Namibia's GDP growth moderated to 1.9% in Q3 2025, headline inflation eased to 2.9%, and the trade deficit narrowed sharply. Old Mutual Namibia Growth led the local market with 41.9% over one year.

Big picture. January 2026 marked a stabilisation phase for Namibia's economy. External buffers held, the Namibian dollar appreciated to multi-year highs, and trade deficits narrowed. Resilient credit conditions offset a moderation in growth from 2024 peaks.

Why it matters

  • Multi-year inflation low. Headline inflation at 2.9% — the lowest since February 2021.
  • Currency strength returned. The Namibian dollar averaged N$16.41/USD over the first 20 days of January, then strengthened further to N$15.88 by 12 February.
  • Trade deficit narrowed sharply. Down to N$393m in December 2025 from N$4.4bn in November, on a 22.9% import contraction and 7.5% export growth.

Macro indicators at a glance

  • GDP Q3 2025: 1.9% year-on-year — the 18th consecutive quarterly expansion. Full-year 2025 estimate: 3.0% (down from 3.7% in 2024).
  • Headline inflation: 2.9% in January 2026, down from 3.2% in December 2025. Driven by Hotels, Cafes & Restaurants (3.6% vs 8.2% a year earlier), Food (1.9% vs 5.3%), and Education (2.4% vs 4.7%).
  • Core inflation: 3.2%, down slightly month-on-month.
  • Cumulative 2025 trade: N$125.7bn exports vs N$150.7bn imports. Annual deficit improved to N$25.0bn (from N$41.7bn in 2024).
  • Top trading partners: South Africa accounts for 25.5% of exports and 38.3% of imports. Top exports — non-monetary gold (18.0%), precious stones (17.5%), uranium (16.8%). Top imports — petroleum oils (13.7%), commercial vehicles (7.2%).
  • International reserves: N$51.6bn — 3.3 months of import cover, sufficient to sustain the currency peg.
  • Private credit: PSCE +4.43% year-on-year (N$5.2bn). Business credit drove growth at +6.8% YoY; household credit growth more subdued at 2.74%.
  • Fuel prices fell. Petrol cut by N$1.00/litre, both diesel grades by N$0.50/litre, effective 4 February. Walvis Bay pumps now: petrol N$19.58, diesel 50ppm N$19.63, diesel 10ppm N$19.73. Dealer margin +14c to N$2.36.

Policy and pipeline

  • Free tertiary education started. Subsidies cover tuition and registration for first-time undergraduate and TVET students. Postgraduate studies excluded. NSFAF loans up to N$17,000 for accommodation, transport, and meals. Income threshold for non-tuition support tightened from N$500,000 to N$100,000.
  • Green hydrogen got funded. AfDB approved a US$10m loan to Hyphen Energy for the Lüderitz project on 22 January.

Fund performance highlights

  • Best 1-year return: Old Mutual Namibia Growth, 41.9% (vs 39.6% benchmark).
  • Best 5-year return: Old Mutual Namibia Growth, 17.4% annualised.
  • Top conservative pick: Allan Gray Namibia Stable A — 11.9% annualised over 5 years vs a 6.1% benchmark.
  • Underperforming benchmark: STANLIB Namibia Managed A — 4.2pp behind on 5-year (10.0% vs 14.2% benchmark).

Investment performance vs benchmark

Latest fund fact sheets, 31 January 2026.

FundAUM1Y1Y BM3Y p.a.3Y BM5Y p.a.5Y BM
Money Market
STANLIB Money Market AN$1.43bn7.2%7.5%7.9%8.0%6.6%6.7%
STANLIB CashPlus RN$1.65bn6.4%7.5%7.6%8.0%6.4%6.7%
FNB Namibia Money Market AN$2.72bn7.3%6.3%7.8%7.0%6.5%6.0%
Conservative
STANLIB Income AN$1.46bn8.9%7.4%9.1%8.0%7.4%6.7%
Ashburton Namibia Income AN$1.18bn8.0%7.4%10.5%8.0%9.6%6.7%
NAM Coronation Balanced DefensiveN$0.24bn12.7%6.2%11.2%7.0%10.2%7.7%
Allan Gray Namibia Stable AN$0.55bn17.5%6.6%13.0%7.2%11.9%6.1%
Moderate
STANLIB Namibia Managed AN$0.22bn18.2%20.5%13.8%17.3%10.0%14.2%
Allan Gray Namibia Balanced BN$6.88bn25.7%18.8%16.2%13.3%14.9%12.1%
M&G Namibian Inflation Plus AN$2.50bn13.4%7.2%11.1%8.0%10.9%8.7%
NAM Coronation Balanced PlusN$1.67bn16.1%18.9%15.3%14.6%13.0%12.7%
Ninety One Namibia Managed RN$6.52bn20.3%20.0%13.5%14.1%12.0%12.5%
STANLIB Namibia Inflation Plus AN$0.81bn17.6%7.2%11.8%8.0%11.0%8.7%
Old Mutual Namibia ManagedN$1.09bn18.0%19.8%13.9%14.1%12.6%12.2%
Aggressive
Old Mutual Namibia GrowthN$0.88bn41.9%39.6%20.9%18.9%17.4%16.5%
Performing against benchmark (within 0.5pp or above)Underperforming (0.5-2.0pp below)Not performing (more than 2.0pp below)

The takeaway

January was a stabilisation month, not a breakout. With growth moderating but external buffers strong, the spread between aggressive winners and moderate laggards is widening. Speak to a Liberty advisor about which fund profile fits your goals.

Source: Janet Haufiku, Junior Data Analyst — High Economic Intelligence (HEI).

Download the full PDFSave the Ehoro Investment Performance Overview — January 2026 for offline reference.