adplus-dvertising
NgGossips.com
  • Home
  • News
  • Business
  • Technology
  • Sports
  • World
No Result
View All Result
Sunday, December 14, 2025
  • Home
  • News
  • Business
  • Technology
  • Sports
  • World
No Result
View All Result
NgGossips.com
No Result
View All Result
Home Business

NESG-Stanbic IBTC Business Confidence Monitor: One Year On, Nigeria’s Business Environment Shows Signs of Improvement

by News Break
October 7, 2025
in Business
0
NESG-Stanbic IBTC Business Confidence Monitor: One Year On, Nigeria’s Business Environment Shows Signs of Improvement
153
SHARES
1.9k
VIEWS
Share on FacebookShare on TwitterShare on Whatsapp



In September 2025, businesses in Nigeria sustained a positive trajectory, with the Current Business Performance remaining in the expansion region since December 2024. The NESG–Stanbic IBTC Business Confidence Monitor (BCM) reported a marginal rise to 107.9 points, up from 107.3 in August 2025. This improvement reflects a combination of sectoral dynamics, notably a rebound in Agriculture, supported by the harvest season, and steady activity in the Services sector.

A sectoral review confirmed that all five broader economic activities stayed in the expansion zone. Agriculture posted the strongest recovery, rising sharply to 107.3 from a contractionary
95.6 in August, while Non-manufacturing (114.5), Trade (107.6), and Manufacturing (102.5) all expanded, albeit at a slower pace compared to August.

Key BCM sub-indices, such as investment, exports, access to credit, and prices, registered marginal gains relative to August 2025, pointing to improving sentiment in capital formation and external trade. Importantly, recent improvements in cost of doing business and input prices suggest a gradual moderation of inflationary pressures on firms. However, this positive trend remains fragile, as financing constraints, erratic electricity supply, high commercial property costs, unclear policy signals, and persistent insecurity continue to undermine business confidence and investment appetite.

Comment from Stanbic IBTC

The current business performance of Nigerian businesses improved slightly in September relative to August, buoyed by both the Agriculture sector and Services, both of which neutralised the modest activity softening in Manufacturing, Non-manufacturing, and Trade sectors. A breakdown of the components of the current business performance shows an improvement in the general business situation, a higher level of demand, improved employment conditions and greater access to credit relative to the prior month. Besides, the cost of doing business has declined for the third consecutive month, while the price index has remained below the 100 index points psychological threshold since November 2024, implying underlying price pressures as moderating. This is not surprising as fuel cost and exchange rate pressures, which negatively impacted prices in 2024, have seen limited price movements so far in 2025. Notably, the exchange rate appreciated by 5.5% year-to-date (as of 2nd October) relative to 40.9% depreciation in 2024 and fuel cost declined by 13.8% in 7m:25 relative to 77.0% price increase in 2024.

We estimate that the oil and non-oil sectors may have grown by 14.3% y/y and 4.4% y/y, respectively, translating into overall GDP growth of 4.5% y/y in Q3:25. We now lift our 2025 growth forecast to 4.0% y/y, from 3.5% y/y, after fully accounting for the impact of GDP rebasing, and after surprisingly good Q2:25 GDP growth. Going into 2026, the non-oil sector’s growth should remain strong amid a likely reduction in interest rates and low inflation, both of which should support aggregate demand and private investment. Further, a likely less exchange rate volatility in 2025 and 2026 based on our current estimates should support growth across trade, manufacturing, real estate, and construction. Aside from that, the forward-linkage impact of Dangote Refinery should benefit manufacturing growth in the medium term. The IMF expects the Dangote Refinery to increase non-oil GDP growth by c.1.5% in 2026. Oil refining has already grown for a third consecutive quarter, to 15.78% y/y in Q2:25, from 11.51% y/y in Q1:25, although its contribution to the manufacturing sector remains insignificant, at 0.1%.”




In September 2025, businesses in Nigeria sustained a positive trajectory, with the Current Business Performance remaining in the expansion region since December 2024. The NESG–Stanbic IBTC Business Confidence Monitor (BCM) reported a marginal rise to 107.9 points, up from 107.3 in August 2025. This improvement reflects a combination of sectoral dynamics, notably a rebound in Agriculture, supported by the harvest season, and steady activity in the Services sector.

A sectoral review confirmed that all five broader economic activities stayed in the expansion zone. Agriculture posted the strongest recovery, rising sharply to 107.3 from a contractionary
95.6 in August, while Non-manufacturing (114.5), Trade (107.6), and Manufacturing (102.5) all expanded, albeit at a slower pace compared to August.

