2027: APC primary a sham, Tinubu should intervene – Arise

Ayodele Arise, chieftain of the All Progressives Congress and aspirant for the ticket of the Ekiti North Senatorial District, has described the party’s primary election as a sham.

He then urged President Bola Ahmed Tinubu to, as a matter of urgency, intervene in the crisis trailing the outcome of the exercise.

In a statement at the weekend, Arise said state governors remained a major challenge for a smooth conduct of the recent APC primaries.

Recall that the APC Committee, which supervised the process, had declared the sitting lawmaker representing Ekiti North, Senator Cyril Fasuyi, as the winner.

However, Arise and other contenders for the ticket, including Dipo Bamisaye and Dare Owolabi, had since dismissed the outcome as fraudulent and manipulated.

Senator Arise, who represented the senatorial district between 2007 and 2011, said the primary was a sham and the party is paying lip service to the crisis the election had generated.

“When we talk about internal democracy, it is still a very big challenge. It’s one thing for us to have a Constitution; it’s another thing for people to try to circumvent it or the guidelines for any election.

“That was demonstrated in no small measure when I tried to come back through the primary because I knew what was in the pipeline, so I went into it to prove a point.

“It will be a shame if some of us passed through this country and we don’t have the voice to correct the anomalies and let people know that if we want to practice democracy, let us practice it. If we don’t want it, it’s a different kettle of fish.

“The experience I had during the primary, I really don’t want to overbeat that because I believe the chairman of the party has spoken with Mr. President, and I think they are looking at all the challenges, and I am sure those of us who worked and won our elections will be given our mandate in due course.”

“As we discover problems, people respond to them, and I believe, more than anybody else, that our President has been very proactive in terms of fixing some of these challenges, working on them, and ensuring that corrections are made before it’s too late,” he stated.

He added that “the issue of the governors is still a major problem in terms of trying to get to the Senate.

“Even when you aren’t contesting against them, if you aren’t their favored candidate, the chances of your making it are a little bit very challenging.”

2027: How INEC can achieve free, fair, credible election – Baba-Ahmed

The National Chairman of the Peoples Redemption Party, PRP, Hakeem Baba-Ahmed, has revealed how the Independent National Electoral Commission, INEC, can have free, fair and credible elections in Nigeria.

In a statement on Sunday, Baba-Ahmed, said that INEC must be strengthened and shielded from undue political interference to enhance public confidence in the electoral process.

The former Special Adviser to President Bola Tinubu on political matters noted that called for a review of the process for appointing the INEC Chairman, National Commissioners and Resident Electoral Commissioners, RECs.

According to him, the current system gives the executive excessive influence over the electoral body.

“The moment you hand over an electoral body to a partisan administration that wants to retain power, you create serious questions about its neutrality,” he said.

He also called for greater financial autonomy for the commission, insisting that INEC should be allowed to present and defend its budget directly before the National Assembly without executive interference.

The former Special Adviser to President Bola Tinubu on political affairs urged authorities to impose stiffer penalties on politicians and other individuals involved in electoral fraud and violence.

Baba-Ahmed pointed out that the persistence of electoral offences is largely due to the lack of accountability for offenders.

“Politicians who compromise the electoral process must face the consequences of their actions. The culture of impunity must end,” he added.

Group berates ex-gov Jang for opposing indigeneship for Hausa-Fulani

Plateau State chapter of the Kautal Pulaaku Fulbe Association of Nigeria, KPFAN, has berated former Governor Jonah David Jang over his opposition to a recent court ruling granting indigeneship to Hausa residents in Jos North Local Government Area based on their birth and long-term stay in the state.

While reacting to the ruling in a statement on Saturday, Jang had said the judgment would come with serious implications for the state’s identity, cultural heritage, and indigenous rights.

The former governor stated that debates surrounding citizenship, residency, and indigenship in the state have remained at the center of political and social discussions for decades, and wondered why the court should hastily decide on a matter that could further heighten tension.

He argued that altering the existing framework could create tensions and undermine the rights of groups that have traditionally been recognized as indigenous to the state.

But the Fulani group, in a statement issued on Sunday by its National Publicity Secretary, Haruna Idris Bayero, countered the elder statesman, describing his opposition to the ruling as not only unfortunate but dangerous to the unity of the people and the fragile peace in the state.

Bayero said Jang’s stance negates the provisions of the Nigerian Constitution which guarantees every citizen equal rights and prohibits discrimination on grounds of ethnicity, place of origin, or religion.

