APP dissolves Imo executive committee, sets up interim caretaker

The Action Peoples Party, APP, has dissolved its Imo State Executive Committee and set up an Interim Caretaker to manage the affairs of the party till further notice.

The party reached the resolution during an emergency meeting held by its National Working Committee, NWC, which was approved by the National Executive Committee, NEC.

Eight-member Interim Caretaker Committee was appointed to oversee the affairs of the party pending its congresses.

The Interim Caretaker Committee members include, Ernest Njesi as Chairman, Emeka Onwukwe as Secretary, Henry Alaribe, Deputy Chairman Owerri zone.

Others are: Ogemdi Ezemonye as Deputy Chairman, Orlu zone, Ernest Ezirim, Deputy Chairman, Okigwe zone, Cajethan Duke as Publicity Secretary and Peter Etoh as Treasurer.

Addressing the Interim Caretaker Committee members, the National Chairman of the party, Uchenna Nnadi, said that the decision taken was to restore internal harmony within party members and urged the newly appointed Caretaker Committee Executive to ensure every member is carried along in their schedule.

In a similar development, the party has officially, written to the Independent National Electoral Commission, INEC, notifying the Commission of its preparedness to conduct congresses at Ward, Local Government and State levels.

In a letter dated March 2, 2026, and addressed to the INEC Chairman, the APP National Chairman, Nnadi, and the National Secretary, Abu Ibrahim Bossan, conveyed the party’s notification in line with statutory requirements for a 21-day notice.

The congresses, according to the National Chairman, will hold on March, 24, 2026, at ward levels, March 26 at Local Government levels and

March 28 at the State levels.

FCTA to commence compliance enforcement on land use, ground rent

The Federal Capital Territory Administration has stated it will start enforcing compliance on residents who contravene land use and those defaulting with regard to ground rent as well.

This was part of the decisions taken at the FCT Executive Committee meeting on Monday, chaired by the FCT Minister, Nyesom Wike, at his official residence in Life Camp.

Speaking with journalists after the event, Director, Department of Lands Administration, Mr Chijioke Nwankwoeze pointed out that the administration had given defaulters ample time to comply with the Administration’s directive, hence the need to take action on non-compliance.

Mr. Nwankwoeze, further gave an update on the issuance of Certificates of Occupancy in the Federal Capital Territory. He announced that the process of issuing C of O had greatly improved.

“Unlike before when it took years or even decades, in the current dispensation, C of O issuance is possible in as short as one week. The Minister does not waste time in signing C of Os. Once we send the C of Os to him, within two days, they are back”, he revealed.

He went on to unravel the underlying causes of delay in C of O processing to include non-submission of passport photos and refusal to accept or decline the offer of Rights of Occupancy within the stipulated time of 21 days.

The Director Lands also identified other causes of C of O delay to include non-confirmation of Remita payments and the use of unverifiable addresses such as P. O. Box which are not actual physical locations.

Meanwhile a total of three memoranda were presented and ratified by the committee. TheY are, approval for the purchase of diesel for waste disposal and management plants at four districts in the FCT, ratification and procurement of food and non-food items for victims of flood-affected areas in the FCT and the approval and ratification of the contract for the supply of communication gadgets and other equipment for the support of FCT security agencies.

Elaborating on the memoranda, the Coordinator, AMMC, Chief Felix Obuah, said the purchase of diesel for waste disposal and management plants in Mabushi, Jabi, Durumi and Wuye districts was at the cost of N7,300,000,000.

On his part, Director, FCT Department of Procurement, Alhaji Musa Idris, revealed that the supply of communication gadgets and other equipment for FCT security agencies cost the administration N1,133,802,500.

He stated that the essence of the procurement was to support the agencies in their assignments of securing the FCT.

Also addressing journalists, Chief of Staff to the Minister, Chidi Amadi expressed appreciation to the media for its consistency in the reportage of the policies and programmes of the FCT Administration.

Court declines ex-commissioners’ bid to stop Kano gov’t from reclaiming official vehicles

The National Industrial Court of Nigeria sitting in Kano has rejected separate ex parte applications seeking to restrain the Kano State Government from retrieving official vehicles from former commissioners who recently resigned from the State Executive Council.

