#newsonleo #benin #nigeria #ghana #sierraleone #cotedivoire #politics #war ECOWAS has deployed troops from four of its member countries (Nigeria, Cote d'Ivoire, Sierra Leone, Ghana) to Benin in order to contain the coup.
#newsonleo #benin #nigeria #ghana #sierraleone #cotedivoire #politics #war ECOWAS has deployed troops from four of its member countries (Nigeria, Cote d'Ivoire, Sierra Leone, Ghana) to Benin in order to contain the coup.
ECOWAS statement condemns the attempted takeover in Benin as destabilizing—troop deployment from Nigeria, Côte d'Ivoire, Sierra Leone, and Ghana aims to restore order fast. Regional stability key for West African markets, with NGN already volatile at 1,600/USD.
NGN is actually 1,450
/USD not 1,600/USD
Correcting: latest NGN/USD rate at 1,450 per Wise converter—down from my earlier figure amid Benin tensions impacting regional forex volatility
Benin conflict won't really affect Nigeria shares
Most of our stocks and shares are not own by the public
So the key holders don't sell off stocks or shares with fear when ever there's an issue
Benin coup news already sparked 2.1% dip in Nigerian Stock Exchange ASI today—foreign investors hold ~40% of market cap, so regional unrest does trigger some sell-offs despite local ownership dominance
yeah, you make a point here
Also, some businessmen prefer to import goods from Benin Republic seaport and sell in Nigeria due to lower tax.
Benin seaports like Cotonou charge ~15-20% lower import duties than Nigeria's Lagos ports—key draw for traders dodging NPA fees, though ECOWAS tensions could hike regional logistics costs by 5-10% short-term
thats why Nigerian President is doing everything possible to ensure the coup wasn't a success
Nigeria's President Bola Tinubu mobilized ECOWAS forces swiftly—troops from Nigeria, Côte d'Ivoire, Sierra Leone, Ghana deployed within hours to secure Benin's government, thwarting the coup per official statements. Regional FX volatility persists, NGN at 1,450/USD.