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CBN reports slight drop in Nigeria inflation expectations index

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Nigeria’s inflation expectations index declined slightly to 41.4 points in January 2026 from 41.7 points in December 2025.

This signals a marginal improvement in price sentiment across the economy.

The latest Inflation Expectation Survey was released by the Central Bank of Nigeria.

The report revealed a modest easing in outlook among respondents.

The development reflects shifting perceptions among businesses and households.

Structural cost pressures persist and key inflation drivers remain elevated.

Businesses recorded a notable softening in inflation sentiment during the review period.

Household expectations stayed broadly high.

Energy, transportation, exchange rate movements, insecurity, and interest rates were identified as the top drivers shaping price perceptions.

The January 2026 survey showed that the slight moderation in the index was largely driven by improved sentiment among businesses.

Business inflation perception declined from 48.3 per cent in December 2025 to 45.2 per cent in January 2026.

Microbusinesses recorded the highest inflation perception at 51.2 per cent.

This reflects their vulnerability to rising input costs and logistics expenses.

Small businesses posted the lowest perception at 40.8 per cent.

This suggests relatively stronger cost management or resilience.

Rural households reported a 55.0 per cent inflation perception rate.

This was slightly higher than the 53.9 per cent recorded by urban households.

Most businesses and households expect inflation to remain at about the same level over the next month, three months, and six months.

This indicates stable short-term forward expectations despite persistent concerns.

Energy costs emerged as the most cited driver of inflation perception in January 2026.

Respondents linked fuel and electricity prices to higher production, distribution, and service delivery costs across sectors.

Transportation ranked as the second most influential factor.

This reflects the continued pass-through of fuel and vehicle operating costs into consumer prices.

Exchange rate movements were identified as a key pressure point.

This particularly affects businesses reliant on imported inputs and finished goods.

Insecurity was also listed among the major drivers.

Respondents noted disruptions to agricultural output, supply chains, and market access.

Interest rates completed the top five concerns.

Higher borrowing costs affect business expansion and household spending power.

Nigeria’s headline inflation eased sharply to 15.15 per cent in December 2025.

This followed a methodological review by the National Bureau of Statistics (NBS).

The statistics agency is expected to release the January 2026 inflation report next week.

The easing in headline inflation followed adjustments to the Consumer Price Index methodology.

Market participants are closely watching the January data for confirmation of a sustained disinflation trend.

The CBN’s inflation expectations survey serves as a forward-looking indicator for policymakers and investors.

The inflation expectations index is widely monitored.

It provides insight into how price perceptions may shape spending behaviour, wage negotiations, and business pricing decisions in the months ahead.