Home Latest Insights | News Trillion-Naira Stocks Tighten Grip on NGX as SWOOTs Rise to 26, Controlling Over 85% of Market Value

Trillion-Naira Stocks Tighten Grip on NGX as SWOOTs Rise to 26, Controlling Over 85% of Market Value

Trillion-Naira Stocks Tighten Grip on NGX as SWOOTs Rise to 26, Controlling Over 85% of Market Value

Nigeria’s equity market is becoming increasingly defined by a narrow circle of heavyweight stocks. As of February 16, 2026, 26 listed companies have attained market capitalizations above N1 trillion, with their combined value reaching N110.54 trillion, according to data from Nigerian Exchange Limited.

With total market capitalization at N122.13 trillion, this elite group now commands about 85.5% of the entire exchange — an extraordinary level of concentration that underscores how market performance is increasingly tethered to a small group of blue-chip names.

The 26 trillion-naira stocks now control roughly 85.5% of total market capitalization, reinforcing the NGX’s growing dependence on a narrow group of heavyweights.

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In October 2025, there were 22 such companies valued at N78.92 trillion. The addition of four new entrants and the sharp rise in aggregate value within just four months reflect strong capital appreciation in select sectors and sustained investor preference for scale, liquidity, and earnings visibility.

Banking Momentum and Sector Rotation

The banking sector has been the single most important driver of the SWOOT expansion. Fidelity Bank Plc, Wema Bank Plc, Ecobank Transnational Incorporated, and Dangote Sugar Refinery Plc all crossed the N1 trillion threshold this year.

Fidelity Bank’s valuation climbed to about N1.07 trillion after its share price rose to N21.30. Wema Bank surged 34.6% year to date, lifting its market capitalization to roughly N1.1 trillion. Ecobank Transnational Incorporated joined the league at about N1.04 trillion despite a recent moderation in its share price.

Analysts link the rally in banking stocks to positioning ahead of recapitalization requirements, improved asset quality metrics, and resilient earnings growth. Stronger balance sheets and improving net interest margins have attracted both domestic institutional capital and foreign portfolio flows seeking liquid exposure.

Telecoms and industrials have also played a defining role. MTN Nigeria climbed to around N16.4 trillion in market value after a 52.6% year-to-date gain, overtaking traditional heavyweights such as Dangote Cement Plc and BUA Foods Plc in relative scale. Telecom operators continue to benefit from data revenue expansion and pricing adjustments, while cement and consumer goods firms leverage domestic production advantages and infrastructure-linked demand.

The growing size of these companies means index direction is increasingly shaped by a handful of counters. Portfolio managers tracking benchmark performance are compelled to maintain significant exposure to these stocks, reinforcing the cycle of concentration.

Liquidity, Institutional Capital, and Structural Shifts

The SWOOT category has evolved into more than a valuation milestone; it now functions as a structural anchor for liquidity and institutional participation. Large-cap stocks dominate daily turnover, foreign inflows, and index weightings. In practical terms, this means that market rallies — and corrections — are amplified by movements in this concentrated cluster.

Recent reforms by the National Pension Commission may intensify this trend. By raising allowable investment limits for pension funds in equities, regulators have potentially unlocked nearly N1 trillion in incremental demand. With pension assets already exceeding N26 trillion, much of that capital is expected to gravitate toward liquid, high-capitalization names.

The implication is that structural domestic liquidity is aligning with existing concentration patterns, likely reinforcing demand for blue-chip stocks over smaller, less liquid counters.

At the same time, the narrowing breadth of market leadership raises important considerations. While concentration reflects strength in Nigeria’s largest corporations, it also heightens systemic sensitivity. Earnings disappointments or sector-specific shocks within telecoms or banking could disproportionately influence overall index performance.

Market Pause After Extended Rally

The dominance of SWOOTs was evident even as the market pulled back on February 17, 2026. The All-Share Index declined by 941.2 points to close at 189,321.24, ending an 11-day winning streak. Market capitalization slipped from N122.1 trillion to N121.5 trillion, although trading volume rose to 1.19 billion shares across 86,607 deals.

Among the trillion-naira stocks, performance was mixed but skewed negative. Lafarge Africa Plc fell 4.04%, International Breweries Plc declined 4.00%, and MTN Nigeria shed 3.81%. Fidelity Bank also retreated 2.35%, while Aradel Holdings Plc eased marginally.

Within the FUGAZ banking cluster, sentiment was broadly bearish. Zenith Bank Plc fell 10%, United Bank for Africa Plc dropped 6.56%, Access Holdings Plc lost 4.63%, and Guaranty Trust Holding Company Plc shed 2.33%. Only First HoldCo Plc recorded a marginal gain.

Despite the pullback, the broader narrative remains intact. The trillion-naira cohort has become the engine room of the Nigerian capital market, shaping liquidity flows, institutional allocation, and benchmark direction.

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