The Nigerian Exchange (NGX) sustained its bearish trajectory, with the All-Share Index (ASI) falling by 0.45% to close at 138,780.55 points, reducing the year-to-date return to 34.23%.

Total market capitalization contracted by ₦394.45 billion to ₦87.42 trillion on the back of subdued investors’ sentiment – 14 stocks advanced compared to 43 decliners.

The market negative close was driven by persistent sell-offs in medium and high-cap stocks such as LEGENDINT, PZ, UBA, and others across key sectors.

The decline was further fuelled by investors’ safe-haven repositioning into alternative asset classes, particularly commercial papers and FGN savings bonds amid heightened risk aversion.

This marks the sixth consecutive session of losses, eroding approximately ₦2.27 trillion in investors’ wealth within the period.

Trading data highlighted that market activities were mixed today as the total volume of all trades consummated increased by +19.34%, while the total value dropped by -50.52%.

In a note, Atlass Portfolio Limited told investors that approximately 482.76 million units valued at ₦19,672.82 million were transacted across 28,193 deals.

In terms of volume, ACCESSCORP led the activity chart, accounting for 8.92% of the total volume of all trades executed in the market, followed by FIDELITYBK (8.32%), GTCO (7.22%), UBA (6.93%), and AIICO (6.03%), rounding out the top five.

Ticker: ARADEL emerged as the most traded stock in value terms, accounting for 32.84% of the total value of all trades consummated on the exchange.

NSLTECH topped the advancers’ chart with a price appreciation of 9.09 percent, trailed by CONHALLPLC (+8.53%), JOHNHOLT (+7.94%), CADBURY (+5.45%), WEMBANK (+5.31%), FCMB (+5.00%) and eight others.

Forty three stocks depreciated, according to data obtained from the Nigerian bourse. LEARNAFRCA, LEGENDINT, and DAARCOMM were the top losers, with a price depreciation of -10.00% each.

Other decliners include UNIVINSURE (-9.60%), CAP (-7.41%), HMCALL (-5.84%), INTBREW (-5.08%), and VFDGROUP (-3.70%). Given the trading session, the market breadth closed negative, recording 14 gainers and 44 losers.

Sectoral performance was largely negative, with declines recorded in Banking (-0.55%), Insurance (-4.46%), Consumer Goods (-1.32%), Oil & Gas (-0.44%), and Commodity (-0.08%) sectors.

However, the Industrial sector posted a modest gain of 0.23%. Trading activity presented a mixed picture as the number of deals dropped by 9.43% to 28,193, trading value plummeted by 50.52% to ₦19.67 billion, while trading volume increased significantly by 19.34% to 482.76 million units. #Nigerian Exchange Extends Losses as Investors Exit Positions#

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

You May Also Like

Cost Of Foodstuffs Is Going Down � Doguwa, begs Nigerians To Be Patient With Tinubu

A member of the House of Representatives, Alhassan Doguwa, has claimed that…

Yemi Alade Unveils Heartfelt Visuals for Soulful Anthem “My Padi”

Global music sensation Yemi Alade is back with the official music video…

PDP Is Not Ready for 2027 Elections Says Okowa, Cites Coalition Stance and Internal Crisis

Former Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) vice presidential candidate, Ifeanyi Okowa, has declared…

ONSA Denies El-Rufai’s Allegations of Ransom Payments to Bandits

The Office of the National Security Adviser (ONSA) has strongly dismissed allegations…