The ex-commissioners had asked the court to grant an interim injunction preventing the government from taking back the vehicles pending the hearing and determination of their motion on notice.

In their suits, the claimants joined the Attorney General of Kano State, the governor, and the Kano State Public Complaints and Anti-Corruption Commission as defendants.

Represented by Suraj Sa’ed (SAN) and five other lawyers, the former commissioners argued that their applications were filed pursuant to Order 17 Rule 1 of the National Industrial Court of Nigeria (Civil Procedure) Rules, 2017.

The applicants include former Commissioner for Science, Technology and Innovation, Dr Yusuf Ibrahim K/Mata; former Commissioner for Internal Security, AVM Ibrahim Umar (rtd); former Commissioner for Special Duties, Nasir Sule Garo; former Commissioner for Humanitarian Affairs and Poverty Alleviation, Adamu Aliyu Kibiya; and former Commissioner for Youth, Mustapha Rabi’u Musa Kwankwaso.

They contended that the vehicles were allocated to them as part of their conditions of service upon appointment and argued that, by convention and in line with the determination of the Revenue Mobilisation Allocation and Fiscal Commission, commissioners are entitled to retain such vehicles at the end of their tenure.

According to affidavits filed in support of their applications, the former commissioners resigned in January this year and urged the court to grant the interim reliefs in the interest of justice, maintaining that the balance of convenience favoured them.

In his ruling, Justice Mahmood Abba Namtari declined to grant the interim orders sought and instead directed that the defendants be put on notice.

The cases were adjourned to March 10 for hearing of the substantive applications.

Nigerian Govt approves N48 billion to 12 selected universities

The Federal Government has approved N48b to 12 selected universities for engineering upgrades.

Minister of Education, Dr. Tunji Alausa, made this disclosure on Monday at the inauguration of the Implementation Committee on Tertiary Education Trust Fund Special High-Impact Intervention Projects in Abuja.

Alausa said the funds would either upgrade existing facilities or support the construction of new engineering workshops where necessary while adding that an additional N20 billion has been provided in the 2026 TETFund guidelines to upgrade engineering facilities in other selected universities.

According to him, beneficiary institutions to receive N4 billion each include:

Federal University of Technology, Minna, Niger State

Federal University of Technology, Akure, Ondo State

Federal University of Technology, Babura, Jigawa State

Federal University of Technology, Ikot-Abasi, Akwa-Ibom State

Federal University of Technology, Owerri, Imo State

Nigerian Army University, Biu, Borno State

African Aviation and Aerospace University, Abuja

Shehu Shagari University of Education, Sokoto State

Enugu State University of Medical and Applied Sciences

University of Ilesha, Osun

Delta State University

Abubakar Tafawa Balewa University

DSS nabs teacher claiming responsibility for Obi’s attack

The Department of State Services has arrested a 26-year-old man, Udeme Stephen, for allegedly claiming responsibility for the recent attack on the 2023 presidential candidate of the Labour Party, Peter Obi.

Stephen was apprehended following a threat he posted on his X account, @stevetom788, shortly after armed men fired gunshots at the African Democratic Congress secretariat and Chief John Odigie-Oyegun’s residence in Benin, Edo State.

Present at the event were Obi, Odigie-Oyegun, former President of the Nigeria Bar Association, Olumide Akpata and some ADC leaders.

In his post, Stephen claimed responsibility for the incident and issued further threats against Obi.

He wrote that Obi was fortunate to have survived the Benin attack and warned that he would not be “that lucky next time,” alleging that his associates would target the former presidential candidate during a planned visit to Rivers State.

“We warned Obi against his entrance into Edo State, but he mistook our resolve for his Obidiots online noise.

“Thank his stars he (Obi) survived this one… I learnt he’s going to my Rivers State… Na my men go handle that one and dem no dey miss target…

“Speak no peace to a bastard and wish him no long life, for he’s destined to die,” Udeme posted.

Speaking on Monday, a top security source disclosed that the DSS immediately launched a covert investigation after the threat was issued.

The source added that operatives deployed forensic analysis to track the suspect.

He identified Stephen as a teacher at Jessica High School in Eliozu, located in the Umuehere Community of Obio-Akpor Local Government Area of Rivers State.

“No sooner had Stephen issued the threat than DSS operatives began a covert investigation, deploying forensic analysis to track and arrest him.