“The Kautal Pulaaku Fulbe Association of Nigeria (KPFAN) views with utter dismay and disappointment the recent remarks by former Plateau State Governor, Senator Jonah David Jang, opposing the issuance of indigene certificates to Hausa/Fulani residents in Plateau State,” the statement said.

Continuing, Bayero said:

“His position is not only unfortunate but also a dangerous relic of ethnic exclusivism that contradicts the clear provisions of the Constitution of the Federal Republic of Nigeria (1999, as amended).

“Senator Jang’s stance flies in the face of Section 42 of the Nigerian Constitution, which prohibits discrimination on grounds of ethnicity, place of origin, or religion.

“Every Nigerian citizen, including Hausa/Fulani families who have lived in Plateau State for generations—some for over a century- has the right to be recognized as bona fide citizens of the state where they reside, contribute, and pay taxes. Citizenship is not a privilege to be dispensed based on parochial loyalties.

“The indigene-settler dichotomy has been weaponized over the years to marginalize fellow Nigerians. Many Hausa/Fulani communities in Plateau were born there, have their ancestral graves there, and have contributed immensely to the economy, security, and cultural life of the state. Denying them certificates simply because their great-grandparents migrated before the creation of the state is a historical injustice.

“It is no longer news that Plateau State has witnessed recurring cycles of violence. Our association firmly believes that the refusal of successive Plateau leaders, including Senator Jang, to embrace justice and equality for all citizens—irrespective of ethnic background—has been the kindling for repeated conflicts.

“When a section of society is permanently designated as “non-indigenes” despite decades of residence, you create second-class citizens who are vulnerable to exclusion, dispossession, and violence. That is the real recipe for crisis.

“In the 21st century, no modern society advances by locking out fellow citizens from certificates of belonging. Jang’s logic, if applied universally, would unravel the Nigerian federation. We call on him to use his advanced age and experience to champion inclusion, not exclusion. The Fulani are not strangers in Plateau; they are neighbours, farmers, herders, traders, and in many cases, indigenous people whose history predates the 1967 creation of Plateau State.

“We call on the Plateau State government to disregard Senator Jang’s retrogressive advice and instead move toward a unified residency-and-indigeneity framework that respects the Nigerian Constitution. No citizen should be denied state-level rights—access to employment, education, or political participation—because of their ethnic surname.

“Senator Jang’s statement is a disservice to national unity and a direct affront to the Hausa/Fulani communities who have called Plateau their home for generations.

“The Kautal Pulaaku Fulbe Association will continue to resist all forms of discriminatory policies and will support legal action if necessary. We urge Plateau leaders to learn from history: peace comes from justice, not from perpetual exclusion.”

46 illegal immigrants from Togo, Burkina Faso, others arrested in Ogun [VIDEO]

No fewer than 46 suspected illegal immigrants residing in Ogun State have been arrested by troops of the Nigerian Army, in conjunction with operatives of the Department of State Services, DSS and the Nigerian Immigration Services.

Assistant Director Army Public Relations of the 35 Artillery Brigade, Idereghi Samuel Akari said in a statement on Sunday that the arrest followed actionable intelligence.

He said the operation which commenced on 11 June 2026, led to the arrest of the suspects at various locations within Ijebu Imushin, Ijebu Ilese and surrounding communities during a targeted security operation.

Preliminary investigations revealed that the individuals had allegedly been residing in the state for approximately six months without valid immigration documentation.

During interrogation, the suspects claimed to be merchants and workers affiliated with QNet, an online marketing platform involved in the sale of various commodities.

The arrested individuals comprise 18 nationals of Burkina Faso, 23 nationals of Côte d’Ivoire, 4 nationals of Togo and 1 national of Senegal. Among them are 36 males and 10 females.

The statement added that the suspects have been handed over to the Nigeria Immigration Service, NIS, Ogun State Command, for further “investigation and appropriate administrative action in accordance with extant laws”.

68 pledges unmet as 10th N’Assembly nears end — Report

68 pledges unmet as 10th N’Assembly nears end — ReportA new assessment of the 10th National Assembly has found that lawmakers have failed to deliver 68 of 92 legislative commitments tracked since the beginning of their tenure, with the House of Representatives recording an overall fulfilment score of 26.8 per cent and the Senate 44.11 per cent.

