Economy
Osita Izunaso Chairs Senate Committee on Capital Market
By Aduragbemi Omiyale
The lawmaker representing Imo West Senatorial District in the National Assembly, Mr Osita Izunaso, has been appointed as the Chairman of the Senate Committee on Capital Market.
The was named as the head of the team by the Senate President, Mr Godswill Akpabio, on Tuesday along with other members of the upper chamber of the parliament.
Mr Izunaso, who was among the candidates earlier vying for Mr Akpabio’s position at the 10th Senate, is not a rookie in the leadership of a senate committee.
He was formerly the Chairman of the Senate Committee on Gas and Housing. He is a journalist turned lawyer and an expert in financial matters.
Also, the Senate President appointed his predecessor, Mr Ahmad Lawan, as the Chairman Senate Committee on Defence, while the former Speaker of the House of Representatives, Mr Aminu Tambuwal, was chosen to lead the Senate Committee on Housing and Urban Development.
Below is the full list;
- Senate Committee on Air Force, Akwashiki Godiya
- Senate Committee on Anti-Corruption and Financial Crimes, Udende Emmanuel
- Senate Committee on Aviation, Buhari Abdulfatai
- Senate Committee on Capital Market, Osita Izunaso
- Senate Committee on Establishment and Public Services, Cyril Fasuyi
- Senate Committee on Ecology and Climate Change, Seriake Dickson
- Senate Committee on Housing and Urban Developmentt, Aminu Tambuwal
- Senate Committee on Interior, Adams Oshiomhole
- Senate Committee on Downstream Petroleum, Jide Ipisagba
- Senate Committee on Defence, Ahmed Lawan
- Senate Committee on Public Accounts, Wadada Ahmed
- Senate Committee on Special Duties, Kaka Shehu Lawan
- Senate Committee on Sustainable Development Goals, Idiat Adebule
- Senate Committee on Works, Patrick Ndubueze
- Senate Committee on Appropriation, Solomon Adeola
- Committee on FERMA, Usaini Babangida
- Senate Committee on Finance, Sani Musa
- Senate Committee on Banking Insurance and Other Financial Institution, Abiru Adetokunbo
- Senate Committee on Army, Abdulaziz Yar’adua
- Senate Committee on Customs Excise and Tariff, Isa Jibrin
- Senate Committee on Cooperation and Integration NEPAD, Yau Sahabi
- Senate Committee on Culture and Tourism, Elisha Abbo
- Senate Committee on Diaspora and NGO, Victor Umeh
- Senate Committee on Drugs and Narcotics, Dankwambo Ibrahim
- Senate Committee on Education Basic and Secondary, Adamu Usman
- Senate Committee on Employment and Productivity, Diket Plang
- Senate Committee on Environment, Akintunde Yunus
- Senate Committee on Ethics Public Petitions, Imasuen Neda
- Senate Committee on FCT, Ibrahim Folarin
- Senate Committee on Federal Character and Governmental Affairs, Allwell Iheanacho
- Senate Committee on Foreign Affairs, Sani Bello
- Senate Committee on Gas, Jarigbe Jarigbe
- Senate Committee on Health, Banigo Ipalibo
- Senate Committee on Upstream Petroleum, Etang Williams
- Senate Committee on Water Resources, Abubakar Yari
- Senate Committee on Trade and Investment, Sadik Umar
- Senate Committee on Solid Minerals, Osita Ngu
- Senate Committee on Tertiary Education and TETFUND, Dandutse Muntari
- Senate Committee on States and Local Government Affairs, Ifeanyi Ubah
- Senate Committee on Oil and Gas Host Communities, Benson Agadaga
- Senate Committee on Power, Abaribe Eyinnaya
- Senate Committee on Police Affairs, Abdulhamid Madori
- Senate Committee on Local and Foreign Debts, Aliyu Wammako
- Senate Committee on ICT Cyber Crimes, Afolabi Salisu
- Senate Committee on INEC, Ali Sharafadeen
- Senate Committee on Industries, Fadahunsi Anthony
- Senate Committee on Land Transport, Adamu Aliero
- Senate Committee on Local Content, Sadiku Ohere
- Senate Committee on National Identity and Population Commission, Abdul Ningi
- Senate Committee on National Planning and Economic Affairs, Yahaya Abdul
- Senate Committee on National Security and Intelligence, Umar Shehu
- Senate Committee on Navy, Gbenga Daniel
- Senate Committee on Niger Delta, Bari Mpigi
- Senate Committee on Public Procurement, Monday Ogberu
- Senate Committee on Rules and Business, Titus Zam
- Senate Committee on Information and National Orientation, Eze Emeka
- Senate Committee on Judiciary Human Rights and Legal Matters, Mohammed Tahir Monguno
- Senate Committee on Youth and Sports, Adaramodu Adeyemi