“The suspect is 26 years old, called Udeme Monday Stephen, and teaches at Jessica High School in Eliozu, Rivers State, at Umuehere Community, in Obio-Akpor LGA of the state.

“I strongly believe that the outcome of the agency’s forensic investigations implicated the suspect.

Banks disburse N36.4tn to trade sector amid rate cuts

Segun AjibolaNigerian deposit money banks disbursed a total of N36.39tn in credit to the Trade and General Commerce sector in the first nine months of 2025, amid calls for more credit to the private sector for productive activities and investment in critical infrastructure.

The PUNCH found that the amount extended by the deposit money banks to the business ecosystem represented a 0.96 per cent increase from the N36.05tn recorded in the corresponding period of 2024.

An analysis of the Central Bank of Nigeria’s quarterly statistical bulletin for Q3 2025 showed that total credit rose from N36.05tn in January to September 2024 to N36.39tn in the same period of 2025, reflecting a modest year-on-year growth driven largely by stronger lending in the third quarter of 2025.

The data indicated that August 2025 recorded the highest credit distribution at N5.06tn, followed by September at N4.85tn, while July witnessed a sharp rise to N4.51tn. The surge marked a strong rebound after a relatively slow start to the year.

In contrast, January and February 2025 recorded the lowest credit disbursements at N3.48tn and N3.54tn, respectively, before lending accelerated from March onward.

For 2024, banks recorded their highest credit disbursements in February at N4.91tn and January at N4.62tn, reflecting a strong first-quarter performance.

However, lending moderated significantly mid-year, with July and August posting the lowest figures at N3.41tn and N3.48tn before a mild recovery in September.

On average, banks distributed N4.04tn monthly to Trade and General Commerce between January and September 2025, slightly higher than the N4.01tn monthly average in the same period of 2024.

Credit extended to businesses has remained on a stable line, with interest rates as high as 30 per cent from commercial banks. The Monetary Policy Rate was pegged at a historic high of 27.5 per cent, a move that the real sector repeatedly decried. The recent decision of the Monetary Policy Committee to shave off 50 basis points in February eased the benchmark interest rate to 26.5 per cent and brought some relief to the trade and commerce ecosystem.

Analysts and members of the organised private sector have called for more credit to flow to productive private sector activities, alongside increased investment in critical infrastructure to strengthen the real sector.

A former Chairman of the Chartered Institute of Bankers of Nigeria, Prof Segun Ajibola, said credit growth in trade depends largely on demand dynamics and signals from monetary authorities.

“Many factors influence the push of credit to different sectors of the economy. One has to be need-oriented and demand-oriented. In other words, those who need credit must come forward to request from their bankers,” Ajibola said.

He added, “Dropping rates is an invitation to do more. And more importantly, it also signals the direction of the economy. When the rate drops, the monetary authorities and the fiscal authorities are beckoning operators in the sectors to do more, so that the multiplier effects will help push the economy to higher growth.”

Members of the Organised Private Sector, including the Director-General of the Lagos Chamber of Commerce and Industry, Dr Chinyere Almona, said the rate cut should translate into stronger private sector lending and infrastructure investment.

“We see the rate cut as a bridge from reform to results. We want to see more credit to the private sector for productive activities, more investment in critical infrastructure, government commitment to continued transparency in the FOREX market, and strong support to building our local refining capacity,” Almona said.

She added that with firm coordination between monetary and fiscal authorities, “the Nigerian economy will make good progress towards achieving a Gross Domestic Product growth rate above five per cent in the short term.”

Also, the Director of the Manufacturers Association of Nigeria, Segun Ajayi-Kadir, said the rate cut, though modest, could ease borrowing costs for businesses if banks pass on the benefits.

“Lower borrowing costs for businesses will allow them to access cheaper loans, invest more in machinery, expand operations, and increase working capital. This will increase production capacity, encourage the hiring of more workers, and expand the performance of Small and Medium Enterprises,” Ajayi-Kadir remarked.

He stressed that the impact would depend on effective transmission, controlled inflation, exchange rate stability, and resolution of structural challenges such as power, logistics, and insecurity.

