Nigeria’s equities market has entered the second half of 2026 with striking sector divergence, as new data from the Nigerian Exchange (NGX) shows a sharp split between high-performing and underperforming industries despite a strong overall rally.
The NGX All-Share Index has delivered a year-to-date return of +51.62% as of June 19, 2026, even after a recent correction that wiped more than 16,500 points from the market since May’s peak.
However, beneath the headline performance, sector trends reveal a deeply uneven distribution of investor returns.
The NGX Oil/Gas Index leads all sectors with a remarkable +111.13% year-to-date gain, more than doubling market benchmarks and standing in a category of its own.
The performance has been driven largely by strong rallies in Aradel Holdings and Seplat Energy, which have accounted for much of the sector’s outsized returns.
Aradel Holdings has surged 161% year-to-date, closing at N1,750.00 as of June 19, 2026, up from N670.00 at the start of the year. Seplat Energy has also posted a strong gain of 95.6%, closing at N11,363.90 compared to its opening price of N5,809.00.
Other oil and gas names have delivered mixed results, with Conoil Plc and Oando Plc posting moderate gains, while Geregu Power has been the only notable underperformer in the sector, declining 10.7% year-to-date.
The NGX Industrial Goods Index follows closely with a +95.79% return, supported by strength in cement and manufacturing stocks benefiting from infrastructure demand and easing input cost pressures.
The NGX Premium Index, tracking the exchange’s largest and most liquid stocks, has returned +70.32%, reflecting strong institutional investor participation and sustained confidence in blue-chip equities.
Other outperforming indices include the NGX Lotus II Index at +85.15%, NGX Commodity Index at +61.29%, and NGX Pension indices, all of which have outpaced the broader market benchmark.
By contrast, the banking sector, despite strong earnings performance, has lagged behind expectations. The NGX Banking Index is up +35.77%, underperforming the broader market by a significant margin.
Analysts attribute the banking sector’s relative weakness to high valuations at the start of the year, profit-taking activity, and shifting regulatory expectations from the Central Bank of Nigeria.
Consumer-facing sectors have also struggled, with the NGX Consumer Goods Index posting a modest +18.14% return amid weak purchasing power and rising production costs.
Insurance remains the weakest segment, with the NGX Insurance Index down -1.75% year-to-date, making it the only major sector in negative territory.
The divergence highlights a widening gap in investor outcomes across the market, with oil and gas investors earning nearly three times the returns of consumer goods investors so far in 2026.
Market analysts say the central question heading into the second half of the year is whether the current leadership in oil and industrial stocks can be sustained, or whether a correction will bring greater balance across sectors.
For now, the NGX remains a sharply divided market—rewarding energy and industrial exposure while penalising financial and consumer-heavy portfolios.













