Nigerians have accumulated an estimated $59 billion in cryptocurrency holdings, according to data released by Financial Derivatives Company (FDC) Limited during its July breakfast session.
The figure highlights the country’s emergence as one of Africa’s and the world’s major players in digital assets.
This is just as BTC declined 0.92 percent in 24 hours to $59,368.
The earlier disclosure reflects a profound shift in Nigeria’s financial landscape. In Africa’s largest economy, crypto has moved from a fringe activity to a mainstream tool amid persistent inflation and naira volatility.
Citizens and businesses are increasingly turning to dollar-pegged stablecoins and decentralised platforms, building a parallel financial system with significant economic influence.
Nigeria continues to rank among global leaders in adoption. According to Chainalysis’ 2024 Global Crypto Adoption Index, the country placed second worldwide for grassroots adoption, driven by widespread use in everyday transactions and cross-border commerce.
Despite these impressive statistics, a notable contradiction remains in public perception. While stocks, real estate, mutual funds, and foreign currency are openly discussed, many Nigerians still approach cryptocurrency with caution, often downplaying their involvement. Observers note that this hesitation stems more from perception than actual adoption levels.
Bitcoin (BTC), the leading cryptocurrency, traded at $59,368 after declining 0.92 percent in 24 hours, underperforming a softer broader market. The drop was driven by strong correlation to sell-offs in traditional tech stocks and persistent institutional outflows. U.S. spot Bitcoin ETFs recorded nearly $1.8 billion in net outflows last week, stripping away key support.
Analysts say Bitcoin is acting as a high-beta risk asset, mirroring rotations out of technology and semiconductor stocks rather than crypto-native catalysts.
Aggregate open interest rose 5.11 percent while BTC trades below its 7-day simple moving average of $60,430 with an RSI of 34, signalling oversold conditions. A reclaim of $60,430 or a break below the $58,035 swing low will be critical in the near term.
In a parallel development, Bitcoin experienced a sharp decline in millionaire addresses during the first half of 2026.
According to Finbold’s H1 2026 Cryptocurrency Market Report, addresses holding at least $1 million fell from 148,084 to 121,431 — a loss of 26,653 addresses or 18%. This came as BTC’s price dropped approximately 34.2% from $88,700 to $58,315. The largest decline was in the $1–10 million bracket.
Jordan Major, Chief Editor at Finbold, said: “The data shows how quickly Bitcoin’s on-chain wealth distribution can shift when prices fall. This does not necessarily point to widespread selling, but rather a price-driven reclassification of wallets.”
On the regulatory front, Nigeria’s Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) on July 2 approved seven additional digital asset and fintech companies for its regulatory sandbox under the Accelerated Regulatory Incubation Programme (ARIP).
The firms granted Approval-in-Principle are Bitbarter Technologies, Luno Fintech Nigeria, GetEquity, Koinkoin Global Network, Wrapped CBDC, Trovotech, and Blockvault Custodian.
These conditional approvals, which do not constitute full licences, signal a gradual formalisation of the sector as authorities balance innovation with oversight.
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