The report, released on Sunday by civic-tech organisation AdvoKC Foundation, examined the performance of the House of Representatives and the Senate against promises contained in their respective legislative agendas as the Assembly enters its final year.

The assessment was conducted through the organisation’s Promise Tracker NG platform, which monitored 56 commitments made by the House and 34 commitments made by the Senate across sectors, including healthcare, education, economy, governance, security and political reforms.

According to the report, the House of Representatives fulfilled 13 of its tracked commitments, while four were classified as compromised and 39 as broken.

The Senate delivered nine commitments, 12 were considered compromised, and 13 were classified as unfulfilled.

The House recorded its strongest performance in healthcare, scoring 67 per cent, followed by justice and security at 57 per cent.

However, the chamber scored zero per cent in the economy and jobs category, while governance and political reform recorded only six per cent.

The report said commitments relating to electoral reforms and constitutional amendments remained largely unresolved.

The Senate performed better in some areas, recording 66.7 per cent in education and 57.1 per cent in economic development and jobs.

However, the report identified stalled reforms on constitutional amendments, youth inclusion and local government autonomy as major areas of concern.

Project Director of AdvoKC Foundation, Habib Sheidu, said legislative agendas represented binding commitments to citizens rather than political statements.

“Legislative agendas are not merely aspirational policy wish-lists; they are solemn public covenants made with the Nigerian people,” Sheidu said.

He urged lawmakers to use the remaining year of the Assembly to complete outstanding reforms and improve their record before the end of the legislative cycle.

“With only one year left before the curtain falls on the 10th Assembly, this report is not an indictment but a crucial wake-up call.

“Our lawmakers still possess a vital window of opportunity to salvage their legacies, fast-track trapped constitutional reforms, and deliver the transformational governance they promised.”

AdvoKC said the Legislative Agenda Meter was designed to provide citizens with a data-based mechanism for tracking legislative performance and holding elected representatives accountable.

The organisation said the platform would continue to provide updated information on lawmakers’ progress and encouraged citizens, civil society groups and the media to engage with the findings.

The full assessment reports on the House of Representatives and the Senate were made available through the Promise Tracker NG platform.

Okpebholo condemns Edo kidnapping, orders police prob

Edo State Governor, Monday OkpebholoEdo State Governor, Monday Okpebholo, has condemned the kidnapping that reportedly took place on Sunday at the Vegetable Market along Airport Road, Benin City, describing it as unacceptable and a direct attack on innocent residents.

In a statement released on Monday by his media aide, Patrick Ebojele, the governor also directed the Edo State Commissioner of Police to immediately commence a swift and coordinated investigation into the incident with a view at securing the safe rescue of the victims and arresting those responsible for the attack.

The governor warned that the state government would not tolerate any act that threatens public safety and security or disturbs the peace of the state.

He stated, “I strongly condemn this act of kidnapping and I call on the Commissioner of Police to immediately open investigation into the matter.

“As a government, we will not tolerate any act that threatens public safety and security or disturbs the peace of the state.”

Okpebholo urges residents of Benin City and across Edo state to remain alert and report any suspicious movements to the nearest Police station stressing that timely information will support ongoing police operations.

He reaffirmed that the government would not relent until those responsible were apprehended and made to face the full weight of the law.

Banks earn N225bn from ATM, e-banking charges

Nigerian banks generated N224.69bn from electronic banking services and ATM/card-related charges in the first quarter of 2026, representing a 12.56 per cent increase from N199.61bn recorded in the corresponding period of 2025, an analysis of the unaudited financial statements of 11 listed lenders has shown.

The increase came as banks continued to deepen digital banking adoption and electronic payment services, with income from e-banking channels accounting for a significant share of non-interest revenue during the period under review.

Findings by The PUNCH showed that electronic banking and ATM/card management fee income rose by N25.06bn year-on-year, from N199.61bn in Q1 2025 to N224.67bn in Q1 2026. A breakdown showed that income from electronic banking and e-business activities increased by 11.57 per cent to N177.97bn from N159.52bn recorded a year earlier.

Similarly, earnings from ATM and card management fees climbed by 16.48 per cent to N46.70bn from N40.09bn in Q1 2025.

The growth in digital banking revenue coincided with a broader increase in banking sector fee income. The PUNCH earlier reported that the total fee and commission earnings of the 11 lenders rose by 13.64 per cent to N984.47bn from N866.30bn. Also, account maintenance fee income increased by 14.07 per cent to N209.18bn from N183.37bn.

