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Central Bank of Nigeria Holds Interest Rate at 27.5% Amid Inflation Drop, Keeps CRR At 50%

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The Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) on Tuesday opted to keep its benchmark interest rate unchanged at 27.5 percent, despite growing expectations from sections of the financial community for a rate cut following signs of easing inflation.

Governor Olayemi Cardoso, who announced the decision at the end of the two-day Monetary Policy Committee (MPC) meeting in Abuja, said the decision was unanimous among committee members and hinged on what the bank described as “relative improvements” in macroeconomic indicators.

“The MPC noted the relative improvements in some key macroeconomic indicators which are expected to support the overall moderation in prices in the near to medium term,” Cardoso said.

He pointed to progress in narrowing the foreign exchange gap, a positive balance of payments position, easing PMS prices, and a drop in food inflation as key justifications for maintaining the status quo.

It was the second straight meeting in which the CBN held the Monetary Policy Rate (MPR) steady, following a rapid tightening cycle earlier in the year. Between February and March 2024 alone, the CBN raised the rate by 600 basis points—from 18.75 percent to 27.75 percent—before trimming it slightly to 27.5 percent in April.

The MPR, a key instrument the central bank uses to control liquidity and tame inflation, has seen a cumulative increase of 875 basis points since 2022, when the rate stood at 11.5 percent.

Analysts Had Hoped for a Cut

Some financial analysts and market observers had anticipated that the CBN would ease rates at this meeting, pointing to the marginal decline in headline inflation reported for April. The National Bureau of Statistics (NBS) pegged April inflation at 23.71%, a marginal improvement from the 24.23% recorded in March.

Although the decline was not dramatic, it prompted expectations that the apex bank might shift toward supporting economic growth by easing borrowing costs for businesses and households already struggling with the consequences of earlier rate hikes.

The Chairman of the Organized Private Sector of Nigeria, Dele Oye, advocated for a reduction of the MPR to prevent slowed business growth while criticizing the existing rate, stating, “The economy cannot run on the 27.5 percent interest rate. Nobody can borrow money at the current rate and make a profit from business.”

However, the CBN seemed to have taken a more cautious stance, choosing to allow more time for previous rate hikes to fully filter through the economy.

Cardoso, in his address, stressed that while the inflation outlook was improving, underlying inflationary pressures remained due to factors such as high electricity tariffs, persistent FX demand, and structural inefficiencies.

Policy Tools Unchanged

Beyond the interest rate, the MPC also left all other monetary policy parameters unchanged. The asymmetric corridor around the MPR was retained at +500/-100 basis points. The Cash Reserve Ratio (CRR) was kept at 50 percent for commercial banks and 16 percent for merchant banks, while the liquidity ratio remained at 30 percent.

These tools are used by the central bank to manage the volume of money circulating in the economy and ensure financial system stability.

Cardoso said the committee was encouraged by recent federal government policies to boost local production, reduce import dependence, and stabilize the exchange rate—all aimed at easing pressure on consumer prices.

He also praised the federal government’s efforts in improving food supply through targeted interventions in agriculture and better security in farming regions.

Cardoso has repeatedly positioned the CBN’s current approach as a deliberate reset to restore credibility and reinstate orthodoxy in monetary policy after years of opacity and unorthodox interventions under the previous leadership. The bank has also resumed the release of long-suppressed data, including its audited financial statements and breakdown of gross versus net external reserves.

Presently, the central bank seems committed to maintaining a tight stance in the short term, hoping that existing monetary tools and fiscal coordination will eventually tame inflation and revive growth. But with unemployment high, consumer demand suppressed, and borrowing costs choking business activity, the call for interest rate relief may grow louder in the months ahead, especially if inflation continues its downward drift.

The next MPC meeting is expected in July, where all eyes will again turn to whether the CBN finally responds to the inflation signal or remains on its cautious path.

Central Bank of Nigeria Claims FX Market Volatility Dropped Below 0.5%, But Doubt Persists Over Data Credibility

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The Governor of the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN), Mr. Olayemi Cardoso, on Tuesday declared that volatility in the foreign exchange (FX) market has significantly declined, dropping from over 4% a year ago to less than 0.5%, as monetary and fiscal reforms begin to take hold.

Addressing the press after the 300th Monetary Policy Committee (MPC) meeting in Abuja, Cardoso said the decline in FX volatility signals improving macroeconomic stability, restored investor confidence, and a rebound in external reserves.

