Nigeria’s external reserves have climbed to $51.04bn, their highest level in about 17 years, strengthening the Central Bank’s capacity to defend the naira and stabilise the foreign exchange market.

A multi-year peak
Data from the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) shows the reserves reached the milestone on June 18, after crossing the $50bn mark earlier in the month. It is the strongest reserve position in nearly 17 years.
The buffer represents a sharp jump of about 34 per cent from $37.82bn recorded a year earlier, reflecting steady accumulation over recent months.
What is driving the gains
Analysts attribute the buildup to improved dollar inflows, higher oil revenues, foreign exchange reforms and stronger diaspora remittances. The return of foreign portfolio investment has also supported the trend.
CBN Governor Olayemi Cardoso has hailed the growing buffer, saying it reinforces investor confidence and supports exchange-rate stability, key concerns for an economy navigating reform.
Why it matters for the naira
A larger reserve cushion gives the CBN more room to intervene in the FX market and smooth volatility. That can help steady the naira, which has faced pressure in both official and parallel markets.
The apex bank is expected to continue gradual accumulation toward its year-end target, balancing reserve defence with exchange-rate flexibility.
The road ahead
Sustaining the momentum will depend on stable oil earnings, continued inflows and disciplined policy. Global financial uncertainty remains a factor that could affect capital flows.
For now, the milestone offers a measure of reassurance, signalling firmer footing for Nigeria’s external position and its currency.