The equities market extended its bullish run on Monday as the All-Share Index (ASI) crossed the 250,000 point mark, with investors gaining over N3 trillion amid sustained buying interest in key stocks.
Data from Nigerian Exchange Limited showed that the ASI advanced by 2.33% to close at 250,485.54 points, pushing the market’s year-to-date return to 60.97% from 57.30% recorded in the previous session.
Equities market capitalisation rose from N157.09 trillion to N160.26 trillion, while total market capitalisation stood at N215.89 trillion at the close of trading.
The rally was driven by strong demand for stocks including RT Briscoe, FTN Cocoa Processors and Livestock Feeds, alongside continued activity in banking and telecommunications counters.
Trading activity strengthened during the session as total volume traded rose by 30.82% to 1.51 billion shares, while the value of transactions increased by 17.23% to N70.10 billion exchanged in 95,093 deals.
Investor sentiment also improved sharply, with market breadth rising to 2.76x in the previous session as 56 stocks gained against 21 decliners, indicating stronger participation across the market.
The most active stocks by value traded were MTN Nigeria, First HoldCo, Dangote Cement, Zenith Bank and GTCO, which accounted for a significant share of total market turnover.
Year-to-date equities turnover also increased to N3.37 trillion, while average daily value traded climbed to N38.74 billion, highlighting sustained liquidity and continued investor participation in the market.
David Adonri, Vice Chairman of Highcap Securities, said the sustained rally reflects improving investor confidence, strong liquidity and increased positioning in fundamentally sound stocks. ‘The market is responding positively to improving investor sentiment and increased participation from both institutional and retail investors. We are also seeing renewed confidence in the resilience of listed companies and expectations of stronger corporate performance, which continue to support bullish activity on the Exchange,’ he said.