Among the lenders reviewed, Access Holdings recorded the highest earnings from e-banking services, generating N55.71bn in Q1 2026. UBA followed with N46.93bn, while Ecobank earned N35.53bn from card management fees. GTCO posted N21.90bn in e-business income, and Zenith Bank generated N21.54bn from electronic product fees.

Other notable contributors included First Holdco with N20.75bn, Wema Bank with N6.10bn, Fidelity Bank with a combined N8.81bn from ATM charges and e-banking commissions, Stanbic IBTC with N4.33bn from card-based commissions and electronic banking fees, Sterling Financial Holdings with N2.89bn, and Jaiz Bank with N187.05m.

An analysis of growth rates showed that Fidelity Bank recorded the strongest expansion in digital banking-related income. The lender’s combined ATM charges and e-banking commissions rose by 164.9 per cent to N8.81bn from N3.08bn in the corresponding period of 2025, driven largely by a 240.8 per cent jump in ATM charges.

GTCO followed with a 68.64 per cent increase in e-business income to N21.90bn from N12.99bn. Stanbic IBTC’s combined card-based commission and electronic banking income rose 52.8 per cent to N4.33bn, while Zenith Bank’s fees on electronic products increased by 58.91 per cent to N21.54bn.

Sterling Financial Holdings recorded a 22.15 per cent increase in e-business commissions and fees, while Access Holdings posted a 15.2 per cent rise in channels and e-business income to N55.71bn.

However, some lenders recorded declines in digital banking-related income. Wema Bank posted the sharpest decline, with fees on electronic products dropping by 50.68 per cent to N6.10bn from N12.37bn.

Stanbic IBTC’s electronic banking fees declined by 20.57 per cent to N865m, while UBA’s electronic banking income slipped marginally by 1.91 per cent to N46.93bn. Ecobank’s card management fees also declined slightly by 1.52 per cent to N35.53bn.

Further analysis showed that digital banking channels accounted for a significant portion of banks’ fee income. At Access Holdings, e-banking income contributed 27.2 per cent of total fee and commission earnings of N205.03bn. GTCO derived 27.27 per cent of its fee income from e-business services, generating N21.90bn out of N80.31bn total fee income.

UBA’s electronic banking income represented 37.82 per cent of its N124.07bn fee and commission revenue, making it the bank’s largest fee-generating line item. First Holdco generated 21.59 per cent of its fee income from electronic banking services, while Zenith Bank earned 25.4 per cent of its fee and commission income from electronic product fees.

Ecobank’s card management fees accounted for 14.94 per cent of total fee income, while Wema Bank’s electronic product fees contributed 35.08 per cent despite the sharp decline recorded during the quarter.

Stanbic IBTC’s combined card-based commission and electronic banking income represented 5.21 per cent of total fee income, while Sterling Financial Holdings generated 17.13 per cent of fee income from e-business commissions and fees.

The strong performance of digital banking income comes amid signs of improving economic activity, according to analysts.  Nigeria’s private sector expanded to a nine-month high in May 2026, with the Stanbic IBTC Purchasing Managers’ Index rising to 54.1 points on the back of stronger demand, increased output and improved logistics.

The growth also aligns with ongoing reforms in the banking sector. Earlier this year, the Central Bank of Nigeria said financial-sector reforms, including the recapitalisation programme and efforts to stabilise the foreign exchange market, were strengthening the foundations of the economy and positioning banks to support long-term growth.

Payment digitalisation drive

Digitalisation of financial services has also become a major policy conversation across Africa, with development institutions increasingly linking digital payments and electronic banking adoption to economic formalisation, financial inclusion and government revenue mobilisation.

In its Africa Economic Outlook 2026 report, the African Development Bank said digitalisation was helping countries lower the cost of business registration, reporting and payments, making it easier for firms and individuals operating outside the formal economy to participate in regulated financial systems.

The report noted that countries with higher usage of digital public administration services tend to record stronger domestic revenue mobilisation and lower levels of informality.

According to the AfDB, digital platforms improve taxpayer registration, enhance transaction traceability and strengthen compliance monitoring, enabling governments to capture previously unregistered economic activities without increasing tax rates.

The bank stated that digitalisation also improves administrative efficiency, reduces leakages and broadens the tax base, creating a sustainable pathway for strengthening domestic resource mobilisation and fiscal capacity.

