KEY POINTS
- Nigeria’s capital market shifts from T+2 to T+1 settlement on June 1.
- The move comes six months after the market left T+3.
- The US, Canada and India are already on T+1.
Nigeria’s capital market will switch to a T+1 settlement cycle from June 1, completing a fast pivot toward faster trade clearing and bringing the country in line with global peers. The Securities and Exchange Commission, the Central Securities Clearing System and the Nigerian Exchange Group will mark the move with a ceremony at NGX Group House in Lagos. Moreover, the change comes only six months after the market moved from T+3 to T+2.
What T+1 settlement means
In a T+1 settlement cycle, trades settle one business day after they execute, instead of the previous two. Specifically, that cuts the time between order and ownership transfer in half, which lowers counterparty risk and frees up capital faster. Therefore, investors and brokers can recycle cash and securities more quickly, which can lift overall market liquidity.
The shift also aligns Nigeria with how the world’s biggest markets now work. According to the regulators, the move reflects efforts to boost efficiency, cut settlement risk, deepen liquidity and match global best practice. The United States, Canada and India have already moved to T+1, and other markets are heading the same way. In some places, the eventual goal is same-day settlement, known as T+0.
Nigeria’s switch has been swift. Just six months ago, the market still cleared trades over three days. Now, it will settle them the next morning. Indeed, the speed of the change underscores how far the country’s market infrastructure has come, even as regulators acknowledge that traders, banks and custodians must update systems and workflows to keep up.
The June 1 ceremony will gather most of the country’s market establishment. Specifically, regulators, exchanges, market infrastructure firms, brokers, institutional investors, trade associations and listed companies will attend. Additionally, the event, titled “T+1 and Beyond: Advancing Market Efficiency and Global Competitiveness,” will end with a closing-gong ceremony to mark the transition to the new T+1 settlement regime.
What changes for investors
Everyday investors will feel a simple change, since money or shares from a trade arrive a day sooner. Meanwhile, brokers gain less time to fix errors and must finalize payments faster. However, the upside is real, since tighter cycles cut the chance that a counterparty fails before a trade settles, and they make the Nigerian market more attractive to foreign institutions used to faster systems.
Other emerging markets are watching closely, since faster settlement often draws bigger foreign trading volumes. Together, the upgrade signals a market modernizing in step with the world. Yet the test now lies in execution, since smooth daily settlement under T+1 will demand discipline from every part of the trading chain.


