The Governor of the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN), Olayemi Cardoso has said that the recent decline in Nigeria’s external reserves should not be a cause for concern, noting that the country remains in a strong and comfortable position despite the fluctuations.
- +Cardoso: No cause for concern over Nigeria’s external reserves
The CBN Governor disclosed this on April 17 during a press briefing at the end of the International Monetary Fund (IMF) spring meeting.
The CBN Governor disclosed this on April 17 during a press briefing at the end of the International Monetary Fund (IMF) spring meeting.
He explained that Nigeria’s reserve levels remain well above critical thresholds, noting that the country currently has about 13 months of import cover, far exceeding standard benchmarks, and stressing that such movements are normal and not a source of worry.
Cardoso said he is not particularly concerned about the decline in external reserves, but rather about how Nigerians react to minor fluctuations in the figures, which he suggested are often overinterpreted.
He further emphasized that Nigeria remains in a comfortable reserve position, noting that its current levels significantly exceed the minimum benchmark recommended by the International Monetary Fund, which typically advises about three to six months of import cover.
In January 2026, Nairametrics reported that Nigeria’s external reserves crossed the $46 billion mark for the first time in about eight years, highlighting the steady accretion in reserve levels since 2025.
Data tracked by Nairametrics shows that Nigeria’s last recorded reserves at this level was on August 27, 2018, when they stood at $45.9 billion.
By March 11, 2026, reserves climbed further to $50.03 billion, although subsequent data showed a downward trend from that peak.
However, on March 26, 2026, figures published by the Central Bank of Nigeria indicated that within a 15-day period, Nigeria’s foreign reserves declined by about $547 million to $49.48 billion, reflecting renewed pressure on the country’s external buffers.
More so, a recent projection by Fitch Ratings paints a more cautious outlook, as the agency projects that Nigeria’s foreign exchange reserves will decline to $47 billion by the end of 2026.
Despite these developments, Cardoso maintained that attention should not be fixated on short-term fluctuations, explaining that Nigeria’s foreign exchange system has evolved significantly.
He added that the role of the Central Bank of Nigeria in intervening in the market has reduced significantly, as the system is now sufficiently liquid to function independently.
Prior to the reforms introduced under Bola Tinubu, Nigeria operated a tightly managed foreign exchange regime in which the central bank played a dominant role in supplying foreign currency and maintaining multiple exchange rate windows.
Speaking earlier during a media briefing of the G-24 on the sidelines of the IMF’s April 2026 Global Financial Stability Report, Edun ruled out reversing these reforms, warning that doing so would undermine economic stability and reiterating the need for targeted interventions instead.
