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Economy

CSCS, Two Others Lifts Unlisted Securities Trading Platform by 0.47%

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ISSA CSCS

By Adedapo Adesanya

The unlisted securities trading platform in Nigeria, the NASD Over-the-Counter (OTC) Securities Exchange, appreciated by 0.47 per cent on Monday, which was also the first trading session of April 2023.

The growth witnessed by the alternative bourse was triggered by the trio of Niger Delta Exploration and Production (NDEP) Plc, Central Securities Clearing System (CSCS) Plc, and FrieslandCampina Wamco Nigeria Plc.

NDEP Plc gained N10.00 during the session to trade at N215.00 per share versus last Friday’s N205.00 per share, CSCS Plc rose by 49 Kobo to N15.35 per unit from N14.86 per unit, while FrieslandCampina improved by 28 Kobo to N80.37 per share from N80.09 per share.

These stocks, in the absence of any price decliner, pushed the market capitalisation of the NASD exchange higher by N4.81 billion to N1.030 trillion from N1.025 billion, while the NASD Unlisted Securities Index (NSI) went up by 3.47 points to wrap the session at 744.51 points compared with 741.04 points in the previous session.

However, the activity level shrank yesterday as the volume of securities depleted by 99.9 per cent to 220,795 units from the 318.5 million units achieved a day earlier, while the value of shares traded at the session decreased by 98.6 per cent to N19.1 million from the N31.3 million posted last Friday, with the number of deals depreciating by 47.2 per cent to 19 deals from the 36 deals executed in the preceding trading session.

When the market finished for the day, Geo-Fluids Plc was the most traded stock by volume (year-to-date) with 801.1 million units worth N1.2 billion, UBN Property Plc followed with 365.8 units valued at N309.5 million, and Industrial and General Insurance (IGI) Plc was in third place with 91.2 million units worth N6.7 million.

The most traded stock by value (year-to-date) was still VFD Group Plc with 10.4 million units valued at N2.4 billion, Geo-Fluids Plc was second with 801.1 million units worth N1.2 billion, and UBN Property Plc was in third place with 365.8 million units valued at N309.5 million.

Adedapo Adesanya is a journalist, polymath, and connoisseur of everything art. When he is not writing, he has his nose buried in one of the many books or articles he has bookmarked or simply listening to good music with a bottle of beer or wine. He supports the greatest club in the world, Manchester United F.C.

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Economy

Market Participants Trade 3.821 billion Stocks Worth N154.393bn in One Week

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global stocks

By Dipo Olowookere

The activity level on the Nigerian Exchange (NGX) Limited improved last week after market participants traded 3.821 billion stocks worth N154.393 billion in 258,567 deals compared with the 2.324 billion stocks valued at N134.486 billion transacted in 249,328 deals in the preceding week.

Analysis showed that financial equities dominated with 2.330 billion units sold for N54.606 billion in 108,978 deals, accounting for 60.99 per cent and 35.37 per cent of the total trading volume and value, respectively.

Services stocks recorded a turnover of 509.473 million units worth N16.353 billion in 16,527 deals, and consumer goods shares recorded 216.344 million units valued at N8.057 billion in 25,963 deals.

Sterling Holdings, Access Holdings, and Ikeja Hotel were the busiest stocks, accounting for 1.405 billion units worth N28.370 billion in 12,898 deals, contributing 36.78 per cent and 18.37 per cent to the total trading volume and value, respectively.

The best-performing equity for the week was Airtel Africa, which gained 21.00 per cent to sell for N5,274.00. Regency Assurance grew by 20.25 per cent to 95 Kobo, UPDC expanded by 12.31 per cent to N3.65, DAAR Communications rose by 7.84 per cent to N1.65, and SUNU Assurances increased by 7.50 per cent to N3.87.

The worst-performing equity was International Energy Insurance, which fell by 18.83 per cent to N4.70, McNichols slumped by 18.60 per cent to N7.00, University Press crashed by 17.54 per cent to N4.70, RT Briscoe dipped by 13.98 per cent to N10.15, and UPDC REIT moderated by 13.00 per cent to N8.70.

Business Post reports that 22 shares appreciated during the week, the same as the previous week, and 57 equities depreciated, the same as a week earlier, while 67 stocks remained unchanged, the same as the preceding week.

The All-Share Index (ASI) and the market capitalisation closed lower by 1.21 per cent in the five-day trading week to 229,240.34 points and N147.103 trillion, respectively.

Similarly, all other indices finished lower apart from the main board, which chalked up 2.27 per cent.

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Economy

SEC Advances Fintech Innovation With Seven New ARIP Approvals

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SEC Nigeria

By Adedapo Adesanya

The Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) has cleared seven new fintech and digital asset firms for admission into its Accelerated Regulatory Incubation Programme (ARIP), granting them Approval-in-Principle (AIP) to operate within the programme’s regulatory sandbox as part of efforts to promote innovation while protecting investors.

The commission said the move reinforces its commitment to fostering responsible innovation that deepens Nigeria’s capital market without compromising market integrity.

The seven firms set for admission into the programme are Bitbarter Technologies Limited, Luno Fintech Nigeria Limited, GetEquity Limited, Koinkoin Global Network Limited, Wrapped CBDC Ltd, Trovotech Ltd and Blockvault Custodian Ltd.

According to the SEC, the Approval-in-Principle permits the firms to operate within the defined scope of the programme, subject to conditions stipulated by the Commission.

