Economy
Total Nigeria, 32 Others Lift Equities Market by 0.58%
By Dipo Olowookere
Gains recorded by 33 counters led by Total Nigeria Plc on Tuesday reversed the loss posted on Monday by the stock market.
The Nigerian Stock Exchange (NSE) had closed 0.32 percent lower yesterday, but buying interest by investors today lifted the market, closing 0.58 percent higher at the close of transactions.
A total of 204.85 points were gained on Tuesday by the All Share Index (ASI) to settle at 35,516.21 points, while the market capitalisation increased by N75 billion to finish at N12.966 trillion.
Business Post reports that the market breadth ended positive today with 33 price gainers and 16 price losers.
Total Nigeria, which topped the price risers’ chart today, increased by N9 to settle for the day at N190 per share.
It was followed by Flour Mills of Nigeria, which rose by N1.20k to end at N24.80k per share, and GTBank, which appreciated by N1 to settle at N39 per share.
PZ Cussons garnered 95 kobo to close at N14 per share, while Dangote Sugar added 50 kobo to its share value to close at N15.50k per share.
At the other side, it was a bad day for GlaxoSmithKline as its shares depreciated by N1 to close at N14 per share.
Forte Oil went down by 70 kobo to end at N22.30k per share, while Ecobank also shed 70 kobo to settle at N19.30k per share.
Nigerian Breweries lost 50 kobo today to finish at N100 per share, while Custodian Investment fell by 35 kobo to close at N5.10k per share.
At the close of transactions on Tuesday, the volume and value of shares traded by investors at the market increased by 89.97 percent and 172.34 percent respectively.
A total of 339.8 million equities worth N5.5 billion were exchanged today against the 178.8 million shares valued at N2 billion traded yesterday.
The shares of Consolidated Hallmark Insurance dominated these trades, accounting for 99.9 million units worth N31 million.
It was followed by Stanbic IBTC, which sold 73 million shares valued at N3.6 billion, while May & Baker exchanged 40.1 million equities for N91.9 million.
Transcorp sold 16.1 million shares worth N19.7 million, while United Bank for Africa (UBA) exchanged 13.8 million equities valued at N115 million.
Economy
Senate Moves to Abolish Informal Forex Markets in Nigeria
By Aduragbemi Omiyale
Efforts are being made by the Senate to abolish informal currency markets in the country by amending the Central Bank of Nigeria Act of 2007, meaning only the official market would be recognised by law to discourage round-tripping.
A bill to make this a reality has already passed the first reading at the Senate after the Chairman of the Senate Committee on Reparations and Repatriation, Mr Ned Nwoko, moved a Bill for an Act to Alter the Central Bank of Nigeria Act, 2007, No. 7, to Prohibit the Use of Foreign Currencies for Remuneration and for Other Related Matters.
The bill, when passed into law by the President, will also make it an offence to use any foreign currency for domestic transactions.
Mr Nwoko said the idea is to create demand for the local currency, the Naira, which is almost at its lowest ebb because of its depreciating value at the currency market.
The Nigerian economy is bleeding because many people do not have confidence in the country’s legal tender and is not being used as a store of value.
At the moment, Nigeria operates more than one foreign exchange (FX) market. The official market is the Nigerian Autonomous Foreign Exchange Market (NAFEM), but currencies are also traded in the black market and the peer-to-peer (P2P) segment via cryptocurrency and all have different exchange rates.
At the plenary on Tuesday, Mr Nwoko said his bill intends to eliminate discriminatory practices and strengthen confidence in the local currency.
When passed and signed into law, nobody living in Nigeria will be allowed to pay salaries of Nigerians or expatriates or transact any business in the country with the Dollar, Pound Sterling or Euro or any other foreign currency.
Also, the government will not be allowed to sell crude oil or other commodities or products in foreign currency but “exclusively in Naira.”
According to him, international buyers would be compelled “to purchase the [local] currency” to drive “its demand and value.”
The lawmaker emphasised that this will “position the Naira as the central currency for all financial operations, reinforcing its dominance in the economy.”
Economy
FrieslandCampina Lifts NASD OTC Bourse by 0.29%
By Adedapo Adesanya
The NASD Over-the-Counter (OTC) Securities Exchange recorded a 0.29 per cent appreciation on Tuesday, December 17 lifted by FrieslandCampina Wamco Nigeria Plc.