The President of the Association of Small Business Owners of Nigeria, Dr Femi Egbesola, said the reduction in the MPR could lower banks’ funding costs and support lending to SMEs and traders. “If these factors align, we can expect a modest but meaningful rise in credit flowing to productive sectors,” Egbesola said.

Similarly, the Director of the Centre for the Promotion of Private Enterprise, Dr Muda Yusuf, warned that weak transmission between policy rates and lending rates remains a concern.

“We have historically had a very weak transmission mechanism between the monetary policy rate and the lending rate. Several times in the past, when we see a reduction in the monetary policy rate, it hardly reflects in lower lending rates,” Yusuf said.

He added that high operating costs, risk premiums, and structural bottlenecks continue to constrain lending, urging greater intervention by development finance institutions to provide longer-term, lower-cost funding to the real sector.

United Capital grows revenue 35% to N58.55bn

UNITED CapitalUnited Capital Plc recorded a 35 per cent year-on-year increase in revenue, rising from N43.43bn at the end of 2024 to N58.55bn in 2025.

This was indicated in the Audited Financial Results for the year ended 31 December 2025, filed with the Nigerian Exchange Limited on Monday.

The Group said the performance reflects its execution capability, diversified revenue base and resilience across its business lines. Growth was largely driven by a 176 per cent year-on-year surge in net trading income and a 59 per cent increase in fee and commission income.

Profitability also improved during the period. Profit before tax rose 37 per cent year-on-year to N41.18bn, while profit after tax increased 17 per cent to N28.15bn. Total comprehensive income for the year stood at N30.97bn.

The company stated that the result affirms its ability to sustain its historic growth trajectory and enhance shareholders’ wealth despite a volatile operating environment.

In line with its commitment to shareholders, the Board approved a final cash dividend of N0.70 per ordinary share, amounting to N12.6bn. This brings the total dividend for the 2025 financial year to N1.00 per share, valued at N18bn, representing a 25 per cent increase from the N14.4bn payout in 2024.

United Capital said the improved distribution reflects its strong cash flow position and continued focus on delivering solid earnings performance while enhancing shareholder value.

Commenting on United Capital Group’s FY-2025 audited financials, the Board Chairman, Mr Uche Ike, said, “I am immensely proud of the leadership and the entire United Capital team for the stellar performance delivered in the 2025 financial year. I applaud our people for approaching every challenge with diligence, discipline, and an unwavering commitment to excellence.

“This level of excellence continues to set United Capital apart as a leader in the investment banking and financial services industry. I extend my sincere appreciation to our clients, partners, and shareholders for their enduring trust and to our teams across the Group whose passion and professionalism make performances like this possible.”

On the performance, the Group Chief Executive Officer, Mr Peter Ashade, added, “I am delighted to inform all our stakeholders that United Capital Group ended the year on an impressive note as Profit before Tax rose 37 per cent year-on-year despite the challenging operating environment. This remarkable business performance was driven by growth in core business operations, a resilient business model and strong execution of our strategic initiatives.

“As we proceed into the 2026 financial year, I remain excited about the opportunities ahead. Our robust risk management framework, technical expertise, operational scale, focused team and strategic clarity provide us a strong platform to effectively harness the opportunities inherent in our operating environment.”

NCC proposes 14-day notice before SIM deactivation

The Executive Vice Chairman of the Nigerian Communications Commission, Aminu Maida.The Nigerian Communications Commission has proposed that telecom operators must give subscribers a minimum of 14 days’ notice before deactivating their SIM cards over inactivity or post-paid churn.

The proposal is contained in a consultation paper titled Stakeholders Consultation Process for the Telecoms Identity Risks Management Platform, dated February 2026 and published on the Commission’s website.

Under the proposed amendments to the Quality-of-Service Business Rules, the NCC stated that “prior to churning of a post-paid line, the Operator shall send a notification to the affected subscriber through an alternative line or an email on the pending churning of his line.”

It added, “This notification shall be sent at least 14 days before the final date for the churn of the number.

A similar provision was proposed for prepaid subscribers. The commission said, “prior to churning of a pre-paid line, the Operator shall send a notification to the affected subscriber through an alternative line or an email on the pending churning of his line,” stressing again that the notice “shall be sent at least 14 days before the final date for the churn of the number.”