Beyond revenue generation, the AfDB said digitalisation promotes economic and financial inclusion by providing informal businesses with access to digital payment platforms and financial services.

The report stated that digital financial tools enable small businesses to build transaction histories, reduce information gaps with lenders and gain access to savings, credit and risk-management products.

The AfDB explained that these developments help improve the resilience and productivity of micro, small and medium-sized enterprises while encouraging gradual migration from the informal to the formal economy.

The growing contribution of e-banking, card services and other digital channels to banks’ fee income reflects the broader shift toward digital finance across Africa, as consumers and businesses increasingly rely on electronic payment systems for everyday transactions.

‘Over 70% of eligible NNPC staff seek exit’

NNPCThe Nigerian National Petroleum Company Limited has commenced an early retirement scheme that is already attracting significant interest from employees, with officials confirming that more than 70 per cent of eligible staff have indicated willingness to participate in the voluntary exit arrangement.

The initiative, structured under the Accelerated Exit Scheme and the Voluntary Exit Scheme, is being positioned by the company as a strategic and non-coercive reform designed to align its workforce with long-term transformation goals, improve efficiency and create space for younger professionals.

The AES targets employees with up to one year left before retirement in 2026, while the VES covers staff due for statutory retirement in 2027, as well as SS1-grade employees with about two to five years remaining before retirement between 2028 and 2030.

Officials of the national oil company, who spoke with The PUNCH on condition of anonymity on Sunday because they were not authorised to speak publicly on the retirement scheme, insisted that the initiative is entirely voluntary and designed to benefit both employees and the organisation.

They said no employee was being compelled to leave the organisation. One of the officials disclosed that more than 70 per cent of workers eligible for the scheme had already indicated interest in taking advantage of the programme.

The clarification comes amid concerns in some quarters over the rationale behind the initiative and speculation that some categories of staff may be under pressure to exit the company.

The PUNCH reports that last month, an internal communication from the Group Chief Executive Officer, Bashir Ojulari, to staff explained that the restructuring is part of a broader organisational recalibration currently underway at the national oil company.

“Over the past year, we began an important recalibration of our organisation as part of our broader transformation,” Ojulari said. “As we build momentum on this journey, it is essential that our workforce continues to evolve in line with the future we are building.”

He further clarified that the AES targets employees due for retirement by 2026, while the VES covers staff scheduled for statutory retirement in 2027, as well as employees on grade level SS1 expected to retire between 2028 and 2030.

“These programmes form part of our deliberate efforts to responsibly manage workforce transitions while creating the right conditions for organisational renewal and long-term sustainability,” he noted.

However, a senior NNPC official familiar with the scheme explained that participation is entirely optional, stressing that no employee is being compelled to leave the organisation. The source maintained that the scheme was neither targeted at specific individuals nor unprecedented within the organisation.

According to the official, the programme was introduced for two reasons: to provide workers approaching retirement with an opportunity to leave the system earlier under more favourable terms while creating room for fresh talent to join the company.

“I am sure you know what the scheme is about. There are staff of the NNPC who are due to retire in five years or three years. There are also people retiring by the end of this year. The company opened a scheme for them to take early retirement, and this happens everywhere,” the official said.

“It is voluntary. If a worker decides to leave early, there is a package he or she gets. If the person decides to leave now, there is a package for it. Nobody is being forced to leave.”

Another source explained that the initiative was conceived as a win-win arrangement, offering financial incentives to employees while supporting the company’s workforce renewal strategy.

“The real reason why it was rolled out is for the benefit of the individual and also for the benefit of the organisation,” the official stated

“For the individual who decides to leave early, there is a more enhanced package instead of waiting to retire when the person clocks 60 years, which is the official retirement age, or years of service, whichever comes first. So, if somebody feels that they want to move on and do something else with their lives, they can take advantage of the package and leave on better terms.”

The official stressed that employees eligible for the programme retained the right to decline the offer without any consequences. “Some who are due to retire at the end of this year or in two years can say that they are not interested. People are not being forced to leave. It is voluntary,” the source emphasised.

The NNPC official also linked the programme to the company’s broader efforts to rejuvenate its workforce and ensure continuity through strategic recruitment. According to the source, the company recruited more than 1,000 employees last year, and the retirement initiative would further create opportunities for young professionals to grow within the organisation.

“For the organisation, it opens up space to bring in younger people to take up roles. Recall that last year, the company employed over 1,000 persons who are now in the system,” the official said. “So, it helps people who want to take early retirement to do so and take up something different with their lives.”

