Sunday, October 19, 2025
29.8 C
Lagos

Business

Troyka Holdings Chair, Biodun Shobanjo, Inducted into Loeries Hall of Fame

Nigeria’s foremost advertising leader and Chairman of Troyka Holdings,...

Zenith Bank, NEM, Seplat, AIICO, Dangote Cement, First HoldCo Recognised as Nigeria’s High-Performing Companies

L-R:    Michael Ani, Manager, Investor Relations, Dangote Cement; Oluseyi...

Finance Min, Wale Edun, to Keynote FiBOP Annual Confab Oct 18

The Honourable Minister of Finance and Coordinating Minister of...

Niteon Unveils First African Manufacturers Bank to Unlock $200bn Digital Export Market

Niteon, one of Nigeria's largest digital export marketplaces, has...

FG Boosts MSME Financing with NCGC Initiative

In a bid to boost economic growth and development,...

ICT

Konga Partners Verve to Delight Customers with Free Shopping Vouchers

  Konga, Nigeria’s leading composite e-commerce platform has partnered with...

NCC Spotlights Renewable Energy on World Consumer Rights Day

  The Nigerian Communications Commission (NCC) has concluded arrangements to...

Governors, NCC Set for Broadband Awareness Forum Oct 20

All Nigeria State Governors are set to discuss how...

VerveLife 5.0 Gears Up for Nairobi, Lagos Events

Following a successful series of Verve Life 5.0 satellite...

Telecom Infrastructure Critical to Successful 2023 Elections – Danbatta

The Executive Vice Chairman of the Nigerian Communications Commission,...

Capital Market

SEC DG: Commission Considering Gradual Implementation of ISSB Standards

The Director General of the Securities and Exchange Commission...

ISSB-Aligned Disclosures Will Lower Capital Costs, Attract Global Investors — SEC

The Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) has unveiled plans...

SEC DG to Cadets:  Invest Early, Long Term to Create Wealth

Graduating Cadets of the Nigerian Defence Academy (NDA) have...

SEC DG: Accountability, Transparency will Boost Investor Confidence in Capital Market

The Director General of the Securities and Exchange Commission...

SEC DG: Digital Assets Represent $10tn Opportunity by 2030

The Director General of the Securities and Exchange Commission...

Insurance

13-year-old Rhema-Love Abraham Emerges Winner of 2025 Heirs Insurance Essay Championship

L:R- Funmi Olotu, National Coordinator, National Social Safety-Nets Coordinating...

Leadway Assurance: Insurance Company of the Year at 2025 BAFI Awards

L-R: Managing Director, Leadway Assurance, Gboyega Lesi; Publisher, BuisnessDay...

Heirs Insurance Group Announces Inaugural Travel Festival: A Call for Inclusive Travel Ecosystem for Africans

Heirs Insurance Group (HIG), Nigeria’s fastest-growing insurance group, has...

Sovereign Trust Insurance Celebrates 2025 Customer Service Week

Sovereign Trust Insurance Plc has been actively involved in...

Leadway: 55 Years of Innovation, Expanding Financial Access, Inclusion Across West Africa

Leadway, one of Nigeria’s foremost non-banking financial services and...

Business

Troyka Holdings Chair, Biodun Shobanjo, Inducted into Loeries Hall of Fame

Nigeria’s foremost advertising leader and Chairman of Troyka Holdings,...

Zenith Bank, NEM, Seplat, AIICO, Dangote Cement, First HoldCo Recognised as Nigeria’s High-Performing Companies

L-R:    Michael Ani, Manager, Investor Relations, Dangote Cement; Oluseyi...

Finance Min, Wale Edun, to Keynote FiBOP Annual Confab Oct 18

The Honourable Minister of Finance and Coordinating Minister of...

Niteon Unveils First African Manufacturers Bank to Unlock $200bn Digital Export Market

Niteon, one of Nigeria's largest digital export marketplaces, has...

FG Boosts MSME Financing with NCGC Initiative

In a bid to boost economic growth and development,...

ICT

Konga Partners Verve to Delight Customers with Free Shopping Vouchers

  Konga, Nigeria’s leading composite e-commerce platform has partnered with...

NCC Spotlights Renewable Energy on World Consumer Rights Day

  The Nigerian Communications Commission (NCC) has concluded arrangements to...

Governors, NCC Set for Broadband Awareness Forum Oct 20

All Nigeria State Governors are set to discuss how...

VerveLife 5.0 Gears Up for Nairobi, Lagos Events

Following a successful series of Verve Life 5.0 satellite...