- Committee on Senate Services, Sunday Karimi
- Senate Committee on Women Affairs, Ireti Kingibe
- Senate Committee on Science and Technology, Aminu Iya Abbas
- Senate Committee on Social Welfare and Poverty Alleviation, David Jimkuta
- Senate Committee on Inter-Parliamentary Affairs, Goje Danjuma
- Senate Committee on Privatisation, Uzor Kalu
- Senate Committee on Primary Health Care Development and Disease Control, Ibrahim Lamido
- Senate Committee on Media and Public Affairs, Adaramodu Adeyemi
- Senate Committee on Legislative Compliance, Musa Madoki
- Senate Committee on Agricultural Production Services and Rural Development, Mustafa Saliu
- Senate Committee on Communication, Aliyu Bilbis
- Senate Committee on Marine Transport, Wasiu Eshinlokun
- Senate Committee on NDDC, Asuquo Ekpenyong
- Senate Committee on Agricultural Colleges and Institutions, Adeniyi Adegbonmire
- Senate Committee on NASENI, Onyewuchi Ezenwa
- Senate Committee on Constitution Amendment, Jibrin Barau
Economy
LCCI Raises Eyebrow Over N15.52trn Debt Servicing Plan in 2026 Budget
By Adedapo Adesanya
The Lagos Chamber of Commerce and Industry (LCCI) has noted that the N15.52 trillion allocation to debt servicing in the 2026 budget remains a significant fiscal burden.
LCCI Director-General, Mrs Chinyere Almona, said this on Tuesday in Lagos via a statement in reaction to the nation’s 2026 budget of N58.18 trillion, hinging the success of the 2026 budget on execution discipline, capital efficiency, and sustained support for productive sectors.
She noted that the budget was a timely shift from macroeconomic stabilisation to growth acceleration, reflecting growing confidence in the economy.
She lauded its emphasis on production-oriented spending, with capital expenditure of N26.08 trillion, representing 45 per cent of total outlays, and significantly outweighing non-debt recurrent expenditure of N15.25 trillion.
According to Mrs Almona, this composition supports infrastructure development, industrial expansion, and productivity growth.
However, she explained that the N15.52 trillion allocation to debt servicing underscored the need for stricter borrowing discipline, enhanced revenue efficiency, and expanded public-private partnerships to safeguard investments that promote growth.
She added that a further review of the 2026 budget revealed relatively optimistic macroeconomic assumptions that may pose fiscal risks.
“The oil price benchmark of $64.85 per barrel, although lower than the $75.00 benchmark in the 2025 budget, appears optimistic when compared with the 2025 average price of about $69.60 per barrel and current prices around $60 per barrel.
“This raises downside risks to oil revenue, especially since 35.6 per cent of the total projected revenue is expected to come from oil receipts.
“Similarly, the oil production benchmark of 1.84 million barrels per day is significantly higher than the current level of approximately 1.49 million barrels per day.
“Achieving this may be challenging without substantial improvements in security, infrastructure integrity, and sector investment,” she said.
Mrs Almona said the exchange rate assumption of N1,512 to the Dollar, compared with N1,500 in the 2025 budget and about N1,446 per Dollar at the end of November, suggests expectations of a mild depreciation.
She said while this may support Naira-denominated revenue, it also increases the cost of imports, debt servicing, and inflation management, with broader macroeconomic implications.
The LCCI DG added that the inflation projection of 16.5 per cent in 2026, up from 15.8 per cent in the 2025 budget and a current rate of about 14.45 per cent, appeared optimistic, particularly in a pre-election year.
She also expressed concern about Nigeria’s historically weak budget implementation capacity, likely to be further strained by the combined operation of multiple budget cycles within a single year.
Looking ahead, Mrs Almona identified agriculture and agro-processing, manufacturing, infrastructure, energy, and human capital development as key drivers of growth in 2026.
She said that unlocking these sectors would require decisive execution—scaling irrigation and agro-value chains, reducing power and logistics costs for manufacturers, and aligning education and skills development with private-sector needs.
