Where Should Nigerians Invest in 2025? T-Bills, Stocks, Real Estate and Dollar Assets Compared
Returns, risks and liquidity of Nigeria's major asset classes, compared side by side.
Read more
Since the exchange rate unification of 2023, the naira has taught every Nigerian business owner the same lesson at different prices: FX risk is not a finance department topic. It is a survival topic. Businesses that priced imports at ₦700/$ and collected payment ninety days later at ₦1,500/$ did not lose margin; they lost the goods and the margin. Yet FX volatility is not going away, and waiting for a stable naira is not a strategy. Managing exposure is. Here are the five practices that separate the businesses that absorb currency shocks from the ones that are destroyed by them.
Most owners underestimate their true FX exposure because they only count direct imports. Map every cost line with dollar content: raw materials, equipment and spares, software subscriptions, freight, expatriate or remote salaries, even "local" suppliers who themselves import. Businesses that run this exercise typically discover their cost base is 40 to 70% dollar-linked even when they sell purely in naira. That number, your exposure ratio, drives every other decision.
1. Price with an FX clause, or price short. Long-dated naira quotes on dollar-linked work are donations to volatility. Either build an indexation clause into contracts ("prices adjust beyond ±10% exchange movement") or shorten quote validity to 7 to 14 days. Serious counterparties accept this; the ones who refuse are asking you to carry their currency risk free of charge.
2. Match currencies naturally. The cheapest hedge is structural: earn some dollars if you spend dollars. Export a product line, serve diaspora clients, price a service offshore. Even 15 to 20% of revenue in hard currency transforms your resilience. It is a hedge that pays you instead of costing premium.
3. Hold a hard-currency buffer. Keep two to three months of your dollar-linked costs in domiciliary balances or dollar instruments. You are not speculating on the rate; you are buying certainty that the next restock happens regardless of what the naira does that month.
4. Shorten your cash conversion cycle. Every day between paying for imported inputs and collecting from customers is an open FX position. Negotiate supplier credit in naira where possible, collect deposits upfront, and chase receivables like the currency depends on it, because it does.
5. Buy forward when certainty beats price. For predictable large obligations, forward contracts through your bank lock a known rate. The forward rate always looks expensive against today's spot, until the quarter when it doesn't. Hedge obligations, not opinions.
Relative effectiveness observed across client engagements (score out of 100)
"You cannot control the exchange rate. You can control how many days of it you are exposed to, and who carries the risk in your contracts."
Three moves, in order. Map your exposure: one afternoon with your management accounts to compute your dollar-linked cost percentage. Fix your pricing mechanics: add indexation clauses or shorten quote validity on everything signed from now. Start the buffer: a standing instruction moving a fixed amount monthly into your dollar reserve, sized toward two months of hard-currency costs. None of these requires a treasury department; all of them require deciding before the next rate move, not after.
Currency volatility is now a permanent feature of the Nigerian operating environment. The businesses that thrive under it are not the ones that predict the naira correctly. They are the ones whose margins no longer depend on predicting it at all.
CBC's consultants map your FX exposure and build the pricing, treasury, and sourcing playbook to protect your margins.
Continue Reading
Returns, risks and liquidity of Nigeria's major asset classes, compared side by side.
Read more
Five proven strategies for Nigerian SMEs to grow sustainably despite FX volatility, inflation, and infrastructure challenges.
Read more
A step-by-step planning framework for setting realistic 2025 goals in a volatile economy.
Read more