Telecom Infrastructure Critical to Successful 2023 Elections – Danbatta

The Executive Vice Chairman of the Nigerian Communications Commission,...

Capital Market

SEC DG: Commission Considering Gradual Implementation of ISSB Standards

The Director General of the Securities and Exchange Commission...

ISSB-Aligned Disclosures Will Lower Capital Costs, Attract Global Investors — SEC

The Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) has unveiled plans...

SEC DG to Cadets:  Invest Early, Long Term to Create Wealth

Graduating Cadets of the Nigerian Defence Academy (NDA) have...

SEC DG: Accountability, Transparency will Boost Investor Confidence in Capital Market

The Director General of the Securities and Exchange Commission...

SEC DG: Digital Assets Represent $10tn Opportunity by 2030

The Director General of the Securities and Exchange Commission...

Insurance

13-year-old Rhema-Love Abraham Emerges Winner of 2025 Heirs Insurance Essay Championship

L:R- Funmi Olotu, National Coordinator, National Social Safety-Nets Coordinating...

Leadway Assurance: Insurance Company of the Year at 2025 BAFI Awards

L-R: Managing Director, Leadway Assurance, Gboyega Lesi; Publisher, BuisnessDay...

Heirs Insurance Group Announces Inaugural Travel Festival: A Call for Inclusive Travel Ecosystem for Africans

Heirs Insurance Group (HIG), Nigeria’s fastest-growing insurance group, has...

Sovereign Trust Insurance Celebrates 2025 Customer Service Week

Sovereign Trust Insurance Plc has been actively involved in...

Leadway: 55 Years of Innovation, Expanding Financial Access, Inclusion Across West Africa

Leadway, one of Nigeria’s foremost non-banking financial services and...

NESG-Stanbic IBTC Business Confidence Monitor: Easing Macro-economic Pressures, Favorable Business Climate

The Business Confidence Monitor (BCM) is the flagship survey-based report of the Nigerian Economic Summit Group (NESG), supported by Stanbic IBTC.

The report obtains qualitative information on the current business performance within the Nigerian economy and gauges expectations about overall economic activities in the short term. It is anchored on business managers’ optimism on key leading economic indicators such as investment, prices, demand conditions, employment, etc.

The NESG-Stanbic IBTC BCM combines leading qualitative indicators on Production, Investment, Export, Demand Conditions, Prices, Employment, and the General Business Situation to gauge the overall business optimism of the Nigerian economy.

The target respondents for the Business Confidence Survey (BCS) are business establishments operating in Nigeria that have been engaged in economic activities since the beginning of 2023. The survey is administered to senior managers and business executives.

Businesses in Nigeria maintained a positive performance streak for another month, as the BCM Index stayed in the expansion region for the sixth consecutive month in 2025.

According to the NESG–Stanbic IBTC Business Confidence Monitor (BCM), the Current Business Index rose to 113.6 points in June, up from 109.8 points in May 2025. This performance is attributed to several tailwinds, including easing inflationary pressures, improved investor confidence and climate, and stronger business resilience across key sectors.

Sectoral analysis showed expansion across all sectors and broader economic activities. Strong business growth was observed in Manufacturing (123.6), non-manufacturing (120.7), and Trade (121.0) in June 2025. The Agriculture and Services sectors also expanded, though only slightly above the origin (100 index points), reaching 108.9 and 106.3 index points, respectively.

However, non-manufacturing’s performance declined when compared with its May 2025 level of 122.2. This decline is linked to factors such as credit squeeze, rising inventories due to weak demand, and high (weak) exchange rates, which fuel imported inflation and escalate production costs, especially as many companies in this sector depend on imported inputs.

Despite the overall positive trend, structural challenges constrained broader business growth. Key BCM sub-indices investment, export, supply order, prices, and employment recorded lower values compared to the previous month.

The cost of doing business also rose in June, reversing the slight relief observed in May 2025. Businesses identified major constraints such as limited access to financing, persistent electricity supply shortages, inconsistent economic policies, inadequate foreign exchange availability, and elevated commercial lease and rental costs.

In June 2025, the NESG–Stanbic IBTC Business Confidence Monitor (BCM) Index for the Agriculture sector rebounded from its temporary contraction in May 2025, returning to the expansion region. The sector index rose to 108.9 points in the month, up from 98.2 points in May.