According to him, these changes are a direct result of “policy consistency, orthodox monetary tightening, and enhanced transparency” by the apex bank.

“If you look at the exchange rate, volatility has reduced from over 4% a year ago to less than half of 1% now. That’s an indication of stability,” Cardoso said, emphasizing that Nigeria’s currency depreciation has been relatively modest when compared to other emerging markets grappling with similar global shocks.

The CBN chief explained that liberalization of the FX market, unification of exchange rates, and reforms to boost FX supply had begun to yield results. In addition, he said that the synergy between monetary and fiscal authorities has contributed to the recent calm in the FX market, creating a more predictable environment for foreign investors and businesses.

Cardoso noted that the naira’s adjusted exchange rate had made it more competitive, with the potential to enhance Nigeria’s position in regional trade, particularly within ECOWAS. He also said local refineries, especially the Dangote Refinery, would soon help ease FX demand pressure by reducing the country’s need for imported refined fuel products.

Reserve Rebound and Remittance Push

Beyond exchange rate stability, Cardoso disclosed that Nigeria’s net external reserves have surged from just over $3 billion to around $23 billion in recent months—a development he described as a “quantum leap.”

According to the governor, the turnaround is a result of improved transparency in reserve reporting and reforms that brought back players who had previously stayed away from the FX market. The CBN has resumed the publication of both gross and net reserve figures, which Cardoso said was meant to “bolster confidence and reduce speculative behavior.”

The gross reserves, which hovered between $33–34 billion earlier in the year, are expected to rise further due to increased oil receipts, declining fuel import needs, and expanding non-oil export earnings, particularly gas.

On diaspora remittances, the CBN said it is targeting inflows of $1 billion monthly. The bank said reforms—such as digitization of remittance processes, improved KYC compliance, and closer collaboration with the Nigerian Inter-Bank Settlement System (NIBSS)—have already raised inflows from $200 million to over $600 million at peak levels.

Cardoso said banks are now expected to develop tailored products for Nigerians abroad, after the apex bank dismantled structural bottlenecks that previously constrained the flow of funds through formal channels.

Transparency or Window Dressing?

However, while Cardoso painted an optimistic picture of the FX market and the broader economy, not everyone is buying it, at least not without scrutiny. Concerns over data credibility from government institutions have continued to surface, casting doubt over the authenticity of the central bank’s claims.

Notably, respected economist and member of President Bola Tinubu’s Economic Advisory Council, Bismarck Rewane, recently pointed to “discrepancies” in data released by the National Bureau of Statistics (NBS)—Nigeria’s chief data agency. Speaking on Monday about the state of Nigeria’s economy, Rewane warned that inconsistent and manipulated figures could erode public trust in economic governance.

“Are those numbers credible? If they aren’t, then what exactly are we seeing here? A distortion in methodology?,” Rewane queried. He did not accuse any particular agency of deliberate falsification but said the inconsistencies could lead to misinterpretation and flawed policy decisions.

While the CBN said it is now committed to greater transparency—publishing audited financial statements and reserve data regularly—there is growing skepticism in economic and civic circles that such efforts may be more cosmetic than institutional. Over the past year, multiple analysts and economists have expressed worry that a trend of data “massaging” may be evolving across federal agencies, especially as the government faces rising criticism over economic hardship.

“Let the Central Bank comply with sections 50 (1)(3) of the CBN Act and publish its annual financial statement, let us see if the net external reserves is actually $23.1bn. There are places where you don’t bring that slimy political propaganda to, and reserve management as one of the 5 pillars that forms the basis of Central Banking is an integral part, because it has a direct consequence on managing monetary policy,” economist, Kelvin Emmanuel, said last month in response to CBN’s claim that Nigeria’s FX reserves rose to $23 billion.

These suspicions are backed by the precedent set by the past administration. In the past, agencies such as the NBS, the Debt Management Office (DMO), and the Ministry of Finance have faced public backlash over statistics that either contradicted market realities or appeared misaligned with earlier releases.

Analysts say the credibility gap poses a major threat to Nigeria’s economic recovery, particularly in the FX market, where investor decisions hinge on reliable information.

“Net FX reserves came in line with expectations, but CBN’s commitment to improve quality of reserves shouldn’t be understated. While CBN didn’t publish detailed data of its short- and medium-term foreign liabilities, providing some insight into its net reserves is a significant step in the right direction,” JP Morgan said in 2023.

