Nigeria’s highly anticipated return to one of the world’s most closely watched frontier market benchmarks has hit an unexpected hurdle, just months after the country celebrated official approval for its reclassification.
London-based index provider FTSE Russell has placed Nigeria’s planned upgrade from “Unclassified” status back to “Frontier Market” under immediate review. The reclassification, initially scheduled to take effect in September 2026, is now in jeopardy following a recent structural change in how equity trades are settled on the Nigerian Exchange (NGX).
Why FTSE Russell placed Nigeria’s market upgrade under review
The friction stems from an operational shift implemented on June 1, 2026, when the Nigerian Exchange shortened its equity settlement cycle from two business days to one, moving from a T+2 to a T+1 settlement cycle.
On paper, this aligns Nigeria’s capital markets with global financial hubs like the United States, Canada, and India, which have adopted faster settlement timeframes to boost liquidity, improve operational efficiency, and reduce systemic risk.
For international institutional investors, however, the compressed T+1 timeline introduces practical complications:
Foreign exchange conversion windows: Asset managers must convert foreign currency into Naira (NGN) before purchasing domestic equities.
Pre-funding requirements: With only 24 hours to complete FX conversion and settle trades, foreign investors may be forced to pre-fund positions before trades are fully confirmed.
Market quality concerns: FTSE Russell has flagged these pre-funding requirements as a potential breach of its market quality standards, prompting the current review.
The firm has said it will continue to monitor conditions and communicate a final decision on Nigeria’s index status by the end of August 2026, reported by Business Insider Africa
Sensitive timing for Nigeria’s FX reform story
The timing of this reassessment is a notable setback for the Tinubu administration’s economic team. Nigeria only regained approval for FTSE Frontier Market status in March 2026, after spending nearly three years excluded from the index.
The country was downgraded to “Unclassified” in 2023 amid severe foreign exchange shortages, delays in capital repatriation, and strict currency controls that blocked global fund managers from moving money out of the country.
Since taking office, the current administration has aggressively pursued foreign exchange liberalization, floating the Naira and clearing a substantial backlog of unmet FX demand. The planned FTSE upgrade had been widely celebrated as external validation that these reforms were beginning to restore institutional investor confidence.
The broader impact on foreign portfolio investment
Index classifications matter because billions of dollars in global funds are tied directly to benchmark tracking. A delay or reversal of Nigeria’s FTSE upgrade could reinforce caution among offshore asset managers who are still testing the reliability and consistency of the country’s reforms.
Foreign participation in Nigerian equities remains fragile:
Declining foreign inflows: Foreign portfolio investment in the Nigerian stock market fell by 17.4% in the first five months of 2026, dropping to approximately ₦400.1 billion (about 260 million dollars) compared to the same period a year earlier.
The MSCI factor: Nigeria also remains under close observation by MSCI, another leading index provider. MSCI removed Nigeria from its Frontier Markets Index in 2024 due to capital repatriation bottlenecks and has yet to reinstate the country, despite acknowledging recent structural progress.
How local market operators are responding
Local market stakeholders have pushed back against the view that the T+1 settlement cycle undermines Nigeria’s readiness for index reinstatement. They argue that the review understates multi-year improvements in market infrastructure, trading transparency, and foreign exchange accessibility.
For many Nigerian capital market experts, the shorter settlement timeframe is an intentional step toward modernisation rather than a new source of operational risk, and they contend that global investors can adapt with appropriate FX and funding strategies.
What to expect next
The next two months will be critical for Nigeria’s capital markets. FTSE Russell’s final decision at the end of August 2026 will serve as a litmus test of how international investors now perceive Nigeria’s reform trajectory.
If the upgrade proceeds as planned, it could unlock renewed index-linked inflows and signal a deeper vote of confidence in Nigeria’s FX and market reforms. If it is delayed or reversed, global capital may remain cautious for longer, keeping Nigeria’s reform story under watch rather than fully rewarded.
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