This recovery was primarily driven by a swift rebound in the Crop Production sub-sector, which contributed over 80% of total output. The reversal of the May 2025 downturn is attributed to several favorable developments: the harvest period coinciding with the New Yam Festival celebrated nationwide, the commencement of wet-season planting, a boost in livestock activities following the inclusion of high-yield Danish dairy heifers, and the operationalisation of various agro-processing initiatives supported by multilateral development institutions.

A breakdown of performance across the five agricultural sub-sectors shows that only Fishing recorded a contraction (below 100 points) in June 2025. Other sub-sectors experienced expansion in business activities, with significant growth in Crop Production (109.6, up from 95.1 in May 2025). Agro-Allied (108.2), Livestock (105.2), and Forestry (100.0) also remained in the expansion region.

Despite these gains, many agribusiness owners pointed to several ongoing challenges affecting their operations, with limited access to finance being the most critical. Many reported difficulty securing loans, which limits their ability to procure essential inputs like feed, drugs, and agricultural equipment. Other challenges include infrastructure deficits particularly unreliable power supply and weak transportation and logistics networks rising input costs, high rental and operational expenses, growing insecurity, and regulatory burdens.

Unstable power supply remains a major concern, especially for poultry and fish farmers who rely heavily on cold storage and water systems, thus increasing their energy costs. This situation contributed to a rise in the cost-of-doing business index to 136.3 in June, from 120.2 in May 2025.

NESG–Stanbic IBTC Business Confidence Monitor (BCM) Index for the manufacturing sector showed that businesses experienced expansion, recording an index of 123.6 points in June 2025. This marks a significant improvement from 114.4 points in May 2025.

The uptick reflects stronger performance across key sub-sectors, boosting overall manufacturing output in Nigeria. Major contributors to this expansion include Textile, Apparel & Footwear; Cement; Plastic and Rubber Products; Wood and Wood Products; and Pulp, Paper and Paper Products.

Despite this progress, manufacturers highlighted persistent structural constraints, raw material shortages, unreliable electricity, high import tariffs, inflation, and insecurity. Rising production costs, high rents, imported machine parts, and diesel worsened by weak domestic currency continue to weigh on output and profits.

Multiple taxes, weak demand, unstable policies, and poor access to finance further stifle growth and expansion. In addition, insecurity hampers the sourcing of raw materials, further disrupting production. While most sub-sectors recorded positive performance, some particularly Motor Vehicle and Assembly posted declines. Still, the strength of major sub-sectors outweighed these losses, driving the sector’s overall index improvement.

Business conditions in Nigeria’s non-manufacturing sector posted a reading of +120.7 points in June 2025. This marks the second month in a row of declining business performance, highlighting growing concerns among businesses about the challenging economic environment.

While still within expansion territory, the index continues a downward trend from 123.6 points in April and 122.2 in May, reflecting growing strains on sector-wide business optimism. Many non-manufacturing industries attributed the weakening momentum to persistent structural and macroeconomic challenges. Poor power supply has increased reliance on costly diesel, while high rents, dilapidated roads, and other infrastructural deficits have inflated production and transportation costs, eroding business efficiency. Although the overall performance remained positive, the outlook varied across sub sectors.

Apart from Oil and Gas Services, which reported improved business activity, all other sub-sectors registered a decline compared to May, with “Other Non-Manufacturing” sliding into contraction at 98.4 points. Amplifying these pressures are rising exchange rates and restricted access to finance, which hinder procurement and planning.

Meanwhile, mounting regulatory burdens and elevated inflation continue to compress productivity and profit margins. These worsening conditions have increased operational costs, curtailed expansion, and weakened investor confidence across the sector.

Nigeria’s Services sector sustained its business expansion momentum in June 2025, following a slight slowdown in the previous month (May 2025). The NESG–Stanbic IBTC Services Business Confidence Monitor (BCM) Index rose to 106.3 points from 104.5 in May 2025.

The improvement in business performance was driven by growth in the Broadcasting and Real Estate sub-sectors, supported by rising client/consumer demand and more stable operating conditions Five of the six major service sub-sectors recorded business expansion.

However, the Telecommunications and Information Services sub-sector experienced a contraction due to structural challenges, including the rising cost of service delivery primarily energy-related-delayed tariff adjustments, high exchange rates, and soaring dollar-denominated expenses for tower leases, network equipment, and international connectivity.

Other Services sub-sectors reported weak expansion in June, as amplified business constraints such as energy-related cost pressures, logistics bottlenecks, currency volatility, and persistent security issues, particularly in northern and rural areas continued to hinder service growth and raise operating costs. These factors eroded competitiveness and dampened business activity during the period.