Institutional Reform Still Fragile

Cardoso admitted that the central bank is still undergoing a process of institutional reform, stressing that it should not be judged by the same yardsticks as commercial banks. He noted that the CBN moved from a loss of over N1 trillion in 2023 to a near breakeven position of N30 billion this year, a transition he said underscored the scale of internal restructuring.

He explained that the central bank is not a profit-making organization, making it primarily a custodian of monetary stability, whose performance should be measured against that mandate.

The CBN insists that it remains committed to its reform path. Cardoso reiterated that the apex bank will continue to tighten monetary policy, sustain FX reforms, and strengthen cooperation with fiscal authorities to anchor long-term macroeconomic stability.

Google Rolls Out AI Mode in Search, Ushering A New Era of Search Experience

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Tech giant Google has announced the rollout of its AI mode in search, which lets users ask complex questions, signaling a new era of user search experience.

On Tuesday, the company announced this update at its annual developer conference, Google I/O 2025.

Announcing the launch, Google wrote,

“Since launching last year, AI Overviews have scaled to over 1.5 billion users and are now in 200 countries and territories. As people use AI Overviews, we see they’re happier with their results, and they search more often. In our biggest markets like the U.S. and India, AI Overviews are driving over 10% growth in the types of queries that show them, and this growth increases over time. It’s one of the most successful launches in Search in the past decade.

“For those who want an end-to-end AI Search experience, we’re introducing an all-new AI Mode. It’s a total reimagining of Search. With more advanced reasoning, you can ask AI Mode longer and more complex queries. Early testers have been asking queries that are two to three times the length of traditional searches, and you can go further with follow-up questions. All of this is available as a new tab right in Search.”

Instead of a traditional list of links, AI Mode generates direct, AI-driven answers using Google’s search index, similar to chatbots like ChatGPT or Perplexity. It’s designed for nuanced or exploratory questions, such as comparing products or diving into complex topics. Users can input queries via text, voice, or images (e.g., uploading a photo to ask about a product or scene). This integrates with Google Lens for enhanced visual search.

AI Mode is Google’s direct response to the release of search engines from Silicon Valley startups like OpenAI and Perplexity, which provide chatbot-style answers to questions and queries. The feature which will roll out to users in the U.S. starting this week, builds on Google’s existing AI-powered search experience, AI overviews, which display AI-generated summaries at the top of its search results page. Both AI Overviews and AI Mode will now use a custom version of Gemini 2.5, and Google says that AI Mode’s capabilities will gradually roll out to AI Overviews over time.

Also, Google disclosed that search results will be personalized based on users’ past searches, and if they choose to connect their Google Apps using a feature that will roll out this summer. For instance, if they connect their Gmail, Google could know about their travel dates from a booking confirmation email and then use that to recommend events in the city they are visiting that will be taking place while they are there.

Before the integration of AI to search, CEO Sundar Pichai has flagged this feature as a top priority, emphasizing that Google is leaning in heavily on AI. It is understood that search remains the engine that drives Alphabet’s business, hence the need for the upgrade.

Google’s AI mode is part of its response to growing competition from AI-first platforms like ChatGPT and Microsoft’s Bing with Copilot. By embedding generative AI directly into Search, Google is reshaping the web discovery process and redefining what users expect from search engines.

The idea behind AI Overviews is to deliver quick, summarized answers to complex questions—helping users get what they need without digging through multiple links. But recent data suggests this convenience is coming at the expense of traffic to the very sites that supply the information.

Google’s integration of AI Mode into its dominant search engine (over 90% global search market share) gives it a massive reach advantage. With no login required for AI Overviews and easy access, Google can capture users seeking conversational or multimodal search, challenging chatbots’ user bases.

Looking ahead

Google’s AI Mode raises the stakes for AI chatbots by blending advanced AI with its unparalleled search infrastructure. The shift toward AI-driven search could redefine how users interact with information, pushing chatbots to adapt or risk losing ground.

Tekedia Capital welcomes Exin Therapeutics

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Tekedia Capital welcomes Exin Therapeutics to our community. Exin Therapeutics is a biotech company that is developing genetic therapies that  target neural activity for people suffering from neurological and neuropsychiatric disorders such as epilepsy, debilitating symptoms of autism spectrum disorder, and Parkinson’s disease.

The innovation in Exin Therapeutics is the circuit-level approach it is taking to treat these brain disorders. Largely,  instead of trying to restore missing genes, they’re supplementing already existing genes that directly change the neural activity in the brain. A proprietary AI system they invented is assisting them in the development.

