Consumer Goods stocks on the Nigerian Exchange
Food, beverages, brewing and personal care — the staples portfolio of the NGX.
Top Gainers
Top Losers
All Consumer Goods stocks on the NGX
| Ticker | Price | Change | Volume | Market Cap |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| BUAFOODS BUA Foods Plc |
₦798.00 | +0.00% | 79,071 | ₦14.36T |
| NESTLE Nestlé Nigeria Plc |
₦3,395.00 | +0.00% | 1,390,275 | ₦2.69T |
| INTBREW International Breweries Plc |
₦14.00 | +0.72% | 18,451,358 | ₦2.36T |
| NB Nigerian Breweries Plc |
₦71.00 | +0.00% | 21,770,502 | ₦2.20T |
| GUINNESS Guinness Nigeria Plc |
₦423.20 | +0.00% | 479,312 | ₦926.97B |
| DANGSUGAR Dangote Sugar Refinery Plc |
₦68.05 | -2.79% | 7,270,057 | ₦826.60B |
| UNILEVER Unilever Nigeria Plc |
₦94.00 | +0.00% | 772,246 | ₦540.03B |
| NASCON NASCON Allied Industries Plc |
₦152.00 | +0.00% | 7,413,170 | ₦410.77B |
| PZ PZ Cussons Nigeria Plc |
₦78.40 | +0.00% | 3,459,737 | ₦311.29B |
| HONYFLOUR Honeywell Flour Mills Plc |
₦21.50 | +0.00% | 2,725,865 | ₦170.50B |
| VITAFOAM Vitafoam Nigeria Plc |
₦118.00 | +0.00% | 3,016,989 | ₦147.60B |
| CADBURY Cadbury Nigeria Plc |
₦64.60 | +2.54% | 1,340,247 | ₦147.31B |
| CHAMPION Champion Breweries Plc |
₦16.00 | +0.00% | 1,156,374 | ₦143.17B |
| NNFM Northern Nigeria Flour Mills Plc |
₦79.40 | +0.00% | 194,182 | ₦14.15B |
| MCNICHOLS McNichols Consolidated Plc |
₦8.08 | +8.89% | 12,337,536 | ₦9.02B |
| GOLDBREW Golden Guinea Breweries Plc |
₦7.10 | +0.00% | — | ₦7.28B |
| UNIONDICON Union Dicon Salt Plc |
₦14.40 | -2.70% | 1,365,966 | ₦3.94B |
| ENAMELWA Enamelware Nigeria Plc |
₦37.00 | +0.00% | 5,163 | ₦2.81B |
| MULTITREX Multi-Trex Integrated Foods Plc |
₦0.36 | +0.00% | — | ₦2.24B |
| DUNLOP Dunlop Nigeria Plc |
₦0.20 | +0.00% | — | ₦954.5M |
About Consumer Goods on the NGX
Consumer Goods is where Nigerians actually spend their money — Nestle, Cadbury, BUA Foods, Dangote Sugar, Honeywell, Flour Mills, NASCON, Unilever, PZ Cussons, and brewers Nigerian Breweries, Guinness Nigeria and International Breweries.
The sector spent 2024 and 2025 absorbing one of the harshest macro environments in a decade: a 70% naira devaluation, double-digit inflation and the removal of fuel subsidies all squeezed margins and pushed several names to record FX losses. As the naira stabilises and pricing actions stick, the sector is showing the first signs of margin recovery. The brewers and personal-care names are the most FX-exposed (imported inputs, royalty payments); millers and sugar refiners are partially hedged via local sourcing. Consumer Goods rewards investors who can stomach earnings volatility for top-line growth and brand moats.