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Home » Nigeria: PMI Down to 51.9 in March as Higher Fuel Costs Lead to Surge in Prices

Nigeria: PMI Down to 51.9 in March as Higher Fuel Costs Lead to Surge in Prices

Stanbic IBTC Bank Nigeria says PMI shows new order growth sustained in March 2026, but higher fuel costs lead to surge in prices

Peter Oluka by Peter Oluka
April 1, 2026
in Finance
Reading Time: 3 mins read
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Growth slowed in the Nigerian private sector at the end of the first quarter of the year as higher fuel costs led to a steep intensification of inflationary pressures.

Output growth was only modest, but underlying demand reportedly remained resilient, leading to a further sharp rise in new orders. In turn, firms continued to expand their employment and purchasing activity.

The headline figure derived from the survey is the Stanbic IBTC Purchasing Managers’ Index (PMI). Readings above 50.0 signal an improvement in business conditions on the previous month, while readings below 50.0 show a deterioration.

The headline PMI posted 51.9 in March, down from 53.2 in February but still above the 50.0 no-change mark and therefore signalling an improvement in the health of the private sector during the month. Business conditions have strengthened in 15 of the past 16 months.

Muyiwa Oni, head of Equity Research West Africa at Stanbic IBTC Bank commented:

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“While higher fuel costs and power supply issues contributed to a slowdown in the growth of Nigeria’s private sector activity, underlying demand remains strong. This is reflected in an increase in customer demand and the associated impact of new product launches, both of which supported an improvement in new orders. Businesses also remained optimistic about increases in future output amid their plans to invest in business expansions and boost promotional efforts. Nonetheless, input prices rose markedly at the sharpest pace since January 2025, with all four monitored sectors seeing sharper rates of inflation.

The PMI numbers in Q1:26 are consistent with an estimated 3.99% y/y GDP growth for the quarter after also accounting for crude oil sector’s performance.

We now see the Nigerian economy growing by 4.22% y/y in 2026, from 3.87% y/y in 2025, with the oil sector growth slowing to 3.01% y/y (vs 2025: 8.50% y/y), as we now expect crude oil production (including condensates) to We estimate the non-oil sector’s growth at 4.24% y/y in 2026, from 3.71% y/y in 2025, likely driven primarily by services, which we see growing by 5.64% y/y in 2026 (vs 2025: 4.14% y/y). The government’s continuous investment attraction across oil & gas, solid minerals, electricity, agriculture and general manufacturing should continue to support sentiment on production activity.

The government’s infrastructure drive should keep supporting the attractiveness of the construction, real estate and cement sectors. In addition, we expect electioneering activity to support improvement in media & advertising, logistics, transportation, hospitality, security services, and communications activities, as these are the direct beneficiaries of election-related spending. Nonetheless, the ongoing tensions in the Middle East pose a downside risk to the growth outlook as higher inflation emanating from sustained increase in fuel prices may lead to higher-for-longer interest rates. This may influence a slowdown in demand conditions should the tensions continue to escalate.”

Reports of greater customer requests amid improving underlying demand, as well as the impact of new product launches, led to a further marked increase in new orders, the second in as many months.

The rate of growth was only slightly softer than that seen in February.

The rate of expansion in business activity slowed more markedly, however, and was only modest overall.

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A number of firms continued to raise output in response to higher new orders, but others suggested that rising fuel costs had limited growth.

Activity increased in agriculture and wholesale & retail, but decreased in manufacturing and services. The aforementioned rise in fuel costs had a stark impact on rates of inflation in the Nigerian private sector during March.

Purchase costs increased at the fastest pace in 15 months, while selling prices were also raised to the largest extent since December 2024 in response. Selling price inflation accelerated sharply across all four monitored sectors.

Employment increased for the tenth month running, albeit slightly and at a slower pace than in February. Meanwhile, the rate of staff cost inflation also eased and was at a four month low.

The need to respond to rising new orders and expected increases in workloads in the coming months encouraged companies to expand their purchasing activity and stocks of inputs in March. The rise in input buying was marked, but inventory accumulation was only modest.

Prompt payments for purchased items meant that suppliers’ lead times continued to shorten, but some firms reported that higher fuel costs had impacted delivery schedules.

Meanwhile, shortages of staff and materials, price increases and power supply issues contributed to a further accumulation of outstanding business, albeit one that was only marginal.

Companies remained optimistic that output will increase over the coming year, with confidence reflecting plans to invest in business expansions and boost promotional efforts. That said, sentiment eased to a four-month low.

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Peter Oluka

Peter Oluka

Peter Oluka (@peterolukai), editor of Techeconomy, is a multi-award winner practicing Journalist. Peter’s media practice cuts across Media Relations | Marketing| Advertising, other Communications interests. Contact: peter.oluka@techeconomy.ng

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