Economy
LASACO Assurance Plans Share Reconstruction
By Modupe Gbadeyanka
The board of LASACO Assurance Plc has indicated its intention to carry out a share reconstruction exercise, Business Post has gathered.
However, to make this happen, the company wants the approval of its highest decision-making organ, the shareholders.
A notice from LASACO Assurance said it would want the shareholders to authorise this share reconstruction of its existing 7.334 million ordinary shares at the 39th Annual General Meeting (AGM) fixed for Thursday, September 12, 2019 at the City Hall in Lagos.
The board wants to restructure the shares to one new unit for every four previously held by its investors.
“This notice is hereby given that the 39th Annual General Meeting of LASACO Assurance Plc will be held at City Hall, Catholic Mission Street, Lagos Island, Lagos on Thursday, September 12, 2019 at 11am for the following purposes.
“To lay before the members, the reports of the directors, the audited financial statements for the year ended December 31, 2018 together with the reports of the audit committee and the independent auditors thereon. To declare a dividend, to elect directors.
“To authorise the directors to fix the remuneration of the external auditors; BDO Professional Services, who has been appointed as company’s external auditors in place of Doyin Owolabi & Co who retired as company’s auditors having served the statutory five years as stipulated by the National Insurance Commission (NAICOM) code.
“To elect members of the audit committee, to fix the directors fees.
“To reconstruct the existing shares of 7,334,344 ordinary shares [to] one new share for every four shares previously held.
“That the directors be authorised to appoint all necessary parties and to do all such acts and things to give effect to the share capital reconstruction exercise,” the notice said.
Business Post reports that companies use share reconstruction exercise to reduce the number of outstanding shares and then increase their share price proportionately without affecting the total book value of those shares.
Recall that in September 2018, the board of LASACO Assurance said it was planning to raise fresh capital with the creation of additional 40 billion shares.
In its financial statements for the year ended December 31, 2018, the insurer grew its profit before tax by 12 percent to N958.2 million from N854.3 million, while the profit after tax appreciated by 11 percent to N736.3 million from N661.9 million.
In the results released by the company, the gross premium written rose by 35 percent to N9 billion from N6.7 billion, while the net underwriting income jumped by 31 percent to N5.2 billion from N4 billion.
However, the investment income went down by 14 percent to N753.7 million from N874.7 million, while the other income dropped by 67 percent to N190.5 million from N576.4 million.
During the year under consideration, the net claims paid by LASACO Assurance reduced by 8 percent to N1.8 billion from N2 billion.
An analysis of the firm’s balance sheet showed that the total assets depleted by 8 percent to N17.1 billion, while the total liabilities reduced to N8.6 billion from N10.4 billion, with the shareholders’ funds increasing by 4 percent to N8.5 billion from N8.2 billion and the earnings per share (EPS) rising to 13 kobo to 12 kobo.
Economy
11 Plc, FrieslandCampina, CSCS Lift NASD Exchange by 1.38%
By Adedapo Adesanya
Three securities lifted the NASD Over-the-Counter (OTC) Securities Exchange by 1.38 per cent on Friday, July 3, with the NASD Security Index (NSI) up by 58.80 points to 4,307.26 points from 4,248.46 points, and the market capitalisation closing higher by N35.30 billion to N2.585 trillion from N2.549 trillion.
The price gainers were led by 11 Plc, which expanded by N20.05 to close at N220.55 per share compared with the previous day’s N200.50 per share, FrieslandCampina Wamco Nigeria Plc increased by N5.36 to N151.82 per unit from N146.46 per unit, and Central Securities Clearing System (CSCS) Plc appreciated by N3.52 to N90.74 per share from N87.22 per share.
Yesterday, the value of transactions surged by 1,431.2 per cent to N160.1 million from the preceding session’s N10.5 million, and the volume of trades rose by 303.7 per cent to 1.8 million units from 440,653 units, while the number of deals decreased by 34.4 per cent to 21 deals from 32 deals.
Great Nigeria Insurance (GNI) Plc was the most traded stock by value on a year-to-date basis, with 3.4 billion units sold for N8.4 billion, followed by Infrastructure Credit Guarantee (Infracredit) Plc with 2.3 billion units worth N6.5 billion, and CSCS Plc with 70.7 million units transacted for N4.9 billion.
