FX Spot, Derivatives Markets Turnover Sinks by 47%
Nigeria’s foreign exchange market recorded one of its sharpest weekly declines in recent memory as total turnover in the FX Spot and Derivatives markets plummeted 46.57% to $1,631.12 million in the week ended July 10, 2026, from $3,053.01 million recorded in the preceding week ended July 3, 2026, according to data released by FMDQ Exchange.
The week-on-week decline represents a loss of $1,421.89 million in total FX market activity — a dramatic reversal that erased nearly half of the previous week’s turnover in a single trading week and raised fresh questions about liquidity conditions in Nigeria’s interbank foreign exchange market.
The FX Spot market bore the heaviest burden of the weekly contraction, recording a 46.62% week-on-week decline, with transactions falling sharply by $1,379.66 million to $1,579.90 million from $2,959.56 million in the week ended July 3, 2026.
The Spot market, which consistently accounts for the dominant share of Nigeria’s total interbank FX turnover, saw activity nearly halved within a single week — a development that points to a significant pullback in foreign currency demand across trade finance, corporate and retail channels.
The magnitude of the Spot market decline suggests either a sudden contraction in genuine FX demand, reduced CBN intervention, or a combination of both factors that compressed available market liquidity during the review week.
The FX Derivatives segment was not spared from the broad market contraction, recording a 45.19% week-on-week decline, with transactions falling by $42.23 million during the period.
According to FMDQ Exchange, the decline in FX Derivatives turnover was primarily driven by a downturn in FX Forwards activity — the same segment that had recorded strong growth in recent weeks as businesses sought to hedge against exchange rate volatility.
The simultaneous contraction in both FX Forwards and Spot transactions suggests a broad-based reduction in market participation rather than a segment-specific adjustment.
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