FX regime,” Adebajo said.

Read also: Dollar holders rethink bet as naira gains gather pace

The Nigerian naira is extending its bull run, which began last year, as the local currency has gained roughly seven percent year-to-date, closing at N1,346.32 on Friday, a rare comeback for a currency that shed 41 percent of its value in 2024.

The naira also decoupled from oil prices, the nation’s main foreign-exchange earner, helped by undervaluation, higher non-oil exports, and the virtual collapse in petroleum products imports.

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Adebajo noted that the recent “stability reflects both deeper structural supply, including exports, remittances, more formalised flows and sizeable, potentially reversible portfolio or carry inflows.”

The investment banker cum economist pointed to the role diaspora remittances play in stabilising the currency. Nigeria aims to attract $1 billion in monthly inflows, according to Yemi Cardoso, central bank governor. This is after remittances surge to nearly $25 billion.

“Diaspora remittances and autonomous market flows now provide a large share of FX, helping diversify away from oil but still confidence‑sensitive.”

Read also: Naira gap closes at 0.29 percent as speculators offload dollars

Speaking on reported plans of corporates to start offloading dollars in a bid to avoid currency shocks, Adebajo said the development could initially lead to naira appreciation and higher naira liquidity, warning that the second-round impact is broader money growth unless CBN sterilises via tighter liquidity operations.

That could also have a ripple effect on inflation that has now cooled to its lowest in about five years at 15.10 percent in December after authorities revised the consumer price index methodology.

“A stronger naira can materially ease imported and fuel‑related inflation, but inflation will only fall decisively if FX gains are paired with tight policy and better domestic supply,” he said.

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Adebajo argued that the CBN would likely tolerate a stronger naira but would lean against very rapid, disorderly appreciation by buying FX to rebuild reserves and adjusting policy to discourage destabilising inflows.

Wasiu Alli is a business, economics cum data journalist with strong expertise covering macro trends, capital markets, government policies, corporate earnings and comparative economics analysis. Alli turns raw data into trends that not only tells compelling stories but nudges investors to make valued and informed decisions. He’s an alumnus of Lagos State University and trained at Lagos Business School. He formerly heads the Companies and Markets desk at BusinessDay where he writes and supervises the production of well researched articles on earnings updates, corporate sectoral comparisons, market intelligence as well as interviews with C-suite executives.

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