The LCCI head stressed the need to resolve issues surrounding the Naira for crude, increase the supply of oil to local refineries to boost local refining capacity and conserve the substantial foreign exchange used for fuel imports.
“Overall, the 2026 Budget presents a credible opportunity for Nigeria to transition from recovery to expansion.
“Its success will depend less on the size of allocations and more on execution discipline, capital efficiency, and sustained support for productive sectors.
Economy
Customs Street Chalks up 0.12% on Santa Claus Rally
By Dipo Olowookere
The Nigerian Exchange (NGX) Limited witnessed Santa Claus rally on Wednesday after it closed higher by 0.12 per cent.
Strong demand for Nigerian stocks lifted the All-Share Index (ASI) by 185.70 points during the pre-Christmas trading session to 153,539.83 points from 153,354.13 points.
In the same vein, the market capitalisation expanded at midweek by N118 billion to N97.890 trillion from the preceding day’s N97.772 trillion.
Investor sentiment on Customs Street remained bullish after closing with 36 appreciating equities and 22 depreciating equities, indicating a positive market breadth index.
Guinness Nigeria chalked up 9.98 per cent to trade at N318.60, Austin Laz improved by 9.97 per cent to N3.20, International Breweries expanded by 9.85 per cent to N14.50, Transcorp Hotels rose by 9.83 per cent to N170.90, and Aluminium Extrusion grew by 9.73 per cent to N16.35.
On the flip side, Legend Internet lost 9.26 per cent to close at N4.90, AXA Mansard shrank by 7.14 per cent to N13.00, Jaiz Bank declined by 5.45 per cent to N4.51, MTN Nigeria weakened by 5.21 per cent to N504.00, and NEM Insurance crashed by 4.74 per cent to N24.10.
Yesterday, a total of 1.8 billion shares valued at N30.1 billion exchanged hands in 19,372 deals versus the 677.4 billion shares worth N20.8 billion traded in 27,589 deals in the previous session, implying a slump in the number of deals by 29.78 per cent, and a surge in the trading volume and value by 165.72 per cent and 44.71 per cent apiece.
Abbey Mortgage Bank was the most active equity for the day after it sold 1.1 billion units worth N7.1 billion, Sterling Holdings traded 127.1 million units valued at N895.9 million, Custodian Investment exchanged 115.0 million units for N4.5 billion, First Holdco transacted 40.9 million units valued at N2.2 billion, and Access Holdings traded 38.2 million units worth N783.3 million.
Economy
Yuletide: Rite Foods Reiterates Commitment to Quality, Innovation
By Adedapo Adesanya
Nigerian food and beverage company, Rite Foods Limited, has extended warm Yuletide greetings to Nigerians as families and communities worldwide come together to celebrate the Christmas season and usher in a new year filled with hope and renewed possibilities.
In a statement, Rite Foods encouraged consumers to savour these special occasions with its wide range of quality brands, including the 13 variants of Bigi Carbonated Soft Drinks, premium Bigi Table Water, Sosa Fruit Drink in its refreshing flavours, the Fearless Energy Drink, and its tasty sausage rolls — all produced in a world-class facility with modern technology and global best practices.
Speaking on the season, the Managing Director of Rite Foods Limited, Mr Seleem Adegunwa, said the company remains deeply committed to enriching the lives of consumers beyond refreshment. According to him, the Yuletide period underscores the values of generosity, unity, and gratitude, which resonate strongly with the company’s philosophy.
“Christmas is a season that reminds us of the importance of giving, togetherness, and gratitude. At Rite Foods, we are thankful for the continued trust of Nigerians in our brands. This season strengthens our resolve to consistently deliver quality products that bring joy to everyday moments while contributing positively to society,” Mr Adegunwa stated.
He noted that the company’s steady progress in brand acceptance, operational excellence, and responsible business practices reflects a culture of continuous improvement, innovation, and responsiveness to consumer needs. These efforts, he said, have further strengthened Rite Foods’ position as a proudly Nigerian brand with growing relevance and impact across the country.
Mr Adegunwa reaffirmed that Rite Foods will continue to invest in research and development, efficient production processes, and initiatives that support communities, while maintaining quality standards across its product portfolio.
“As the year comes to a close, Rite Foods Limited wishes Nigerians a joyful Christmas celebration and a prosperous New Year filled with peace, progress, and shared success.”
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