The NESG–Stanbic IBTC Trade index recorded an expansion in June 2025, with the index rising to 121.0 points, up from 114.1 points in May 2025. The Retail sub-sector showed a notable rebound, shifting from the contraction zone of 89.2 points in May to 111.7 points in June 2025.

In contrast, the Wholesale sub-sector experienced a slight decline but remained in the expansion zone, registering 130.3 points in June. This performance underscores the enduring structural and macroeconomic constraints that continue to weigh heavily on the trade sector.

The modest improvement in some areas of sectoral performance was largely driven by increased consumer demand for essential goods, relative stability in the retail prices of fast-moving consumer goods (FMCGs), and improved conditions in supply chain logistics.

Traders across key urban centers reported higher sales volumes in food items, personal care products, and household essentials categories typically considered non-discretionary partly due to heightened demand from festival-related activities nationwide.

Despite these gains, many trade businesses in Nigeria continue to struggle with a wide range of structural and operational challenges that impede their growth and profitability. Chief among these is the lack of capital, followed closely by market price volatility and logistics and transportation bottlenecks.

These challenges discourage investment, reduce business competitiveness, and make it increasingly difficult for entrepreneurs to sustain operations. Entrepreneurs frequently cite limited access to affordable financing and prohibitively high interest rates on loans as key constraints. These financial barriers hinder the ability to expand operations, replenish inventory, or invest in productivity-enhancing tools.

To capture the short-term outlook and performance expectations of business owners in the country, the NESG–Stanbic IBTC Future Business Expectation Index provides insights into the levels of optimism and pessimism among businesses for the next one to three months.

For June 2025, the index stood at 134.5 points, reflecting a slight improvement from 132.4 points in May 2025. Across the sectors, the Manufacturing sector recorded the highest optimism at 160.4 points, followed by Trade (158.0 points) and non-manufacturing (153.5 points).

Meanwhile, the Services sector, at 122.3 points, showed the lowest level of optimism regarding expected improvements in the business environment. Notably, sentiment improved in four sectors; Non-manufacturing, Manufacturing, Services, and Agriculture compared to May 2025, suggesting that despite higher index scores, businesses remain cautiously optimistic in their expectations due to ongoing macroeconomic uncertainties.

The generally optimistic outlook for Nigerian businesses is driven by a combination of seasonal economic activity, policy-driven interventions, relative exchange rate stability, ongoing infrastructure development, and a gradual recovery in consumer demand.

These drivers continue to support cautious optimism across various sectors, particularly in Agriculture, Retail Trade, Non-manufacturing, and Services. As these positive trends continue to build momentum, many businesses are positioning themselves to take advantage of new opportunities and more favorable operating conditions.

 

Hot this week

13-year-old Rhema-Love Abraham Emerges Winner of 2025 Heirs Insurance Essay Championship

L:R- Funmi Olotu, National Coordinator, National Social Safety-Nets Coordinating...

Stanbic IBTC Bank, LOXEA BYD forge alliance for Electric Vehicle Financing

In a strategic move to advance Nigeria’s shift toward...

CBN, Bank of Angola Sign MoU on Technical Co-operation at IMF/World Bank Meeting

In an effort to enhance bilateral cooperation and technical...

NBS: Nigeria’s Inflation Falls to 18.02% in September, Lowest Level in Three Years

Nigeria’s headline inflation rate fell for the sixth consecutive...

NUPEMCO Marks 2025 CSW with Nationwide Pension Awareness Activities, Huawei-Supported National Essay competition

The Nigerian University Pension Management Company (NUPEMCO) celebrated the...

Topics

Hilal Takaful Paid N220m Claims in 2022, N50m in June 2023

From left: Prince Cookey, Publisher/Editor-in-Chief, Business Journal; Bisi Bamishe,...

PenCom, Yobe State to Implement CPS Regime

Governor Mai Mala Buni of Yobe State has reaffirmed...

Shared Value Shift: Time for Business to Take the Lead in Africa

The business world is changing, and those who do...

CBN: eNaira Poses no Threat to Financial Stability

The attention of the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN)...

Stanbic IBTC Bank PMI: Business Activity Falls for First Time in 8 Months

The Nigerian private sector moved back into contraction territory...

Is EPE a Good Location to Buy Land?

By Dennis Isong For a long time, buying and selling...

Stanbic IBTC PMI: Output Growth Quickens to 5-Month High

The end of the third quarter of 2022 saw...

Orange, Google Partner on Mobile Internet Services in Africa, Middle East

Orange announces a new partnership with Google™ to bring...
Exit mobile version