Currently, under Section 2.3.1 of the QoS Business Rules, a subscriber line may be deactivated if it has not been used within six months for a Revenue Generating Event, and if inactivity persists for another six months, the subscriber may lose the number, except in cases of network-related faults.

The commission also proposed that operators must submit churn data to the new Telecoms Identity Risk Management System. According to the document, “An Operator shall submit details of all churn numbers to the Telecoms Identity Risks Management System (TIRMS) within seven days of completion of the churn process.

The proposed changes form part of a broader regulatory review tied to the rollout of the Telecoms Identity Risk Management System, a cross-sector platform designed to curb fraud linked to recycled, swapped, and barred mobile numbers.

In the background section of the paper, the NCC explained that the TIRMS “is a secure, regulatory-backed Platform that helps prevent fraud stemming from churned, swapped, barred Mobile Station International Subscriber Directory Number in Nigeria.”

It added that the platform “will provide a uniform approach for all sectors in relation to the integrity and utilisation of registered MSISDNs on the Nigerian Communications network.”

The consultation process, which the commission said is in line with Section 58 of the Nigerian Communications Act 2003, is open for 21 days from the date of publication. Stakeholders are expected to submit comments on or before March 20, 2026.

The document was dated February 26, 2026, and signed by the Executive Vice Chairman and Chief Executive Officer of the Commission, Dr Aminu Maida.

CBN bets on easing inflation, FX stability for rate cut

The Central Bank of Nigeria reduced the Monetary Policy Rate by 50 basis points to 26.5 per cent on 24 February 2026, after the Monetary Policy Committee’s 304th meeting. SAMI TUNJI examines the disinflation trends, foreign exchange stability and banking sector reforms supporting the decision, alongside the fiscal risks that could challenge the outlook

When the Monetary Policy Committee met for its 304th session in Abuja, it delivered what several analysts had expected by cutting the Monetary Policy Rate by 50 basis points to 26.5 per cent. However, the committee kept other key settings unchanged, retaining the standing facilities corridor around the MPR at +50 and -450 basis points and leaving the Cash Reserve Requirement for deposit money banks at 45 per cent.

The CBN’s policy shift rests on one claim and one constraint. The claim is that disinflation is holding and is being supported by the delayed effect of earlier tightening, exchange rate stability and improving food supply. The constraint is that the same environment still carries risks, including fiscal releases and election-related spending that could push inflation up again.

CBN Governor Olayemi Cardoso, speaking during a press briefing after the meeting, signalled that the rate cut was not a declaration that inflation risk had ended. When asked if Nigeria could now “go to sleep on inflation”, he said, “Caution is our watchword in the Central Bank.”

Disinflation as key trigger

Analysts at Afrinvest earlier noted that Nigeria’s “disinflation trend, alongside sustained accretion to external buffers (foreign exchange reserves up 2.4 per cent since November to $47.8 bn), continued naira appreciation (up approximately 6.7 per cent to N1,355.00/$1.00 in the official market), and stable energy goods prices (notably, PMS), provides the CBN with latitude for policy fleibility.”

Nigeria’s headline inflation rate declined marginally to 15.10 per cent in January 2026, down from 15.15 per cent recorded in December 2025, according to the Consumer Price Index report released by the National Bureau of Statistics. This decline came despite earlier projections by analysts that Nigeria’s inflation could climb to 19 per cent in January. The NBS report showed that the Consumer Price Index fell to 127.4 in January from 131.2 in December, representing a 3.8-point decrease. The NBS said the January headline inflation rate was 0.05 percentage points lower than the rate recorded in December. The inflation figure was the lowest in five years and two months, since November 2020, when inflation stood at 14.89 per cent. The MPC described January 2026 as the eleventh consecutive month of decline in year-on-year headline inflation.

The disinflation story is clearer when broken down. Food inflation declined 8.89 per cent in January 2026 from 10.84 per cent in December 2025, which the MPC linked to improved domestic food supply, sustained exchange rate stability and base effects. The food inflation figure marked the first single-digit reading in 128 months and the lowest since August 2011, when food inflation stood at 8.66 per cent.