Providing insight into the level of acceptance of the initiative among eligible staff, the source said initial indications suggested that the programme had recorded significant success.

“As of today, among those who qualify for this scheme and those within that space, what we have seen is that more than 70 per cent of persons who are eligible have indicated interest in taking early retirement,” the official disclosed.

“So, if you have 70 per cent who have indicated interest, as I speak to you, it means many people just want to go and do something different with their lives. If we were having 15 per cent or less, you can say people do not want to leave. But the scheme is currently a success.”

The source dismissed suggestions that the programme was targeted at specific individuals or designed to compel employees to vacate their positions. “It is not about individuals being targeted. It is not about individuals at all, but a scheme. It is also not the first time it is happening in NNPC. Some organisations do it every three years,” the official said.

“If you do not want to go, it is fine. This scheme has been rolled out for people to take advantage of. It is mutually beneficial to the business and individuals.”

The official added that beyond opening the door for younger employees, the programme would also enable the company to bring in specialised skills where necessary. “For the organisation, it just opens up space to bring in younger people and, in other cases, experienced hires, but in most cases, younger people, and ventilate the system in a positive manner,” the source added.

NNPC, which transitioned into a limited liability company under the Petroleum Industry Act, has in recent years pursued various reforms aimed at improving operational efficiency and positioning the national oil company to compete effectively with its international counterparts.

The company has also embarked on workforce optimisation initiatives alongside efforts to strengthen capacity, attract new talent and improve productivity as it navigates the evolving dynamics of the global energy industry.

The latest voluntary retirement programme appears to align with that broader transformation agenda, with management insisting that participation remains a matter of personal choice rather than institutional compulsion.

Domestic gas sales rise 30% on reforms – Report

GasNigeria’s domestic gas market recorded a significant increase in sales, rising by about 30 per cent between January 2022 and January 2025, driven by reforms under the Petroleum Industry Act 2021 and recent executive orders by President Bola Tinubu, according to a legal analysis by Tope Adebayo LP.

The Lagos-based full-service law firm said in a statement made available to our correspondent that the reforms have improved regulatory clarity, fiscal attractiveness and investor confidence across the gas value chain, even as infrastructure gaps and implementation challenges continue to slow the pace of growth.

It stated that Nigeria, which holds more than 206 trillion cubic feet of proven gas reserves, has long struggled to convert its resource base into domestic energy supply due to underinvestment, weak infrastructure and gas flaring.

According to data cited in the report, domestic gas sales rose from 49.3bscf in January 2022 to 64.2bscf in January 2025, reflecting the gains attributed to ongoing reforms under the PIA.

The report noted that the legislation marked a turning point for the sector.

“The PIA represents the most comprehensive reform of Nigeria’s petroleum sector in decades and has established a stronger foundation for domestic gas development through regulatory clarity, pricing liberalisation mechanisms, infrastructure support and enhanced investment incentives,” the firm stated in a report titled ‘From Policy to Practice: Legal and Regulatory Drivers of Nigeria’s Domestic Gas Market Under the PIA and Recent Executive Orders’.

It explained that structural reforms under the Act, including the creation of separate regulatory authorities for upstream and midstream/downstream operations, have helped to improve oversight and reduce regulatory bottlenecks.

The analysis also highlighted the Domestic Gas Delivery Obligation framework as a key intervention aimed at boosting supply to strategic sectors such as power generation and industry. The framework includes enforceable penalties for non-compliance.

It further noted improvements in gas utilisation and supply performance, alongside modest reductions in gas flaring and the expansion of the Nigerian Gas Flare Commercialisation Programme, which it said has seen multiple flare sites auctioned for monetisation projects.

Beyond production measures, the PIA, it stated, introduced open-access provisions for infrastructure, partial liberalisation of gas pricing and the establishment of the Midstream and Downstream Gas Infrastructure Fund to support investments in processing, transportation and distribution.

The law firm maintained that recent executive orders and presidential directives have also strengthened the investment climate through tax incentives, faster contracting timelines and more flexible local content implementation.

“These interventions signal a deliberate effort by the government to improve project economics and enhance Nigeria’s competitiveness as a destination for gas investments,” Tope Adebayo LP noted.

However, the firm warned that policy gains alone are insufficient to deliver the market’s full potential.

