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NGX Market Value Has Soared in Five Years

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Chinyere

Active Member
Mar 23, 2026
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Following demutualisation in 2021, the Nigerian Stock Exchange rebranded into NGX Group and the market hasn't looked back since.
NGX market capitalisation now sits at ₦128.7 trillion (Nigerian Stock Exchange) , compared to roughly ₦20 trillion pre-demutualisation — a 500%+ explosion in five years. What makes this rally stand out is that it wasn't driven by a single catalyst, but by a mix of structural reforms, sectoral momentum, and growing retail participation.
The All-Share Index is already up +28.84% year-to-date in 2026 (Nigerian Stock Exchange) , with the NGX Oil & Gas Index leading sectors at +64% YTD. (Nigerian Stock Exchange)
This isn't noise — it's a market maturing in real time.

Is this growth reflecting the real economy, or is it mostly liquidity chasing returns?
 
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Following demutualisation in 2021, the Nigerian Stock Exchange rebranded into NGX Group and the market hasn't looked back since.
NGX market capitalisation now sits at ₦128.7 trillion (Nigerian Stock Exchange) , compared to roughly ₦20 trillion pre-demutualisation — a 500%+ explosion in five years. What makes this rally stand out is that it wasn't driven by a single catalyst, but by a mix of structural reforms, sectoral momentum, and growing retail participation.
The All-Share Index is already up +28.84% year-to-date in 2026 (Nigerian Stock Exchange) , with the NGX Oil & Gas Index leading sectors at +64% YTD. (Nigerian Stock Exchange)
This isn't noise — it's a market maturing in real time.

Is this growth reflecting the real economy, or is it mostly liquidity chasing returns?
That growth is eye-catching, a jump from ₦20 trillion to ₦128.7 trillion in five years is massive. What’s interesting is it’s not just one thing driving it; reforms, sector performance, and more people trading are all playing a role.
The question now is whether this market boom matches the real economy or if it’s mostly cash chasing returns. Either way, it shows Nigeria’s bourse is maturing fast, but investors need to stay sharp about where the value really is.
 
  • Like
Reactions: Benjamin E Housel
Following demutualisation in 2021, the Nigerian Stock Exchange rebranded into NGX Group and the market hasn't looked back since.
NGX market capitalisation now sits at ₦128.7 trillion (Nigerian Stock Exchange) , compared to roughly ₦20 trillion pre-demutualisation — a 500%+ explosion in five years. What makes this rally stand out is that it wasn't driven by a single catalyst, but by a mix of structural reforms, sectoral momentum, and growing retail participation.
The All-Share Index is already up +28.84% year-to-date in 2026 (Nigerian Stock Exchange) , with the NGX Oil & Gas Index leading sectors at +64% YTD. (Nigerian Stock Exchange)
This isn't noise — it's a market maturing in real time.

Is this growth reflecting the real economy, or is it mostly liquidity chasing returns?
A 500% jump in the stock market doesn’t mean the economy is five times bigger. It mostly means prices have adjusted upward for a few key reasons:

Weaker naira: When the currency loses value, assets look more expensive in naira even if nothing really changed.
Higher investor confidence: People are now willing to pay more for the same company earnings.
Inflation-driven growth: Companies are making more money partly because prices of goods and services have risen.

So yes, some of the growth is just on paper. But it’s not meaningless, it also shows confidence is returning and money is flowing back into the market.
 
That growth is eye-catching, a jump from ₦20 trillion to ₦128.7 trillion in five years is massive. What’s interesting is it’s not just one thing driving it; reforms, sector performance, and more people trading are all playing a role.
The question now is whether this market boom matches the real economy or if it’s mostly cash chasing returns. Either way, it shows Nigeria’s bourse is maturing fast, but investors need to stay sharp about where the value really is.
Right!!!