Core inflation eased 17.72 per cent from 18.63 per cent, driven largely by a moderation in Information and Communication services. The MPC also pointed to a short-run indicator. Month-on-month headline inflation fell to negative 2.88 per cent in January 2026 from 0.54 per cent in December 2025. A negative monthly reading suggests that the direction of prices in that month was not just slower growth but an outright decline, even if the durability of that pattern still needs to be tested across subsequent prints.

Speaking at the press briefing after the 304th MPC meeting, Cardoso said the continued deceleration in inflation was driven mainly by the “continued effects of the contractionary monetary policy”, foreign exchange market stability, robust capital inflows and improvement in the balance of payments. He added that these conditions suggested that prior tightening had helped anchor expectations. While the disinflation was central to why the committee saw room to reduce the benchmark rate, it did not loosen system liquidity aggressively as other parameters were retained.

The MPC flagged fiscal risk as releases from the federation account increase, which could pose upside risks to inflation. If fiscal expansion accelerates, it can increase liquidity and weaken the disinflation trend, particularly in an economy where supply constraints are common. In that scenario, the CBN would face a choice between defending disinflation with tighter policy or tolerating higher inflation to protect growth and credit conditions. This is why the cut looks like an incremental test rather than a clear start of a long easing cycle.

FX stability, reserves and recapitalisation

The MPC also linked its disinflation outlook to sustained stability in the foreign exchange market and stronger external buffers. Cardoso disclosed that gross external reserves rose to $50.45bn, providing import cover of 9.68 months for goods and services. The CBN tied reserve accretion to both real-economy flows and confidence. He pointed to higher export earnings and increased remittance inflows as drivers that contributed to foreign exchange stability and investor confidence. Cardoso also referenced favourable trade developments, a current account surplus, rising non-oil exports and increasing diaspora remittances.

The CBN further welcomed the newly issued Presidential Executive Order 09, which redirects oil and gas revenues into the Federation Account, and said the committee acknowledged its potential impact in improving fiscal revenue and reserve accretion. For monetary policy, the relevance is not the politics of the order but the mechanics. If more oil and gas revenue predictably flows through the federation account, fiscal planning can improve, and external buffers can strengthen, particularly if inflows support reserves and reduce pressure for deficit monetisation. However, the same story carries a risk. Higher inflows can also encourage higher spending if fiscal discipline is weak, and the MPC already warned that fiscal releases, including election-related spending, could push inflation up.

Cardoso also laid out a list of risks that can disrupt the external stability underpinning the rate cut. He cited the possibility of global shocks, uncertainties around oil prices, and the effect of pre-election spending if not contained.

The CBN governor further noted that banking sector indicators remained within regulatory thresholds and described the sector as resilient. He noted progress in recapitalisation, stating that 20 banks had fully met the new minimum capital requirements and that a further 13 were at advanced stages of their capital raising processes, which he said were expected to conclude within the stipulated time. He also noted that banks raised N4.05tn in verified and approved capital ahead of the 31 March 2026, recapitalisation deadline set by the CBN. The PUNCH observed that this figure was nearly double the N2.4 tn reportedly raised as of April 2025. Cardoso said N2.90tn of the amount, representing 71.6 per cent, was mobilised domestically, while N1.15tn, equivalent to 28.33 per cent, came from foreign participation.

“In summary, 71.67 per cent is domestic mobilisation and 28.33 per cent is foreign participation. This balance, in my view, represents a mix of domestic and foreign, which signals broad investor engagement and confidence in the sector,” Cardoso said.

The CBN governor also had to address stability risks tied to institutions under intervention. Cardoso said depositor funds in those institutions remain secure and that operations continue under close supervisory and regulatory oversight. He said this to prevent recapitalisation anxieties from turning into deposit flight or market rumours, both of which can disrupt the transmission of monetary policy.

A further stability issue is the payments and fintech ecosystem. The governor said the CBN recognised the importance of innovation but would ensure that risks to financial stability were properly managed. “We are advancing work already on a very comprehensive framework for digital assets,” Cardoso said, noting that the process would involve consultation and scrutiny to ensure transparency and long-term resilience. He disclosed that there are over 430 licensed fintech operators in Nigeria and described the segment as systemically important, adding that the CBN was strengthening supervisory oversight to address cyber threats and other emerging risks.