“Large-scale outcomes remain constrained by persistent infrastructure gaps, payment risks within the power sector, legacy debts, and implementation inefficiencies. The transition from policy to practice is clearly underway, but it remains incomplete,” it stated.

According to the analysis, achieving a fully functional and scalable domestic gas market will require sustained investment in pipelines, processing facilities, transportation networks and distribution systems, alongside stronger institutional coordination and consistent regulatory execution.

The report stated that the foundations had been laid, but long-term success would depend on effective implementation and continued market reforms. It added that, to unlock the full promise of the Decade of Gas initiative, Nigeria must bridge the gap between legal design and operational reality.

CBN liquidity tightening triggers short-term debt shift

Fixed-income analysts are strongly advising institutional investors and fund managers to realign their portfolios towards short-dated sovereign instruments, following an aggressive liquidity mop-up by the CBN that has pushed Open Market Operations yields to highly competitive levels.

The calls for tactical reallocation come on the heels of the latest primary market auction, where the apex bank offered N200.00bn across three distinct tenors. The exercise triggered an unprecedented wave of liquidity deployment, with total investor subscriptions shattering expectations to hit over N2.5tn. Market participants say the scale of demand reflects not only excess liquidity in the financial system but also heightened caution among institutional investors navigating an environment of sticky inflation, exchange rate volatility, and uneven fiscal buffers across key sectors of the economy.

CBN’s liquidity mop-up

Market sentiment is rapidly shifting as fixed-income desks react to the lucrative clearing rates offered by the monetary authority.

“The CBN is sending a very clear message to the market: liquidity control remains the absolute priority, and they are willing to pay a premium to achieve it,” stated an investment research analyst at Meristem Securities.

“With stop rates clearing at 21.80 per cent for the 11-day paper and 20.37 per cent for the 102-day instrument, analysts urge fixed-income investors to ride the OMO yield wave while these elevated windows remain open,” it added.

The auction data reveals an intense concentration of demand at the longer end of the offered curve, where the 102-day maturity drew an astronomical N1.73tn in bids. The CBN eventually allotted N1.72tn to this segment and N220.00bn to the ultra-short 11-day paper, while completely rejecting all bids for the intermediate 39-day paper. Analysts interpret this skewed demand pattern as evidence of a market structure increasingly anchored on yield optimisation rather than tenor diversification, as investors crowd into instruments perceived as offering the best risk-adjusted return in a tightening liquidity cycle.

Beyond the headline figures, dealers note that the heavy subscription levels also underscore the depth of idle liquidity in the banking system prior to the CBN’s intervention. With interbank rates tightening and liquidity buffers being actively sterilised, fund managers are recalibrating strategies to align with a policy environment that prioritises monetary tightening over growth support in the short term.

Yield curve pressures

The aggressive pricing of OMO bills has reverberated across adjacent fixed-income segments, triggering mixed reactions in the secondary markets. This shifting pricing structure became evident over the week as primary market OMO stop rates cleared at 21.80 per cent for the 11-day paper and 20.37 per cent for the 102-day paper, directly influencing broader trading desks.

While the secondary Nigerian Treasury Bills market maintained relative stability with average yields edging down by a single basis point to 17.51 per cent, the sovereign bond market succumbed to notable selling pressure, pushing average long-term FGN bond yields up by eight basis points to settle at 16.32 per cent. Traders say this divergence highlights a fragmented response function across instruments, with shorter-tenor assets benefiting from liquidity chasing yield, while longer-dated bonds experience repricing pressure due to duration sensitivity.

“We are witnessing a profound structural rotation out of long-term debt into short-term high-yield papers. The sharp volatility in the March 2027 bond, which saw its yield spike by 121 basis points in a matter of days, underscores a tactical retreat by asset managers who are trying to avoid duration risk while inflation risks linger,” noted a secondary desk dealer at a major tier-1 investment bank.

Market analysts add that the steepening of yield pressures at the longer end is also being shaped by inflation expectations that remain insufficiently anchored, despite recent monetary tightening. This has created a scenario where investors increasingly demand a premium for holding duration, further accelerating the shift into short-term instruments.

Short-term safe haven

The aggressive positioning by local investors aligns with broader macroeconomic realities. Locally, though Nigeria’s economy showed positive structural resilience with a 3.89 per cent year-on-year GDP expansion in Q1, lingering inflationary pressures from late Q1 continue to keep investment committees cautious of locking up capital for extended durations. The GDP figure, while encouraging, masks significant sectoral disparities that continue to influence capital allocation decisions across institutional portfolios.

