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FDI stays below 4% despite Nigeria’s $23.22 billion foreign capital in 2025
Foreign direct investment (FDI) accounted for less than 4% of total capital imported into Nigeria in 2025, according to data from the latest capital importation report from the National Bureau of Statistics (NBS).
The data shows the country’s external capital inflows remained heavily tilted toward more mobile portfolio funds despite an improvement in absolute FDI volumes.
Nairametrics observed that while total inflows strengthened markedly in 2025, the bulk of that increase came from foreign portfolio investors rather than long-term direct investors typically associated with factory investment, business expansion, and durable job creation.
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**What the data shows **
Data from the NBS report showed that Nigeria recorded total capital importation of $23.22 billion in 2025, up sharply from $12.32 billion in 2024.
But out of the 2025 total, FDI contributed just $923.01 million, representing 3.97% of aggregate inflows.
That compares with $674.71 million in 2024, when FDI accounted for 5.48% of total capital importation.
This means FDI rose by $248.30 million year on year, or about 36.8%, but its share of total inflows still fell by 1.51 percentage points as faster growth in portfolio investment widened the gap.
**Portfolio flows dominated 2025 inflows **
A breakdown of the data showed that portfolio investment remained the clear driver of capital importation in 2025. Portfolio inflows stood at $19.74 billion, more than double the $8.38 billion recorded in 2024.
Although the second half showed some improvement, FDI still remained a marginal component of overall capital importation.
The contrast becomes even clearer when viewed in nominal terms. In 2025, portfolio inflows of $19.74 billion were more than 21 times the size of FDI inflows at $923.01 million.
**FDI improved in value, but not enough to shift the structure **
On a quarterly basis, FDI rose across 2025 from $126.29 million in Q1 to $142.67 million in Q2, then climbed sharply to $296.25 million in Q3 before reaching $357.80 million in Q4.
This shows a clear strengthening in direct investment momentum during the year, especially in the second half. Q4 was the strongest quarter for FDI in 2025 and accounted for roughly 38.8% of the full-year FDI total.
Combined, Q3 and Q4 delivered $654.05 million, meaning about 70.9% of all FDI recorded in 2025 came in the second half of the year.
That said, the broader picture remains weak. Even the full-year FDI total of $923.01 million was still below the value of portfolio investment recorded in each individual quarter of 2025. Q1 portfolio inflows alone stood at $5.20 billion, while Q4 reached $5.49 billion.
Within FDI, equity capital remained the dominant component. FDI equity stood at $868.29 million in 2025, accounting for about 94.1% of total FDI.
This was up strongly from $419.41 million in Q4 2024 to $321.96 million in Q4 2025 on a quarterly end-point basis, while annual equity inflows more than doubled from the visible 2024 quarterly pattern to a 2025 total of $868.29 million.
**What you should know **
The 2025 data shows two things at once. First, Nigeria succeeded in attracting significantly more foreign capital than it did in 2024.
So, while the rise in FDI from $674.71 million to $923.01 million is a positive development, the fact that it still represented just 3.97% of total capital importation shows that Nigeria has not yet achieved a meaningful shift toward deeper, more stable foreign investment.