Likely impact of rate cut on Nigeria’s economy

In a statement, the Minister of Finance and Coordinating Minister of the Economy, Mr Wale Edun, welcomed the CBN’s decision to cut the MPR by 50 basis points to 26.5 per cent, describing it as a signal of growing confidence in the nation’s economic stabilisation. He noted that the decision reflects “strong coordination between fiscal and monetary authorities as the country transitions from stabilisation to economic consolidation”.

Edun explained that the rate cut provides the government with “fiscal space to accelerate investment in infrastructure, energy, agriculture and social services”. He added, “For businesses, it improves access to credit, supports private sector investment, and strengthens job creation in the real economy.”

The Director-General of the Nigeria Employers’ Consultative Association, Adewale Oyerinde, earlier told The PUNCH that the marginal cut indicated that monetary authorities were responding to sustained pressures facing businesses.

“The marginal reduction in the benchmark interest rate represents a cautious but noteworthy signal that monetary authorities are beginning to respond to the sustained pressures facing businesses and the productive sector,” Oyerinde said. He added, “While the 50 basis point reduction may not immediately translate into significantly lower lending rates, it reflects a gradual shift toward supporting economic growth without undermining price stability.”

Oyerinde stressed that the overall policy stance remained tight due to the retention of the Cash Reserve Ratio at 45 per cent for commercial banks and other liquidity controls. “With a substantial portion of bank deposits still sterilised, the capacity of financial institutions to expand credit to the real sector may remain constrained in the near term,” he said.

In a policy brief shared with The PUNCH, the Director of the Centre for the Promotion of Private Enterprise, Dr Muda Yusuf, described the rate cut as growth-supportive but warned that weak policy transmission and fiscal vulnerabilities could blunt its impact. “This policy direction is appropriate and growth-supportive. It reflects improving macroeconomic fundamentals and reinforces confidence in the economy’s stabilisation trajectory,” Yusuf said. He cautioned that lending rates might remain elevated due to structural constraints, stressing, “Unless these structural rigidities are addressed, the benefits of monetary easing may not fully translate into lower borrowing costs for manufacturers, SMEs, agriculture, and other productive sectors.”

Yusuf added that fiscal consolidation remained the missing anchor. “Without fiscal consolidation, monetary easing could be undermined by continued fiscal pressures and crowding-out effects in the financial system,” he said.

Looking ahead, Cardoso said the outlook suggests that “the current momentum of domestic disinflation will continue in the near term”, supported by exchange rate stability and improved food supply. However, he warned that “increased fiscal releases, including election-related spending, could pose upside risk to the outlook.” He reaffirmed the MPC’s commitment to “an evidence-based policy framework, firmly anchored on the Bank’s core mandate of ensuring price stability, while safeguarding the soundness and resilience of the financial system.”

Federal Government not lacking direction – APC replies David Mark, ADC

The Abia State Chapter of the All Progressives Congress, APC, has condemned the statement attributed to the former Senate President, David Mark, and other leaders of the African Democratic Congress, ADC, during the launch of Abia ADC’s membership mobilisation, registration, and revalidation exercise in Umuahia.

The ADC National Chairman, who was represented at the registration event on Saturday by ADC National Welfare Secretary, Nkem Ukandu, said that the APC-led Federal Government lacks direction, adding that the government has abandoned Nigerians amid economic hardship.

Reacting to the opposition party’s statement, the Abia APC Caucus accused the ex-Senate President and the ADC of attempting to mislead Nigerians with rhetorical political rallies.

“We strongly reject the misleading narrative that the APC-led Federal Government lacks direction and has abandoned Nigerians to hardship.

“Nigeria is navigating complex reforms under the bold leadership of President Bola Ahmed Tinubu. These necessary reforms are aimed at stabilising the economy, strengthening the naira, boosting local production, and creating long-term sustainability,” the APC Caucus said.

The Abia APC further stated that individuals who have occupied the highest levels of leadership for decades in the country should not attempt to distance themselves from structural issues that accumulated over time.

On allegations that it was plotting against a free and fair election process in the country, the Abia APC Caucus said the party is committed to free, fair, and credible elections, not the manipulation of outcomes.

“Our party believes in competition based on ideas and performance, not unfounded allegations. Institutions responsible for elections and public finance operate independently within the bounds of the Constitution, and sweeping accusations of manipulation only weaken public confidence without evidence,” it said.