The Nigerian stock market has suffered one of its sharpest declines in recent years, losing an estimated ₦3.6 trillion in market value between late October and mid-November 2025. The drop reflects a deepening loss of investor confidence, intensified by currency volatility, tightening global conditions, and apprehension over the impending Capital Gains Tax (CGT) reforms set to take effect in January 2026.
Market Overview: Persistent Sell Pressure
Data from the Nigerian Exchange Limited (NGX) show that the All-Share Index (ASI) has fallen from around 157,000 points in early October to approximately 153,700 points by the second week of November. The total market capitalisation, which stood at roughly ₦87 trillion in early October, has now dropped to ₦83.4 trillion, wiping out ₦3.6 trillion in investor value.
Major sectors have been caught in the sell-off. Banking, insurance, consumer goods, and oil & gas equities all recorded substantial weekly declines. The insurance index fell by over 3.7 %, the banking index by around 2.1 %, and consumer goods and oil & gas shed 1.5 % and 0.8 % respectively.
Trading data also show that while overall turnover volume dropped significantly — by as much as 30 % in some sessions — the number of individual transactions rose by more than 30 %, indicating a wave of smaller trades as retail investors adjusted their portfolios while institutional players exited riskier positions.
Why the Market Is Falling
Market analysts identify several interrelated reasons for the ongoing decline:
Investor Confidence Crisis
Local and foreign investors have grown increasingly wary of Nigerian equities due to policy inconsistencies, foreign-exchange restrictions, and weak macroeconomic indicators. The lack of clear forward guidance from fiscal authorities has heightened uncertainty.
Foreign Exchange Instability
The naira has depreciated sharply, trading around ₦1,430 – ₦1,450 per US dollar on the official window. The currency weakness has raised import costs, squeezed corporate margins, and driven investors toward dollar-denominated assets.
Capital Gains Tax (CGT) Reform Fears
The most immediate catalyst for the sell-off is the government’s new CGT framework, scheduled to come into effect on January 1, 2026. Investors are liquidating assets early to avoid higher tax liabilities once the new law becomes operational.
Breakdown of the Upcoming 2026 CGT Law
The Capital Gains Tax reform, signed into law under the Nigeria Tax Act 2025, represents one of the most significant overhauls of the country’s investment-tax regime in decades.
Key Provisions
- Tax Rate Adjustment
The flat 10 % CGT rate currently in effect will be replaced by a tiered structure:- Corporate entities will now be taxed on gains at a rate aligned with the Companies Income Tax (CIT) rate, currently 30 %.
- Individuals will pay progressive CGT in line with Personal Income Tax (PIT) brackets, potentially as high as 25 % for top-earning taxpayers.
- Broader Asset Coverage
The tax net will expand to cover:- Digital and virtual assets, including cryptocurrencies and tokenised securities.
- Indirect share transfers, such as offshore entities disposing of Nigerian subsidiaries.
- Foreign-held Nigerian assets deemed to have “economic presence” within Nigeria.
- Reduced Exemption Thresholds
Previously, share disposals below ₦100 million were typically exempt. Under the new regime, only transactions with proceeds below ₦150 million and gains below ₦10 million qualify for exemption. - Effective Date and Transitional Phase
Although the law was signed in 2025, enforcement begins in January 2026. The Federal Inland Revenue Service (FIRS) is expected to issue detailed implementation guidelines in Q1 2026.
Anticipated Impact
Experts predict that the higher tax burden on capital disposals could trigger a wave of asset sales before year-end 2025 as investors attempt to “book gains” at the current 10 % rate. This pre-emptive sell-off has already accelerated the NGX’s losses.
According to analysts, the reform could generate short-term fiscal gains for the government but may also deter long-term investment:
“The policy’s intent — to expand the tax base and align Nigeria with global norms — is economically sound. But the timing, amid inflation, currency volatility, and tight global liquidity, may discourage capital formation,” noted one Lagos-based investment economist.
The government, however, argues that the move is essential to increase non-oil revenue, strengthen fiscal sustainability, and ensure that high-net-worth individuals and multinational corporations contribute fairly to public finances.
Broader Economic Implications
The sharp equity losses and upcoming tax changes have several ripple effects across Nigeria’s financial system:
- Corporate Financing Constraints: Falling equity valuations could limit companies’ ability to raise fresh capital through public offerings.
- Portfolio Rebalancing: Pension funds and institutional investors may shift toward fixed-income securities or offshore assets, reducing liquidity in domestic equities.
- Wealth Effects: Retail investors suffering losses may cut consumption, further slowing economic activity.
- Foreign Investment Deterrence: Higher tax rates and volatile currency conditions may push foreign portfolio investors to competing African markets like Kenya, Egypt, or South Africa.
Government and Market Response
The Ministry of Finance has stated that the CGT reform will be implemented “with minimal disruption” and that a transitional adjustment framework will be introduced to cushion the effects on the capital market. Meanwhile, the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) has begun consultations with the NGX and fund managers to ensure market stability ahead of the 2026 implementation date.
Financial institutions are also urging the government to pair the CGT reform with broader fiscal and monetary coordination, including currency stabilization and clear communication to rebuild investor trust.
Outlook: Stabilization or Continued Slide?
While the NGX has endured steep declines before — including during the 2020 pandemic crash — analysts warn that this episode could last longer due to the structural nature of the tax changes and persistent macroeconomic uncertainty.
Market sentiment remains fragile. Without a clear improvement in foreign exchange supply, inflation control, and policy credibility, analysts forecast that the market could lose another ₦500 billion to ₦1 trillion before year-end 2025.
Still, some experts believe that if managed carefully, the CGT reform could lay the groundwork for a fairer, more sustainable tax regime — provided it is complemented by stable monetary policy and a transparent investment climate.
- Total market loss (as of 11 Nov 2025): ₦3.6 trillion
- Current NGX All-Share Index: ~153,700 points
- New CGT law effective: January 1, 2026
- Key CGT change: Rate increase from 10 % to as high as 30 %, broader asset coverage
- Investor sentiment: Bearish; sell-offs accelerating ahead of tax reform




















































