Abstract:Bankers and other financial market participants in Nigeria have highlighted commodity ecosystem deployment as a mechanism for the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) to meet its objective to earn up to $200 billion yearly from non-oil exports over the next three to five years under its RT 200 FX policy.

Bankers and other financial market participants in Nigeria have highlighted commodity ecosystem deployment as a mechanism for the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) to meet its objective to earn up to $200 billion yearly from non-oil exports over the next three to five years under its RT 200 FX policy.
The stakeholders who assembled at a breakfast meeting organized by the Lagos Commodities and Futures Exchange (LCFE) over the weekend agreed that the proper use of Nigeria's commodities ecosystem provides the abundant potential for the apex bank to produce currency from non-oil exports.
Olugbenga Awe, Divisional Head, Agribusiness, Natural Resources, and Project Development at Heritage Bank, highlighted in his presentation that the Nigerian economy had been well-diversified, except for the sources of forex.
According to Awe, who spoke at the 'The Opportunities for Financial Institutions in the CBN RT 200 FX' event, a commodities exchange is a risk management tool.
According to him, the capacity to match global standards and demand is the most difficult hurdle facing Nigerian non-oil product exports. He noted that if Nigerian non-oil products satisfy global standards, they might improve foreign profits.
“This is where commodity exchanges come into play.” Any product with an electronic receipt that is exchanged on a commodities market must be of global quality.
“Banks are prepared to assist exporters if they satisfy specific requirements, such as a track record of success, export volume and frequency, payment methods, product sourcing strategy, risk mitigation, and seasonality, among others.”

Bode Abikoye, Managing Director of Agvest Nigeria, agreed, noting that commodity prices provide insulation from the consequences of inflation.
“Many experts advocate investing a portion of your portfolio in commodities as a diversifier asset class.”
Furthermore, some commodities, such as precious metals and energy items, tend to be ideal inflation hedges.
Investors divide commodities into two types: hard and soft. Metals such as gold, copper, and aluminum, as well as energy goods such as crude oil, natural gas, and unleaded gasoline, need mining or drilling.
“Soft commodities” are agricultural products such as maize, wheat, soybeans, and livestock. Commodities have a low to negative correlation with traditional asset classes such as equities and bonds.
“The major reason commodities prices fluctuate is due to supply-and-demand dynamics.” When a crop has a large harvest, its price normally falls, but drought circumstances might cause prices to climb due to worries that future supplies would be fewer than predicted, Abikoye explained.
Hajara Adeola, Chief Executive Officer of Lotus Capital, explained in her presentation on 'The Potentials of Non-Interest Financial Instruments to Finance Commodities Ecosystem' that non-interest financial instruments were based on managing businesses on moral principles, and that they offer many benefits to investors.
Akin Akeredolu-Ale, Managing Director of LCFE, explained in his welcome remarks that a commodities exchange would always come in by catalyzing an enabling environment, alignment of relevant stakeholders, a transparent trading platform, certification and standardization, data and price discovery, an enabling environment for price discovery, and a regulatory framework.


XTB, a veteran with over 15 years of experience in the competitive brokerage industry, has reportedly been facing severe user allegations concerning a tedious KYC verification process and blocked withdrawals despite numerous requests by traders globally. Traders worldwide, including those from the United States and the United Kingdom, have objected to the broker’s operational methodology in 2026. If you are one of them, this XTB review is worth reading! In this article, we have examined several user allegations to understand their concerns. Additionally, we have shared our analysis on the XTB regulation status. The holistic approach adopted by us will likely help you make an informed brokerage decision.

Globinok, a Comoros-based new-age trading enterprise, is receiving bad reviews from users across India, in particular. These users have accused the brokerage firm of failing to deliver on their trading promise. This included failing to ensure the AI-based trading experience promised by them. The sudden disappearance of the account manager has been another key complaint highlighted by users. In this Globinok review article, we have shared user reviews and a regulatory overview of the broker.

As AI coding tools spread, a thought is surfacing in more and more traders’ minds: since writing code is now this easy, can I build a few forex EAs myself and let the program trade and earn money automatically? The idea is not naive - automation is genuinely a real and valuable direction in trading. But before you invest your time, several key questions must be thought through first: what do those "profitable EAs" on the market actually rely on? What does a system that truly survives long-term look like? How much can AI help here, and how much can it not? (An EA, or Expert Advisor, is a program that can automatically execute a trading strategy.)

Did PocketOption block your trading account while it still had funds? Did the forex broker cancel the profits made on your investments? Have you witnessed trading losses due to trade manipulation? Did your deposit fail to show up on the PocketOption login? These are some reported user allegations against the brokerage entity. These allegations hint at a potential operational glitch at the broker’s end. To ensure an informed financial decision, we have conducted an extensive PocketOption review sharing user allegations and a regulatory oversight the broker is under.