For us, this is more than an investment, this is a call to mission at a glocal level since some of these diseases remain largely incurable! But with three founders – all Oxford-educated neuroscientists with capabilities in molecular biology, circuit, and systems neuroscience, we see something that is worth supporting, for all nations, and all people.

To learn more, visit:

Tekedia Capital capital.tekedia.com

Exin Therapeutics www.exintherapeutics.com

 

Economist Bismarck Rewane Questions NBS Inflation Data, Compares it to JAMB Scandal

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Bismarck Rewane, economist and managing director of Financial Derivatives Company, has faulted the April 2025 inflation report released by the National Bureau of Statistics (NBS), questioning its credibility and comparing the data inconsistencies to the recently exposed JAMB exam scandal.

According to the NBS, Nigeria’s headline inflation dropped marginally to 23.71 percent in April, from 24.23 percent in March. But Rewane, who appeared puzzled by the figures, argued that the data present a contradiction: states that grow the bulk of the country’s food are seeing extreme inflation, while consumer-heavy states are recording unusually low inflation levels.

“Inflation was highest in Benue at 51 percent, Ekiti at 34 percent, and Kebbi at 33 percent — these are food-producing states,” Rewane said. “Meanwhile, Ebonyi, Adamawa, and Ogun — states that are primarily consuming these food items — posted some of the lowest inflation rates: 7.19, 9.52, and 9.91 percent respectively. How is that even possible?”

Drawing a direct analogy to the Joint Admissions and Matriculation Board (JAMB) exam scandal, where results were recently discredited due to technical errors and suspected manipulation, Rewane raised doubts about the data collection process used by the NBS.

“Are those numbers credible? If they aren’t, then what exactly are we seeing here? A distortion in methodology? A JAMB-type situation?” he asked. “The inflation gap between Benue and Ogun is nearly 43 percentage points — what has happened?”

‘Government Isn’t Stabilizing Prices — It’s Distorting the Market’

Rewane didn’t stop at the data. He moved to broader concerns about how inflation is being interpreted and managed. He warned that the recent drop in food prices, such as the temporary decline in rice, may not be sustainable. Factors like rumors of poisoned rice and increased imports have led to short-term price volatility, not long-term stability, he said.

“Yes, we’ve seen some food prices come down,” he admitted. “But is it real or sustainable? The rice price fell partly due to imports and partly due to people avoiding rice because of rumors it’s poisoned. That’s not policy success — it’s fear and external supply.”

He highlighted tomatoes as a more telling case, noting a 107 percent price increase due to the spread of “tomato ebola”, a plant disease. Meanwhile, dairy prices held relatively stable — a signal of the uneven and unpredictable shifts in the food basket.

For Rewane, the policy response from the government has been both weak and misdirected.

“It’s not the government’s job to produce or sell food,” he said. “That’s the wrong model. The market determines the efficient price. A trader imports rice, offers it for sale, and the consumer makes the decision based on his income.”

He argued that interventions aimed at lowering food prices miss the point — Nigeria’s inflation is driven more by structural issues than monetary phenomena.

“You can’t reduce inflation by just pumping food into the market or manipulating prices,” he said. “There’s an output gap driven by insecurity, poor logistics, high diesel and petrol costs. Then on the other side, you have excess liquidity that fuels demand. That’s the inflation mix.”

Monetary Policy Not Enough to Fix Structural Deficiencies

While acknowledging the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN)’s role in controlling inflation through interest rate hikes and liquidity tightening, Rewane stressed that monetary policy is not enough.

“The CBN can curb demand, yes, but output and production growth comes only from power stability, efficient logistics, lower business costs, and improved farm yields,” he said.

He added that production shortfalls in the face of unrelenting demand will always fuel inflation, regardless of how high the CBN pushes the Monetary Policy Rate (MPR).

Rewane’s comments come at a time of deep public skepticism over official data, with more Nigerians expressing doubts about economic reports that fail to align with market realities. The NBS figures showed a national inflation decline, but many Nigerians say they have seen no relief in food markets, where the cost of goods remains high.

With the NBS maintaining its position on the CPI numbers, Rewane has become the latest voice to question the authenticity of the agency’s figures. The concern has been whether government data truly reflects Nigeria’s economic conditions — or whether the country is navigating policies and metrics built on compromised foundations.

With public trust in institutions like JAMB already shaken, and prices of essentials like rice, tomatoes, and other staples still show a stark difference from the NBS data, the challenge facing the government is no longer just inflation — it’s credibility.