Key BCM sub-indices, such as investment, exports, access to credit, and prices, registered marginal gains relative to August 2025, pointing to improving sentiment in capital formation and external trade. Importantly, recent improvements in cost of doing business and input prices suggest a gradual moderation of inflationary pressures on firms. However, this positive trend remains fragile, as financing constraints, erratic electricity supply, high commercial property costs, unclear policy signals, and persistent insecurity continue to undermine business confidence and investment appetite.

Comment from Stanbic IBTC

The current business performance of Nigerian businesses improved slightly in September relative to August, buoyed by both the Agriculture sector and Services, both of which neutralised the modest activity softening in Manufacturing, Non-manufacturing, and Trade sectors. A breakdown of the components of the current business performance shows an improvement in the general business situation, a higher level of demand, improved employment conditions and greater access to credit relative to the prior month. Besides, the cost of doing business has declined for the third consecutive month, while the price index has remained below the 100 index points psychological threshold since November 2024, implying underlying price pressures as moderating. This is not surprising as fuel cost and exchange rate pressures, which negatively impacted prices in 2024, have seen limited price movements so far in 2025. Notably, the exchange rate appreciated by 5.5% year-to-date (as of 2nd October) relative to 40.9% depreciation in 2024 and fuel cost declined by 13.8% in 7m:25 relative to 77.0% price increase in 2024.

We estimate that the oil and non-oil sectors may have grown by 14.3% y/y and 4.4% y/y, respectively, translating into overall GDP growth of 4.5% y/y in Q3:25. We now lift our 2025 growth forecast to 4.0% y/y, from 3.5% y/y, after fully accounting for the impact of GDP rebasing, and after surprisingly good Q2:25 GDP growth. Going into 2026, the non-oil sector’s growth should remain strong amid a likely reduction in interest rates and low inflation, both of which should support aggregate demand and private investment. Further, a likely less exchange rate volatility in 2025 and 2026 based on our current estimates should support growth across trade, manufacturing, real estate, and construction. Aside from that, the forward-linkage impact of Dangote Refinery should benefit manufacturing growth in the medium term. The IMF expects the Dangote Refinery to increase non-oil GDP growth by c.1.5% in 2026. Oil refining has already grown for a third consecutive quarter, to 15.78% y/y in Q2:25, from 11.51% y/y in Q1:25, although its contribution to the manufacturing sector remains insignificant, at 0.1%.”

RelatedPosts

GTCO Announces Maiden Holiday Edition of Food & Drink Festival, Set for December 20–21, 2025

Wema Bank Unveils ₦120M Grand Prize Pool as 35 Teams Advance to Hackaholics 6.0 Finale

MILO Signs on Northern Influencers to Strengthen National Representation




In September 2025, businesses in Nigeria sustained a positive trajectory, with the Current Business Performance remaining in the expansion region since December 2024. The NESG–Stanbic IBTC Business Confidence Monitor (BCM) reported a marginal rise to 107.9 points, up from 107.3 in August 2025. This improvement reflects a combination of sectoral dynamics, notably a rebound in Agriculture, supported by the harvest season, and steady activity in the Services sector.

A sectoral review confirmed that all five broader economic activities stayed in the expansion zone. Agriculture posted the strongest recovery, rising sharply to 107.3 from a contractionary
95.6 in August, while Non-manufacturing (114.5), Trade (107.6), and Manufacturing (102.5) all expanded, albeit at a slower pace compared to August.

Key BCM sub-indices, such as investment, exports, access to credit, and prices, registered marginal gains relative to August 2025, pointing to improving sentiment in capital formation and external trade. Importantly, recent improvements in cost of doing business and input prices suggest a gradual moderation of inflationary pressures on firms. However, this positive trend remains fragile, as financing constraints, erratic electricity supply, high commercial property costs, unclear policy signals, and persistent insecurity continue to undermine business confidence and investment appetite.

Comment from Stanbic IBTC

The current business performance of Nigerian businesses improved slightly in September relative to August, buoyed by both the Agriculture sector and Services, both of which neutralised the modest activity softening in Manufacturing, Non-manufacturing, and Trade sectors. A breakdown of the components of the current business performance shows an improvement in the general business situation, a higher level of demand, improved employment conditions and greater access to credit relative to the prior month. Besides, the cost of doing business has declined for the third consecutive month, while the price index has remained below the 100 index points psychological threshold since November 2024, implying underlying price pressures as moderating. This is not surprising as fuel cost and exchange rate pressures, which negatively impacted prices in 2024, have seen limited price movements so far in 2025. Notably, the exchange rate appreciated by 5.5% year-to-date (as of 2nd October) relative to 40.9% depreciation in 2024 and fuel cost declined by 13.8% in 7m:25 relative to 77.0% price increase in 2024.

