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First Time Since 2021: Nigeria’s FX Reserves Hit $41bn

by Caleb Owaise
August 25, 2025
in Lead-In
First Time Since 2021: Nigeria’s FX Reserves Hit $41bn

Nigeria’s foreign exchange reserves rose to $41.00 billion on August 19, 2025, the highest level since 2021.
This is according to figures published by the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) on its website.
The current level marks the highest level recorded since December 3, 2021, and shows the steady external accretion witnessed in recent weeks.
The new trajectory comes after months of gradual depletion and volatility, largely attributed to intense pressure from external debt repayments.
The reserves have staged a strong rally in August, adding about $1.46 billion month-to-date, from $39.54 billion on 1 August to $41.00 billion by 19 August. This represents a 3.69 per cent growth in less than three weeks. The momentum has been broadly consistent across trading days, with only marginal pauses. The build-up began in earnest from early August, when reserves crossed the $40 billion threshold on 7 August, after closing July below $39.4 billion.
From there, the pace of accretion quickened: reserves advanced to $40.5 billion by 12 August and crossed $41 billion just a week later. On average, the country’s reserves have grown by roughly $81 million per day in August, reflecting improved FX inflows relative to outflows.
This sharp climb underpins the CBN’s ability to stabilise the naira in the official market, manage liquidity, and defend against speculative pressure.
The year-to-date picture, however, shows more modest gains. Nigeria’s reserves opened the year at $40.88 billion on 31 December 2024. At the latest print of $41.00 billion, this translates to an increase of about $124 million or 0.30 per cent.
In other words, most of the 2025 gains have been concentrated in the past five weeks, following a relatively subdued first half of the year.
Between January and June, reserves largely fluctuated within the $37 billion to $39 billion range, reflecting FX market interventions, oil price swings, and debt service obligations.
For instance, reserves dipped to $37.28 billion in early July before the recent rebound. The sharp turnaround since mid-July has therefore added over $3 billion, a growth of about 8 per cent within just a month.

From a longer horizon, the $41 billion recorded puts Nigeria in its strongest external reserve position since late 2021. The recent improvement is significant given the prolonged drawdowns that followed through 2022 and 2023, when reserves struggled to hold above $38 billion.

A stronger reserve base is a critical pillar for currency market confidence. It improves Nigeria’s sovereign credit outlook, reassures investors of the government’s ability to meet external obligations, and strengthens the CBN’s capacity to manage liquidity shocks. Importantly, the symbolic return to the $41 billion level signals improved FX inflows, possibly from crude oil earnings or portfolio flows.

Earlier, the CBN also reported sustained stability in the foreign exchange market, citing increased capital inflows, improved crude oil production, rising non-oil exports, and reduced imports.

Going forward, sustaining this momentum will depend on a delicate balance of oil exports, non-oil FX receipts, debt servicing, and policy direction.

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For now, however, the sharp August build-up places Nigeria on firmer footing, with the reserves at their highest point in nearly four years.

Author

  • Olushola Bello
    Olushola Bello

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