“When you look at the macroeconomic backdrop, short-duration strategy is simply the most logical play right now,” explained an asset manager overseeing a leading pension fund. “The sheer volume of funds, N1.73tn, seeking a home in a 102-day OMO paper, proves that institutional mandates are locking in these guaranteed, risk-free returns. Why absorb the volatility of a five-year or 10-year bond at 16.3 per cent when you can capture over 20 per cent in less than four months?”

Portfolio managers further note that regulatory frameworks governing pension and insurance funds are also reinforcing this shift, as risk-weighted capital considerations increasingly favour short-dated, highly liquid instruments during periods of monetary tightening. This has created a feedback loop where policy, regulation, and market behaviour reinforce the same directional bias toward short-term sovereign exposure.

Real sector realities

The cautious duration stance is further validated by a deep dive into the underlying sectors of the economy. According to the latest Meristem Macroeconomic Update and GDP Report for Q1 2026, the real sector presents a highly fragmented outlook, driving investors to favour liquid financial assets over long-term structural bets.

The oil sector is expected to maintain a steady expansion, providing a reliable cushion for the broader economy. This growth is heavily tethered to continuous government security enhancements in oil-producing regions, which aim to curb theft and pipeline vandalism through initiatives such as Operation Delta Sentinel. However, analysts caution that the sector remains vulnerable to execution risks and external price volatility, which could disrupt projected output gains.

“The oil sector’s structural recovery is key, but it remains heavily dependent on security execution,” noted an energy desk lead at an indigenous brokerage firm. “Furthermore, production volumes are set to gain from faster, shorter approval timelines to restart inactive oil wells, a much more rapid alternative to drilling new ones. On the infrastructure front, the commencement of operations at the FSO Cawthorne vessel and terminal is providing a reliable evacuation route for critical assets like OML 18. Similarly, natural gas supply is projected to strengthen heading into the second half of 2026, driven by the anticipated completion of the River Niger crossing segment of the OB3 gas pipeline.”

Agricultural pressures

In contrast, the agricultural sector faces imminent near-term headwinds. Output is expected to moderate in Q2 2026 due to the seasonal planting lull. Compounding this, elevated fuel costs are actively driving up transportation and farm input costs, tightening farmer margins and feeding directly into the visible 16.06 per cent food inflation recorded for April 2026.

The inflationary pressure in food markets continues to weigh heavily on household consumption and rural income stability, further complicating policy transmission dynamics.

“The structural bottlenecks in our agro-allied sector are forcing capital allocation to stay nimble,” remarked an investment committee member during a weekly strategy review. “While medium-term prospects remain moderate, buoyed by future harvests and carry-forward benefits from government dry-season schemes like the National Agricultural Growth Scheme and Agribusiness Project, long-term productivity remains structurally constrained. The sector continues to grapple with limited financing following the suspension of the Anchor Borrower’s Programme, persistent regional insecurity, surging fertiliser costs, and weak post-harvest logistics.” These constraints continue to discourage long-horizon private investment into agriculture despite its strategic importance to food security.

ICT energy headwinds

The Information and Communications Technology sector remains a bright spot, with growth projected to remain strong. This momentum is propelled by robust data consumption, broadening broadband penetration, and sustained corporate investments in network expansion, including the continued rollout of 5G infrastructure across major Nigerian cities.

The sector continues to attract foreign and domestic capital inflows, even amid broader macroeconomic tightening.

“Even our highest-growth vectors are feeling the macro pinch. The sector is high-performing, but it is not immune to macroeconomic pressures; rising energy prices are expected to drive up operational overheads and squeeze corporate margins,” a Meristem researcher noted. Industry operators also point to foreign exchange constraints and energy volatility as key risks that could moderate profit expansion in the medium term.

As macro liquidity remains heavily managed by the CBN to counter these mixed structural signals, investment advisors anticipate that secondary market bond yields will experience sustained upward pressure for as long as primary OMO rates remain structurally elevated. This environment is expected to persist until there is a meaningful easing in inflation trends or a shift in the central bank’s liquidity management stance.

For a closer look at the market environment leading up to these economic adjustments, watch this analysis of the CBN’s Policy Choices and Liquidity Interventions. This financial broadcast reviews the apex bank’s tools for controlling excess liquidity and managing local banking assets.