Nigeria's central bank governor Lamido Sanusi has been suspended by the president for "financial recklessness and misconduct".
Mr Sanusi caused shockwaves in Nigeria when he alleged that $20bn (£12bn) in oil revenue had gone missing.
Nigeria's state oil firm has denied failing to account for the money, saying the claim was "unsubstantiated".
Mr Sanusi is widely respected after undertaking reforms to the banking sector since his appointment in 2009.
He was named central bank governor of the year for 2010 by Banker magazine.
Foreign exchange, bond and money markets have stopped trading because of uncertainty caused by the move, Reuters news agency reports.
The BBC's Will Ross in Lagos says Mr Sanusi's allegations threaten to expose high-level fraud in Nigeria's notoriously opaque and corrupt oil sector. Nigeria is one of the world's biggest oil producers.
The controversy also comes ahead of next year's elections, with the governing party split over whether President Goodluck Jonathan should contest.
Anti-corruption credibility
Earlier this month, Mr Sanusi told a senate committee that out of $67bn of oil sold between January 2012 and July 2013, $20bn had not been accounted for.
The Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation said the allegations showed "little understanding of the technicalities of the oil industry".
Mr Sanusi is currently in Niger attending a meeting of top officials, which he has now left.
He is to be replaced by his deputy, Sarah Alade, who is travelling with him.
President Jonathan asked him to resign in December but Mr Sanusi refused, sources told the BBC Hausa service.
The president does not have the power to sack the central bank governor - only the National Assembly can do this.
But Mr Sanusi told CNBC Africa he wanted to ask the courts to rule on whether the president had the power to remove him, saying this jeopardised the independence of the central bank.
"You can suspend the central bank governor but you cannot suspend the truth," he said.
His term in office was due to end in June but correspondents say the decision to suspend him now is still highly significant.
The presidential statement announcing his suspension said he had been removed pending "investigations into breaches of enabling laws, due process and mandate" of the Central Bank of Nigeria.
It said his "tenure has been characterised by various acts of financial recklessness and misconduct... [and] far-reaching irregularities".
While Mr Sanusi's critics question whether he is using his job to harm President Jonathan's chances of re-election, many Nigerians will think the president has chosen to suspend the whistleblower rather than focus on stopping fraud, our correspondent says.
Latest Stories
-
Kusaas Diaspora Union launched to spearhead global unity, development
49 minutes -
Bright Simmons: Mahama’s reduction of ministries to 23 amid calls for efficiency, cost-cutting
52 minutes -
Maxwell Hanson seeks apology and compensation from Anim Addo over defamation claims
2 hours -
We listen, we don’t judge: What they don’t tell you about being an entrepreneur
2 hours -
Mahama orders Lands Commission to halt sale of State Lands
3 hours -
Chiesa on target as Liverpool ease past Accrington Stanley
3 hours -
Everton appoint Moyes as manager for second time
3 hours -
WACCE describes 2024 elections as one of the violent, deadliest in the 4th Republic
4 hours -
Volta Region movie industry stagnated, needs investors to push – stakeholders
4 hours -
Petition against Chief Justice reflects broader public concerns about Judiciary – Joyce Bawa
4 hours -
Northern Ghana won’t experience fuel shortage – NPA assures
4 hours -
Calm restored in Ejura after mob attack on Police Station
4 hours -
18-year-old herdsman remanded over murder of younger brother
4 hours -
GSTEP 2025 Challenge: Organisers seek to support gov’t efforts to tackle youth unemployment
6 hours -
Apaak assures of efforts to avert SHS food shortages as gov’t engages CHASS, ministry on Monday
6 hours