It clarified that the approval is not a final operating licence but confirms that each entity has satisfied the admission requirements for ARIP.

“An Approval-in-Principle confirms that an entity has satisfied the Commission’s admission requirements for the Programme. It is not a final licence and remains conditional on the entity’s continued compliance with all applicable regulatory, operational, and supervisory obligations,” the Commission stated.

The ARIP is a controlled regulatory environment established by the SEC to accelerate the onboarding of digital asset and other investment service providers, including Virtual Asset Service Providers (VASPs) and tokenised product platforms.

The programme enables the Commission to evaluate emerging business models and financial technologies under regulatory supervision before they are offered to the investing public.

According to the commission, the initiative is designed to ensure that adequate safeguards are in place to protect investors while preserving the integrity of Nigeria’s capital market.

The SEC reiterated its commitment to supporting innovation that enhances efficiency, transparency, financial inclusion and sustainable growth in the capital market through initiatives such as ARIP.

It also urged members of the public to verify the regulatory status of individuals or organisations promoting investment products or services through its official channels before committing funds.

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Economy

FG Denies IMF Allegation of 2% GDP Off-Budget Expenditure

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2026 budget tinubu

By Adedapo Adesanya

The Nigerian government has dismissed claims by the International Monetary Fund (IMF) that it spent about two per cent of Nigeria’s Gross Domestic Product (GDP) outside the approved budget.

The widely reported claim was made by the IMF’s Resident Representative in Nigeria, Mr Christian Ebeke, last week. He alleged that the country failed to record public spending equivalent to about two per cent of its GDP in recent official budgets, amounting to about N8 trillion.

But in a statement issued on Sunday, the Minister of Finance and Coordinating Minister of the Economy, Mr Taiwo Oyedele, said the federal government does not operate a “shadow budget” or spend public funds outside the constitutional and statutory framework governing public finance, and described the reports as a misrepresentation of Mr Ebeke’s comments.

He explained that sections 80–83 and 162 of the 1999 Constitution (as amended) provide that public funds can only be withdrawn and spent in accordance with the Constitution and laws enacted by the National Assembly.

According to him, all FG spending is backed by duly enacted Appropriation Acts, Supplementary Appropriation Acts or other statutory authorisations approved by the National Assembly.

Mr Oyedele added that multi-year capital projects, which span several budget cycles, are implemented in line with existing laws and approved capital rollover provisions where applicable.

“These are recognised features of public financial management and should not be misconstrued as expenditures outside the budget,” he said.

He described as inaccurate suggestions that trillions of naira were secretly spent without legislative approval, arguing that such allegations should identify the specific projects allegedly executed without appropriation or legal authority and provide credible evidence to support the claims.

“To be meaningful, assertions of this magnitude must be supported by verifiable facts rather than conjecture.

“For the purpose of public education, it is important to distinguish between appropriation, expenditure authorisation, financing and fiscal reporting,” he added.

Mr Oyedele said Nigeria’s public finance framework includes several statutory transfers, first-line charges and intervention mechanisms established by Acts of the National Assembly.

These, he said, include statutory allocations to development commissions and other agencies created by law, cost of collection and administration retained by designated revenue-collecting agencies, capital expenditure approved under separate budgets for some agencies and the Federal Capital Territory, special interventions for national priorities such as security, infrastructure and disaster response, as well as debt service obligations and other statutory transfers.

The minister maintained that the expenditures are neither secret nor illegal, stressing that they are established by law, disclosed in official fiscal reports and subject to oversight, audit and accountability mechanisms.

“Their treatment for reporting purposes may differ from their presentation in the annual Appropriation Act, particularly under international statistical and reporting standards adopted by the Federal Government. Such classification differences should not be misrepresented as evidence of unlawful expenditure,” he said.

Mr Oyedele also rejected claims that the reported amount represented an increase in Nigeria’s budget deficit.

“A fiscal deficit is determined by the relationship between total government revenues and total government expenditures. Whether a capital project is financed through annual appropriations, supplementary appropriations, statutory transfers, approved intervention mechanisms, or other lawful financing arrangements does not, by itself, increase the fiscal deficit,” he said.

He further explained that the IMF’s observation related primarily to the comprehensiveness, timing and presentation of Nigeria’s fiscal reporting rather than the legality of government expenditure.

According to him, Nigeria, like many other countries, is working to improve the alignment between its budget presentation and international fiscal reporting standards as part of ongoing public financial management reforms.

Mr Oyedele recalled that President Bola Tinubu had, during the presentation of the 2026 Appropriation Bill to a joint session of the National Assembly on December 19, 2025, urged lawmakers to end the practice of operating multiple and overlapping budgets and instead adopt a single, harmonised budget framework.

He said the federal government remains committed to prudent fiscal management, transparency and accountability, adding that recent reforms have strengthened budget credibility, revenue administration, treasury management and the digitalisation of government financial processes.

According to him, these reforms have been acknowledged by the IMF, other multilateral institutions, international credit rating agencies, investors and major global media organisations.

While describing public debate as essential in a democracy, Mr Oyedele urged commentators to base their arguments on facts and a proper understanding of Nigeria’s constitutional and fiscal framework.

“Mischaracterising technical observations as evidence of unlawful expenditure neither advances informed public discourse nor strengthens democratic accountability,” he said.

He added that the federal government would continue to uphold the rule of law, ensure transparency in the management of public resources and work with the National Assembly, oversight institutions, development partners and Nigerians to further strengthen fiscal governance in line with international best practices

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