We estimate that the oil and non-oil sectors may have grown by 14.3% y/y and 4.4% y/y, respectively, translating into overall GDP growth of 4.5% y/y in Q3:25. We now lift our 2025 growth forecast to 4.0% y/y, from 3.5% y/y, after fully accounting for the impact of GDP rebasing, and after surprisingly good Q2:25 GDP growth. Going into 2026, the non-oil sector’s growth should remain strong amid a likely reduction in interest rates and low inflation, both of which should support aggregate demand and private investment. Further, a likely less exchange rate volatility in 2025 and 2026 based on our current estimates should support growth across trade, manufacturing, real estate, and construction. Aside from that, the forward-linkage impact of Dangote Refinery should benefit manufacturing growth in the medium term. The IMF expects the Dangote Refinery to increase non-oil GDP growth by c.1.5% in 2026. Oil refining has already grown for a third consecutive quarter, to 15.78% y/y in Q2:25, from 11.51% y/y in Q1:25, although its contribution to the manufacturing sector remains insignificant, at 0.1%.”




In September 2025, businesses in Nigeria sustained a positive trajectory, with the Current Business Performance remaining in the expansion region since December 2024. The NESG–Stanbic IBTC Business Confidence Monitor (BCM) reported a marginal rise to 107.9 points, up from 107.3 in August 2025. This improvement reflects a combination of sectoral dynamics, notably a rebound in Agriculture, supported by the harvest season, and steady activity in the Services sector.

A sectoral review confirmed that all five broader economic activities stayed in the expansion zone. Agriculture posted the strongest recovery, rising sharply to 107.3 from a contractionary
95.6 in August, while Non-manufacturing (114.5), Trade (107.6), and Manufacturing (102.5) all expanded, albeit at a slower pace compared to August.

Key BCM sub-indices, such as investment, exports, access to credit, and prices, registered marginal gains relative to August 2025, pointing to improving sentiment in capital formation and external trade. Importantly, recent improvements in cost of doing business and input prices suggest a gradual moderation of inflationary pressures on firms. However, this positive trend remains fragile, as financing constraints, erratic electricity supply, high commercial property costs, unclear policy signals, and persistent insecurity continue to undermine business confidence and investment appetite.

Comment from Stanbic IBTC

The current business performance of Nigerian businesses improved slightly in September relative to August, buoyed by both the Agriculture sector and Services, both of which neutralised the modest activity softening in Manufacturing, Non-manufacturing, and Trade sectors. A breakdown of the components of the current business performance shows an improvement in the general business situation, a higher level of demand, improved employment conditions and greater access to credit relative to the prior month. Besides, the cost of doing business has declined for the third consecutive month, while the price index has remained below the 100 index points psychological threshold since November 2024, implying underlying price pressures as moderating. This is not surprising as fuel cost and exchange rate pressures, which negatively impacted prices in 2024, have seen limited price movements so far in 2025. Notably, the exchange rate appreciated by 5.5% year-to-date (as of 2nd October) relative to 40.9% depreciation in 2024 and fuel cost declined by 13.8% in 7m:25 relative to 77.0% price increase in 2024.

We estimate that the oil and non-oil sectors may have grown by 14.3% y/y and 4.4% y/y, respectively, translating into overall GDP growth of 4.5% y/y in Q3:25. We now lift our 2025 growth forecast to 4.0% y/y, from 3.5% y/y, after fully accounting for the impact of GDP rebasing, and after surprisingly good Q2:25 GDP growth. Going into 2026, the non-oil sector’s growth should remain strong amid a likely reduction in interest rates and low inflation, both of which should support aggregate demand and private investment. Further, a likely less exchange rate volatility in 2025 and 2026 based on our current estimates should support growth across trade, manufacturing, real estate, and construction. Aside from that, the forward-linkage impact of Dangote Refinery should benefit manufacturing growth in the medium term. The IMF expects the Dangote Refinery to increase non-oil GDP growth by c.1.5% in 2026. Oil refining has already grown for a third consecutive quarter, to 15.78% y/y in Q2:25, from 11.51% y/y in Q1:25, although its contribution to the manufacturing sector remains insignificant, at 0.1%.”