GNI Plc was also the most traded stock by volume on a year-to-date basis, with 3.4 billion units valued at N8.4 billion, followed by Infracredit Plc with 2.3 billion units exchanged for N6.5 billion, and Resourcery Plc with 1.1 billion units traded for N415.7 million.
Economy
Nigerian Stocks Rebound by 2.19% to Halt Losing Streak
By Dipo Olowookere
The losing streak on the Nigerian Exchange (NGX) Limited was halted on Friday after the bourse closed higher by 2.19 per cent at the close of trading activities.
The gains reported by Nigerian stocks were buoyed by renewed bargain-hunting by investors, which resulted in all the key sectors of Customs Street ended in the green territory.
The banking space rose by 2.78 per cent, the insurance counter appreciated by 1.26 per cent, the energy segment expanded by 0.36 per cent, the consumer goods index chalked up 0.06 per cent, and the industrial goods sector grew by 0.05 per cent.
Consequently, the All-Share Index (ASI) went up by 4,918.37 points to 229,240.34 points from 224,321.97 points, and the market capitalisation increased by N3.156 trillion to N147.103 trillion from N143.947 trillion.
Investor sentiment was bullish after 34 stocks ended on the price gainers’ chart and 18 stocks finished on the losers’ log, representing a positive market breadth index.
The quintet of The Initiates, Universal Insurance, DAAR Communications, Omatek, and Airtel Africa surged by 10.00 per cent to sell for N25.85, 88 Kobo, N1.65, N1.76, and N5,274.00, respectively.
On the flip side, International Energy Insurance lost 9.96 per cent to trade at N4.70, Meyer shed 9.95 per cent to close at N18.55, Veritas Kapital dropped 5.07 per cent to finish at N1.31, Fidelity Bank slipped by 2.17 per cent to N18.00, and Jaiz Bank crashed by 1.84 per cent to N28.12.
During the session, a total of 414.7 million equities worth N25.1 billion exchanged hands in 47,106 deals compared with the 855.4 million equities valued at N28.4 billion transacted in the preceding day in 51,609 deals, implying a contraction in the trading volume, value, and number of deals by 51.52 per cent, 11.62 per cent, and 8.73 per cent, respectively.
Economy
Naira Trades Flat at Official Market as CBN Makes Minimal FX Intervention
By Adedapo Adesanya
The Naira closed flat against the United States Dollar at N1,370.19/$1 in the Nigerian Autonomous Foreign Exchange Market (NAFEX) on Friday, July 3.
However, it appreciated against the Pound Sterling in the same market segment by N2.29 to settle at N1,829.88/£1 compared with the previous day’s N1,832.17/£1, and marginally depreciated against the Euro by 4 Kobo to close at N1,568.32/€1 versus Thursday’s closing price of N1,568.28/€1.
At the parallel market, the Naira also traded flat against the US Dollar at N1,390/$1, and at the GTBank forex desk, it also maintained stability at N1,832/$1.
Market conditions improved shortly after the following minimal intervention by the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) through modest Dollar sales, which boosted liquidity and supported stronger trading activity.
Easing pressure came after half-year profit-taking tapered down, while continued stronger policy signals from the central bank add to near-term support.
Deals executed at the official market on Friday came in at $70.430 million across 82 interbank deals, from $85.517 million the previous day.
Meanwhile, the cryptocurrency market continued its recovery after June non-farm payrolls printed at 57,000, less than half the 113,000 consensus, sending the implied probability of a September Federal Reserve rate hike from 64 per cent to 54 per cent and dragging AI stocks sharply lower.
Weak labour data reduces inflationary pressure and, by extension, the Federal Reserve’s justification for holding rates elevated. That transmission mechanism is direct: lower rate-hike odds compress the opportunity cost of holding non-yielding assets like crypto.
Bitcoin regained the $62,000 mark after it rose by 1.3 per cent to $62,475.29.
Cardano (ADA) gained 6.6 per cent to trade at $0.1759, Ripple (XRP) appreciated by 3.5 per cent to $1.14, Ethereum (ETH) expanded by 2.4 per cent to $1,756.82, Dogecoin (DOGE) improved by 2.1 per cent to $0.0768, Solana (SOL) chalked up 1.8 per cent to $82.65, TRON (TRX) increased by 1.5 per cent to $0.3235, and Binance Coin (BNB) soared by 1.4 per cent to $569.12, while the US Dollar Tether (USDT) and the US Dollar Coin (USDC) traded flat at $1.00 apiece.
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