After closing in the past three sessions in the red territory, the share price of FrieslandCampina Wamco Nigeria Plc improved by N3.90 on Tuesday to settle at N44.00 per unit, in contrast to Monday’s closing price of N40.10 per unit.
As a result, the Unlisted Security Index (NSI) added 8.85 points to wrap the session at 3,023.80 points compared with 3,014.95 points recorded in the previous session.
In the same vein, the value of the trading went up yesterday by N3.03 billion to settle at N1.036 trillion compared with the N1.330 trillion it closed in the preceding session.
Business Post reports that during the trading session, three securities depreciated as Nipco Plc shrank by N14.70 to close at N132.30 per share versus the preceding closing rate of N147 per share.
Further, Geo-Fluids Plc weakened by 36 Kobo to finish the trading session at N3.55 per unit compared with Monday’s closing price of N3.91 per unit, and Afriland Properties Plc lost 21 Kobo to end the session at N15.99 per share, in contrast to the preceding day’s N16.20 per share.
On Tuesday, the volume of securities traded in the session went up by 496.4 per cent to 540,503 units from the 90,629 units recorded a day earlier, as the value of shares increased by 1,190.2 per cent to N29.4 million from the N2.3 million recorded on Monday, while the number of deals decreased by 16.7 per cent to 15 deals from the 18 deals recorded in the previous trading day.
When the market closed for the day, Geo-Fluids Plc was the most active stock by volume (year-to-date) with 1.7 billion units valued at N3.9 billion, trailed by Okitipupa Plc with 752.2 million units worth N7.8 billion, and Afriland Properties Plc with 297.3 million units sold for N5.3 million.
The most active stock by value (year-to-date) for the session remained Aradel Holdings Plc with 108.7 million units sold for N89.2 billion, followed by Okitipupa Plc with 752.2 million units worth N7.8 billion, and Afriland Properties Plc with 297.3 million units valued at N5.3 billion.
Economy
FG May Reconsider $1.3bn Sale of Shell Assets to Renaissance
By Adedapo Adesanya
The federal government may approve the $1.3 billion asset sale deal between Shell and Renaissance, which was rejected in the coming weeks.
The Africa Report reported that deal may get approval following the announcement of Shell’s $5 billion investment in the Bonga North project.
According to the publication, the final investment decision (FID) served as a pavement for the oil major to get approval for the sale of its onshore and shallow water assets to Renaissance.
In October, the chief executive of the Nigerian Upstream Petroleum Regulatory Commission (NUPRC), Mr Gbenga Komolafe, revealed that while the government had processed five divestment applications, only four were approved – leaving out Shell’s asset sale to Renaissance, a consortium made up of four indigenous companies including Aradel Holdings, ND Western, First Exploration and Production (E&P) and WalterSmith as well as the international energy group, Petrolin.
These assets, initially at $2.4 billion and now at $1.3 billion, include an estimated 6.73 billion barrels of crude oil and condensate, along with 56.27 trillion cubic feet of gas.
The FG rejected the transaction because the consortium did not have the financial, experiential, and technical capacities to take over the assets.
On Monday, Shell Nigeria Exploration and Production Company Limited (SNEPCo), a subsidiary of Shell Plc announced the FID on Bonga North, a deep-water project off the coast of Nigeria.
President Bola Tinubu welcomed the move, lauding it as a good investment into the nation’s oil and gas sector.
Bonga North will be a subsea tie-back to the Shell-operated Bonga Floating Production Storage and Offloading (FPSO) facility which Shell operates with a 55 per cent interest.
The Bonga North project will involve drilling, completing, and starting up 16 wells (eight production and eight water injection wells), modifications to the existing Bonga Main FPSO and the installation of new subsea hardware tied back to the FPSO.
Bonga North currently has an estimated recoverable resource volume of more than 300 million barrels of oil equivalent (boe) and will reach a peak production of 110,000 barrels of oil a day, with the first oil anticipated by the end of the decade.
Bonga North will help ensure Shell’s leading Integrated Gas and Upstream business continues to drive cash generation into the next decade.
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