The Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) has reported a decrease in Nigeria’s currency in circulation, which fell to N5 trillion in March 2025.
Currency in circulation (CIC) represents the total cash—coins and banknotes—issued by the CBN and actively used by the public and businesses outside the banking system.
According to the CBN’s latest report, CIC declined by 0.79% from N5.04 trillion in February 2025 and N5.24 trillion in January 2025.
This reflects a cumulative reduction of N240 billion, equivalent to a 4.58% decline in the first quarter of the year.
Meanwhile, banks’ reserves held with the CBN rose to N28.5 trillion in March 2025, up from N27.6 trillion in February and N27.43 trillion in January.
The surge in bank reserves could be attributed to higher deposit inflows, restricted liquidity, or a deliberate policy by the CBN to rein in inflationary pressures.
It may also reflect increased compliance by deposit money banks with the Cash Reserve Ratio (CRR) requirement of the apex bank.
The drop in CIC alongside rising bank reserves highlights the central bank’s ongoing efforts to control inflation, stabilise the naira, and encourage financial intermediation.
Additionally, with the CBN maintaining a hawkish stance on monetary policy and implementing various reforms to stabilise macroeconomic indicators, these movements in money supply aggregates could signal a recalibration of liquidity levels in the financial system.
In January 2025, the apex bank launched a new naira payment solution aimed at enhancing payment turnaround time for Ministries, Departments, and Agencies (MDAs) by 70%.
The CBN said the launch is an extension of its digital transformation project, “Digital First,” which was initiated by the CBN Governor, Olayemi Cardoso, in December 2023 as part of his commitment to modernising the Bank’s operations.