Naira Watch: Exchange Rates Shifted slightly β€” Wednesday 22 April 2026

Naira Watch β€” Wednesday 22 April 2026 | Did Rates Shift Today?
⚑ WATCH
πŸ‡³πŸ‡¬ CBN ~₦1,356–₦1,362 Β· Parallel ₦1,415–₦1,425 Β· Wed 22 Apr 2026 πŸ•Š Trump extends Iran ceasefire β€” but Iran refuses to return to talks Β· Naira softens ₦12–₦18 from Friday peak β›½ Oil Brent ~$99.81 Β· WTI ~$90.86 Β· Whipsawing on extension news Β· War not over yet Parallel gap widens to ₦60–₦70 above official Β· Use Bank IMTO not BDC πŸ‡³πŸ‡¬ CBN ~₦1,356–₦1,362 Β· Parallel ₦1,415–₦1,425 Β· Wed 22 Apr 2026
⚑ NAIRA WATCH Rates shifted moderately today. Naira has softened ₦12–₦18 from last Friday’s ₦1,343 peak β€” but a full collapse was avoided. Trump extended the ceasefire. Iran walked from talks. Oil is whipsawing near $100. Here is exactly what moved and why.
⚑ Naira Watch πŸ“Š Rate Check Wednesday, 22 April 2026 Β· Updated 15:00 WAT

Did Rates Shift Today? β€”
Wednesday 22 April 2026

Today’s Rate Verdict β€” Wednesday 22 April ⚠ Shifted Modestly
CBN Official (USD)
~₦1,358
β–² +₦14 from Fri ₦1,343
Parallel (USD)
₦1,415–₦1,425
β–² Gap widened to ~₦65
Brent Crude
~$99.81
⇄ Whipsawing Β· Extension
Ceasefire Status
Extended
Iran not at table

Yes β€” rates shifted, but not dramatically. The naira has moved from last Friday’s exceptional ₦1,343.74 CBN peak to approximately ₦1,356–₦1,362 across Tuesday and Wednesday’s sessions β€” a weakening of roughly ₦12–₦18. That is a controlled retreat, not a collapse, and the current rate still represents one of the best CBN official levels of Q2 2026.

The driver is entirely geopolitical. Tuesday saw oil spike nearly 3% to Brent $98.48 when it became clear that Vance’s Islamabad trip was on hold β€” Iran had not responded to US negotiating positions. Markets priced in a higher probability of ceasefire expiry without a deal, and the naira followed the risk-off mood. Then on Tuesday evening Trump announced a ceasefire extension β€” but with a sting: Iran simultaneously announced through Pakistan that they would not attend talks “under these circumstances.” Oil whipsawed. Brent settled Wednesday around $99.81, WTI around $90.86 β€” positive territory but hardly a peace-deal crash.

For the naira, the net picture is: ceasefire extended (removes worst-case outcome), Iran not negotiating (removes best-case outcome), oil stuck near $100 (removes the fuel-price-cut catalyst), and the CBN rate settling into a new, slightly softer band of ₦1,355–₦1,365 that is likely to hold until a definitive diplomatic development emerges.

CurrencyCBN Official Est.Parallel (BDC)vs Fri 17 Apr
$
USD
US Dollar
~₦1,356–₦1,362₦1,415–₦1,425β–² +₦12–₦18 softer
Β£
GBP
British Pound
~₦1,825–₦1,832₦1,870–₦1,900β€” Broadly flat
€
EUR
Euro
~₦1,587–₦1,595₦1,600–₦1,640β€” Broadly flat
C$
CAD
Canadian Dollar
~₦990₦1,007–₦1,022β€” Stable
CBN estimate based on NgnRates.com trajectory (₦1,356.19 on Tue Apr 21; ₦1,349.67 Mon Apr 20). Parallel from NgnRates.com BDC aggregator. Verify official rate at cbn.gov.ng.
πŸ•Š Why the Naira Moved β€” Iran Situation Update
Ceasefire Extended
Trump extended the ceasefire citing a “seriously fractured” political situation within Tehran. Worst-case immediate escalation avoided. But no full deal.
Iran Walks from Talks
Iran told US via Pakistan that attending negotiations is “a waste of time” while the blockade and TOUSKA seizure remain. FM Araghchi called blockade “an act of war.”
Trump’s Position
Told CNBC: “I expect to secure a great deal.” Also: “I think we’re going to end up bombing.” Dismissed oil at $90 as “peanuts” β€” expected it to be at $200.
Naira Impact
Extension = relief, no collapse. Iran refusal = no peace rally. Net result: naira softens ₦12–₦18 from last Friday’s peak, settling into ₦1,355–₦1,365 holding range.
CF Extended Iran Refuses Talks Brent ~$99.81 TOUSKA Still Seized No Collapse
β›½ Oil Whipsaw β€” How Prices Moved This Week Brent Β· Key Sessions
Fri 17 Apr (Hormuz open)
$88
β–Ό -11% Β· Best session
Tue 21 Apr (Vance trip held)
$98.48
β–² +3% Β· Doubt spike
Wed 22 Apr (CF extended)
~$99.81
⇄ Whipsawing
Oil is stuck in the $90–$100 range β€” the ceasefire extension removes the catastrophic upside risk ($120+), but the lack of a real deal removes the peace-dividend downside ($75–$80). For Nigeria, Brent near $100 means the Dangote gantry price cut remains on hold β€” the ₦1,050–₦1,100 target requires sustained oil below $95.
πŸ“Š Bottom Line β€” Wednesday 22 April
Rates shifted modestly but not alarmingly. The naira is approximately ₦12–₦18 softer than last Friday’s ₦1,343 peak, settling near ₦1,356–₦1,362 on the CBN official window. The parallel market has widened back toward ₦1,415–₦1,425 β€” a ₦65 premium over official, reflecting Iran-uncertainty risk pricing. Oil is whipsawing near $100 on the ceasefire extension without a deal.

The naira is not in crisis β€” it is in a holding pattern. The structural support from CBN EFEMS, the 27.5% MPR, and strong diaspora remittance flows remains intact. The next decisive move depends on whether Iran returns to talks and whether a permanent agreement emerges in the coming days. For diaspora senders and importers: ₦1,356–₦1,362 official is still an excellent rate historically. Use Bank IMTO or regulated fintech β€” avoid BDC operators while the ₦65 risk premium is priced in.

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