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Feb 10, 2026

When Nigeria’s finance minister addressed global peers in Saudi Arabia this week, his message was framed around trade systems, monetary policy, and the need for emerging markets to gain a stronger voice in the global economy. For Nigeria’s real estate sector, the implications are far from abstract.

Calls for a more inclusive international financial architecture speak directly to the forces that determine how easily capital flows into housing projects, how affordable construction inputs remain, and how stable mortgage markets can become. These global conversations increasingly shape what happens on the ground in Lagos, Abuja, Port Harcourt, and the fast-growing secondary cities drawing developer interest.

At the center of the minister’s remarks was the argument that emerging economies contribute far more to global growth than their current influence over financial systems suggests. He also highlighted the growing strategic importance of Gulf economies in directing trade, investment, and capital allocation. For Nigeria, deeper engagement with these partners could translate into new sources of long-term funding and development finance, two areas where the housing sector has historically struggled.t housing, logistics hubs, and tech-enabled short-lets in Lagos and Abuja.

What investment is rudimentary for billionaires but ‘revolutionary’ for 70,571+ investors entering 2026?

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The scarcity of these treasured artworks has helped drive their prices, in exceptional cases, to thin-air heights, without moving in lockstep with other asset classes.

The contemporary and post war segments have even outpaced the S&P 500 overall since 1995.*

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More than a decade after the landmark privatisation of Nigeria’s electricity industry, the nation continues to grapple with severe energy instability despite a cumulative expenditure exceeding ₦7 trillion across four successive administrations. Since the 2013 handover of the Power Holding Company of Nigeria (PHCN) assets to private entities, the federal government has consistently injected trillions of naira into the sector to stabilise generation, transmission, and distribution, yet reliable supply remains elusive.

The magnitude of the crisis was highlighted in early 2026, as the national grid recorded two total collapses within a single month. These systemic failures plunged major economic hubs into darkness, reigniting debates regarding the efficacy of post-privatisation reforms and the transparency of government interventions.

More than a decade after the landmark privatisation of Nigeria’s electricity industry, the nation continues to grapple with severe energy instability despite a cumulative expenditure exceeding ₦7 trillion across four successive administrations. Since the 2013 handover of the Power Holding Company of Nigeria (PHCN) assets to private entities, the federal government has consistently injected trillions of naira into the sector to stabilise generation, transmission, and distribution, yet reliable supply remains elusive.

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Lagos State has solidified its position as Nigeria’s primary sub-national economic powerhouse, proposing a historic ₦4.44 trillion budget for the 2026 fiscal year. This development comes as total state budgets across the federation surged by 45 per cent, reaching a cumulative ₦36.98 trillion, compared to the ₦25.58 trillion recorded in 2025

According to data following the passage of appropriation bills by 34 of the 36 State Houses of Assembly, the 2026 fiscal cycle reflects an aggressive expansionary posture by sub-national governments. While Lagos leads the expenditure chart, Kano State has also entered the trillion-naira bracket with a proposed budget of ₦1.48 trillion, though it remains significantly behind the fiscal scale of Lagos.

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