Related Posts

GTCO Announces Maiden Holiday Edition of Food & Drink Festival, Set for December 20–21, 2025
Business

GTCO Announces Maiden Holiday Edition of Food & Drink Festival, Set for December 20–21, 2025

December 12, 2025
Wema Bank Unveils ₦120M Grand Prize Pool as 35 Teams Advance to Hackaholics 6.0 Finale
Business

Wema Bank Unveils ₦120M Grand Prize Pool as 35 Teams Advance to Hackaholics 6.0 Finale

December 12, 2025
MILO Signs on Northern Influencers to Strengthen National Representation
Business

MILO Signs on Northern Influencers to Strengthen National Representation

December 11, 2025
Dangote Granite Mines Awards Bursaries to Students in Ijebu Igbo
Business

Dangote Granite Mines Awards Bursaries to Students in Ijebu Igbo

December 11, 2025
Road Safety: Dangote Cement leads Ember month Awareness
Business

Road Safety: Dangote Cement leads Ember month Awareness

December 11, 2025
Stanbic IBTC empowers 200 children through its #Together4ALimb initiative
Business

Stanbic IBTC Bank champions economic growth through strategic partnership with African Development Bank

December 11, 2025

Trending

  • Trending
  • Comments
  • Latest
‘I don’t see him as competition in the Big 3’ – Peruzzi Claims He Wrote All Davido’s Songs

‘I don’t see him as competition in the Big 3’ – Peruzzi Claims He Wrote All Davido’s Songs

December 12, 2025
PWDs demand inclusion, equal access to education, jobs, healthcare in Anambra

PWDs demand inclusion, equal access to education, jobs, healthcare in Anambra

December 10, 2025
“Stick To Makeup”- Daniel Regha Criticizes Tacha For Weighing In On First-Date Bills

“Stick To Makeup”- Daniel Regha Criticizes Tacha For Weighing In On First-Date Bills

December 13, 2025
Fans React After Remi Tinubu Stops Governor Adeleke From Singing On Stage

Fans React After Remi Tinubu Stops Governor Adeleke From Singing On Stage

December 9, 2025
“Almost 90 Million!”- Peller Surprises Funke Akindele With News Of New Car At Premiere

“Almost 90 Million!”- Peller Surprises Funke Akindele With News Of New Car At Premiere

December 9, 2025
“This Won’t Work”- Netizens React As Teni Begs Burna Boy For Ferrari

“This Won’t Work”- Netizens React As Teni Begs Burna Boy For Ferrari

December 10, 2025
Netizens React As Apostle Selman Refers To Woman As “My Love” At Birthday Party

Netizens React As Apostle Selman Refers To Woman As “My Love” At Birthday Party

December 11, 2025
‘Stop Waiting for Him’- Woman Questions Apostle Selman’s Intentions in Open Letter to ‘Sandra’

‘Stop Waiting for Him’- Woman Questions Apostle Selman’s Intentions in Open Letter to ‘Sandra’

December 11, 2025
“My Verse Can Change Your Life” – Saida Boj reacts to Portable’s ₦10 million demand for a music feature

“My Verse Can Change Your Life” – Saida Boj reacts to Portable’s ₦10 million demand for a music feature

December 14, 2025
Nons Miraj Shares How She Made Her First Million

“Rent A House For Her Family”- Mixed Reactions As Nons Miraj Tells Men How To Prove Love

December 14, 2025
“I Started My Music Career In Church Choir”- Singer Ruger

Ruger Says One Girl’s Forgiveness Can End His Playboy Lifestyle

December 14, 2025
Tinubu, Shettima laud Uzodimma at 67, hail Imo governor’s progressive leadership

Tinubu, Shettima laud Uzodimma at 67, hail Imo governor’s progressive leadership

December 14, 2025
they break his heart every time he sees them– Fireboy DML reveals reason why his dad would never forgive him

“I Don’t Care About Ratings”- Fireboy DML Speaks On Fame And Public Opinion

December 13, 2025
Tinubu administration to transform NIPSS into global, digitally driven centre by 2030 — Shettima

Tinubu administration to transform NIPSS into global, digitally driven centre by 2030 — Shettima

December 13, 2025
Tinubu administration to transform NIPSS into global, digitally driven centre by 2030 — Shettima

Tinubu administration to transform NIPSS into global, digitally driven centre by 2030 — Shettima

December 13, 2025
Ayra Starr Becomes First Nigerian Female Artist To Debut Solo Track On UK Top 100 Chart

“New York Is A Walk-In Freezer”- Ayra Starr Speaks On Life After Leaving Lagos

December 13, 2025
  • Home
  • About
  • Contact Us
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms
© 2025 Nggossips. All rights reserved.
No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • News
  • Business
  • Technology
  • Sports
  • World