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Banking system liquidity holds above N8 trillion despite N2.4 trillion OMO mop-up
Nigeria’s banking system liquidity held above N8 trillion despite a N2.36 trillion Open Market Operations (OMO) mop-up by the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN), highlighting the persistence of excess funds in the financial system.
This is according to mid-week financial data from the apex bank following its OMO auction conducted on March 23, 2026.
The development underscores the scale of liquidity inflows and the limited immediate impact of the CBN’s aggressive intervention on overall market conditions.
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**What the data is saying **
The CBN’s N2.36 trillion OMO issuance was aimed at aggressively sterilising system liquidity, which opened the week at over N8.06 trillion. Opening balances on March 23 stood at N85.04 billion, reflecting an initial liquidity squeeze immediately after the mop-up.
However, despite the scale of the intervention, liquidity rebounded quickly, signalling strong underlying inflows into the system.
More insights
A key factor sustaining elevated liquidity levels is the heavy use of the Standing Deposit Facility (SDF), where banks park excess funds with the CBN.
Data shows that SDF balances settled at N8.17 trillion at the start of the week on March 23.
This pattern highlights that the CBN’s current liquidity management tools may require sustained application to achieve desired monetary outcomes.
**What you should know **
Nigeria’s banking system has recorded a sustained surge in excess liquidity in recent weeks, with balances at the CBN deposit window rising above N8 trillion.
This reflects a build-up of idle funds driven largely by inflows from maturing securities and limited absorption through OMO auctions.
The persistence of this liquidity glut suggests structural imbalances within the financial system and reinforces expectations that the CBN will continue to rely on aggressive OMO operations to stabilise market conditions in the near term.