Nigeria’s Money Supply Slips to ₦117.4 Trillion in June 2025 amid Tightening Liquidity

CBN data reveals third consecutive drop in Nigeria's money supply

Nigeria's Money Supply Slips to ₦117.4 Trillion in June 2025
3D Hands holding new rendered Nigerian naira notes.

Nigeria’s broad money supply (M3) dropped slightly to ₦117.4 trillion in June 2025 from ₦119 trillion in May, marking a 1.27% month‑on‑month contraction and the third consecutive monthly decline this year.

The narrow (M1) and broad (M2) measures fell in parallel, M2 dropped from ₦118.9 trillion to ₦117.4 trillion, and M1 dipped from ₦40.4 trillion to ₦39.9 trillion, underscoring a wider tightening in Nigeria’s liquidity conditions.

Despite the recent monthly contractions, the year‑on‑year increase remains strong: broad money rose 15.81%, from ₦101.4 trillion in June 2024 to ₦117.4 trillion in June 2025.

That contrast between short‑term decline and longer‑term growth paints a nuanced picture of monetary dynamics, balancing growth in total money supply over the year against short‑term tightening momentum.

The drop in total money supply in June was cushioned by a notable shift in net asset composition: net domestic assets rose to ₦76.8 trillion (from ₦73.2 trillion in May), while net foreign assets fell sharply to ₦40.7 trillion, down from ₦45.8 trillion the previous month.

This divergence highlights a delicate balancing act by the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) in managing internal liquidity versus external reserves.

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The reduction in M1 and M2 signals declining cash availability, due to elevated interest rates, or seasonal liquidity shifts.

These data align with the CBN’s monetary tightening strategy, including a high Monetary Policy Rate (MPR) and aggressive Open Market Operations (OMO). Early results suggest the policy is beginning to temper excess liquidity and manage inflationary pressures.

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