Business
Naira to Dollar exchange rate May 27
Street traders in major currency hubs, including Lagos and Abuja, are buying the greenback at an average rate of 1,410 Naira and selling between 1,420 Naira and 1,425 Naira per Dollar.
Data from the Nigerian Foreign Exchange Market (NFEM) on Wednesday May 27, 2026 showed the local currency trading at an official rate of 1,372.84 Naira per Dollar.
This reflects a marginal adjustment from the 1,372.64 Naira recorded during the previous day’s trading session, continuing a trend of tight horizontal consolidation in the official window through the latter half of May.
Daily transaction metrics indicate steady liquidity inflow as the Central Bank of Nigeria sustains its market interventions to manage structural volatility.
However, activity in the unofficial parallel market, commonly referred to as the black market, mirrored the stability seen in the official window.
Street traders in major currency hubs, including Lagos and Abuja, are buying the greenback at an average rate of 1,410 Naira and selling between 1,420 Naira and 1,425 Naira per Dollar.
The spread between the official window and the parallel market remains comfortably under 4%, pointing toward minimized arbitrage opportunities and increased equilibrium across the segments.
Business
FG Moves to Sheild Pig Industry from Deadly Swine Fever
The Federal Government has intensified efforts to protect Nigeria’s pig industry from the growing threat of African Swine Fever, a highly contagious livestock disease.
The Minister of Livestock Development, Idi Mukhtar Maiha, says the government is strengthening biosecurity measures, disease surveillance, and stakeholder collaboration to prevent the spread of the disease and safeguard livestock production nationwide.
Speaking during a technical presentation on the status of African Swine Fever in Nigeria, the Minister commended the Chief Veterinary Officer of the Federation, Dr. Yakubu Yanet Ago, for sharing lessons from a recent study visit to Denmark.
He said that the experiences gained from the visit would help Nigeria develop practical solutions to livestock health challenges and improve preparedness against disease outbreaks.
Maiha highlighted Denmark’s pig traceability and compensation system, where every pig is tracked from birth and farmers contribute to a dedicated fund that provides compensation during disease outbreaks.
According to him, such a model encourages early disease reporting, strengthens transparency, and could be adapted to support Nigeria’s livestock sector.
The Minister also pointed to Denmark’s strict biosecurity measures, including mandatory disinfection of vehicles transporting pigs and controls to prevent contact with wild animals.
He stressed that biosecurity should be viewed as an investment rather than a burden, noting that strict movement controls and farm access restrictions have proven effective in containing disease outbreaks.
To strengthen disease prevention, the Minister directed relevant departments to map livestock movement routes, identify major pig markets and commercial farms, improve animal traceability systems, and deepen collaboration with pig farmers, state governments, and development partners.
He also called for stronger surveillance systems, improved laboratory capacity, and greater investment in veterinary research.
In his remarks, the Chief Veterinary Officer of the Federation, Dr. Yakubu Yanet Ago, described African Swine Fever as a devastating viral disease with mortality rates of up to one hundred percent and revealed that outbreaks have been recorded in about twelve states.
He revealed that the Federal Government’s response focuses on improved surveillance, farmer education, and stronger biosecurity, while urging greater cooperation among all tiers of government, increased funding, and alignment with international disease control strategies to achieve long-term eradication of the disease.
Business
DisCos earn N801bn in four months despite persistent blackouts
In the NERC data, the DisCos billed customers N1.01tn between January and April but recovered N801.16bn, leaving about N207.77bn in uncollected revenue during the period.
Data obtained from the Nigerian Electricity Regulatory Commission (NERC) showed that electricity distribution companies (DisCos) earned a total of N801.16 billion from consumers between January and April 2026.
This was despite persistent power outages and supply constraints across the country.
The commercial performance factsheets released by the regulator showed that the 11 DisCos collected N204.74bn in January, N196.68bn in February, N196.13bn in March and N203.61bn in April, bringing total revenue for the four-month period to N801.16bn.
The collections came even as households and businesses endured months of unstable electricity supply caused largely by gas shortages that crippled power generation and forced widespread load shedding, especially in February and March.
In the NERC data, the DisCos billed customers N1.01tn between January and April but recovered N801.16bn, leaving about N207.77bn in uncollected revenue during the period.
Business
BOI names Kuramo Capital Fund Manager for $170.6m iDICE
The iDICE Programme is jointly financed by the African Development Bank, Agence Française de Développement and Islamic Development Bank.
The Bank of Industry (BOI) has appointed Kuramo Capital Management as the fund manager for the DICE Fund of Funds under the Federal Government’s Investment in Digital and Creative Enterprises (iDICE) Programme, in a move aimed at unlocking more capital for Nigeria’s technology and creative sectors.
The appointment, formalised at a contract signing ceremony in Abuja, marks a major milestone in the implementation of the iDICE Programme, which is designed to stimulate entrepreneurship, innovation, job creation and economic growth through targeted investments in high-growth enterprises.
The DICE Fund of Funds is expected to achieve a minimum capitalisation of $170.6 million, with the Federal Government providing an anchor investment of $85.3 million through the iDICE Programme.
Kuramo Capital has been tasked with raising an equivalent amount from private investors on a dollar-for-dollar basis, creating one of the largest government-backed venture capital initiatives in Africa.
The iDICE Programme is jointly financed by the African Development Bank, Agence Française de Développement and Islamic Development Bank.
It focuses on strengthening Nigeria’s digital economy and creative industries through skills development, access to finance and ecosystem support.
( DAILY TRUST)
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