- United Nations Urges Africa to Boost Domestic Funding
- US Dollar Hits 1-Year High on US Fed Hawkish Rates Bets
- Nigerian Exchange Sheds N2.18trn as Dangote Companies Dip
- XRP Price Dips 6.2% on U.S. Federal Reserve Rates Hike Bets
- Bitcoin Sinks 5.3% as Ark, BlackRock IBIT Lead ETF Outflow
- Nigeria Risks Remaining AI Consumer Without Local Infrastructure
- Polaris Bank Dismisses Fatality Rumours after Lagos Branch Fire
- No Nigerian Willing to Leave S/Africa ‘ll be Abandoned — FG
Ethereum (ETHUSD) is down about 5% over the past 24 hours, trading at $2,201.49, as failed Middle East ceasefire talks stoked sell pressure across major cryptocurrencies.
The benchmark yield on Nigerian government bonds increased by 10 basis points week on week in the secondary market, reflecting investors’ risk-off sentiment in the debt instruments.
Bitcoin pulled back by 3.4% to $71,158 over the past 24h, underperforming the broader market, which fell 2.78%, amid a sharp escalation in Middle East geopolitical tensions.
Moody’s Ratings has changed the Government of Ghana’s outlook to positive from stable and affirmed the long-term issuer ratings in local and foreign currency, as well as the foreign-currency senior unsecured debt ratings at Caa1.
Ripple (XRP) dipped 2.02% to $1.33 over the past 24h, underperforming Bitcoin’s 3.01% decline, amid a broader market sell-off driven by geopolitical tensions.
Crude oil and condensate fell to an average of 1.51 million barrels per day (mbpd) in February 2026, even as the Nigerian National Petroleum Company Limited (NNPCL) remitted N1.804 trillion to the Federation Account.
The equities segment of the Nigerian Exchange (NGX) closed in the green as buying interest in Tier-1 banks supported a N1.36 trillion weekly gain in the local bourse.
Fitch Ratings has affirmed Nigeria’s Long-Term Foreign-Currency (LTFC) Issuer Default Rating (IDR) at ‘B’ with a stable outlook.
Pi Network price climbed to $0.169 in 24h, outperforming a down market where Bitcoin fell 1.46%, primarily driven by low-volume drift in a thin market.
The African Development Bank Group (AfDB) has approved a $200 million loan to support Nigeria’s efforts to expand digital infrastructure and create jobs.
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