On Monday, Nigeria's stocks fell 0.12% as investors took profits in newly admitted BUA Foods, which had gained over 59% until the end of last week. Read more.
Tags : nigerian stock market
As investors dumped food and beverage stocks led by Nestle and Nigerian Breweries, and partial profit-booking weighed on Nigerian stocks, they declined by 0.09% on Tuesday, the worst performance since the year started. Read more.
Positive sentiment continued to dominate the Nigerian equity market to start the week. Read more.
After three trading days of consecutive losses, Nigerian stocks rebounded on Monday on a risk-off approach to investing, seeing the benchmark index surge by 0.16%. Banking stocks led the climb. Read more.
With profit-taking causing the market capitalization to decrease N32 billion on November 1st, trading on the Nigerian stock market began on a negative note. Read more.
A rise in financial services shares largely contributed to a 0.26% increase in Nigerian stocks on Wednesday, reversing part of the loss it reported during the previous trading session. Read more.
Investors pocketed gains that had accumulated during the week as Nigerian stocks fell by 0.71% on Monday. Read more.
Nigerian equities rose 0.38% in mid-week trading to reach their highest level in more than eight months, just before of the third quarter earnings season, which is anticipated to start any day now. Read more.
Nigerian Stock Exchange investors totalled N80.44 billion in losses on Monday as stocks reversed a nine-day uptrend. Read more.
Nigerian stocks gained 0.05% on Monday, extending a rise that began on Wednesday as stocks in the financial sector garnered momentum. Read more.
Despite the market's year-to-date performance struggling to return to positive territory, Nigerian stocks closed with an upward gap of 1.59%, hitting its highest level since February 29. Read more.
The benchmark Nigerian gauge was down by 0.01 percent at the end of Tuesday's trade, bringing the market close to flat. Since January, the gauge has lost 3.51%. Read more.