Economy
Equity Traders Gain N286bn as Year-to-Date Return Hits 31.30%
By Dipo Olowookere
The Nigerian Exchange (NGX) Limited returned to winning ways on Wednesday after a brief detour to the bears to book profit.
At midweek, the local bourse rebounded by 0.48 per cent following renewed bargain-hunting in energy sector, which closed higher by 3.21 per cent at the close of transactions.
In addition, the insurance counter appreciated yesterday by 1.60 per cent, and the industrial goods space gained 0.81 per cent on the back of buying interest in Lafarge Africa, which attracted a new investor recently.
However, the consumer goods and the banking counters witnessed profit-taking during the session to leave their respective indices lower at 0.17 per cent and 0.07 per cent, respectively.
When the closing gong was struck by 2:30 pm on Wednesday, the All-Share Index (ASI) was down by 472.43 points to 98,174.99 points from 97,702.56 points and the market capitalisation depleted by N286 billion to N59.512 trillion from Tuesday’s N59.226 trillion.
Business Post reports that Customs Street finished with 42 price gainers and 21 price losers yesterday, implying a positive market breadth index and strong sentiment.
Golden Guinea Breweries appreciated by 9.83 per cent to N4.47, Thomas Wyatt improved by 9.83 per cent to N1.90, FTN Cocoa gained 9.50 per cent to sell for N1.96, Deap Capital grew by 9.43 per cent to N1.16, and NEM Insurance rose by 9.30 per cent to N9.40.
However, Sunu Assurances slumped by 9.85 per cent to N4.21, Learn Africa plunged by 9.85 per cent to N2.93, Haldane McCall tumbled by 9.15 per cent to N5.86, PZ Cussons crashed by 8.71 per cent to N22.00, and Sterling Holdings slipped by 7.16 per cent to N4.41.
Equity traders bought and sold 521.9 million stocks valued at N19.9 billion in 9,420 deals compared with the 1.2 billion stocks worth N27.4 billion traded in 9,403 deals a day earlier, indicating a jump in the number of deals by 0.18 per cent and a drop in the trading volume and value by 54.86 per cent and 27.37 per cent, respectively.
The most active equity at midweek was Tantalizers with a turnover of 88.3 million units sold for N108.3 million, Lafarge Africa transacted 57.2 million units valued at N4.2 billion, Access Holdings traded 41.0 million units worth N986.5 million, Cutix exchanged 37.1 million units valued at N85.4 million, and UBA traded 34.0 million units worth N1.1 billion.
Economy
Crude-For-Naira: Dangote Refinery Gets 395,000bpd Supply
By Adedapo Adesanya
About 395,000 barrels per day of crude oil were delivered to the Dangote Refinery in December under the crude-for-Naira deal with the federal government through the Nigerian National Petroleum Company (NNPC) Limited.
The volume of black gold supplied to the Lagos-based facility was 40 per cent higher than the 280,000 barrels per day delivered in November.
According to a report from Argus, the crude receipts at the 650,000 barrels per day capacity Dangote refinery rose to a new high in December.
It gathered the data from its tracking systems as well as from Kpler and Vortexa data.
The report said that this was the fourth consecutive month that crude deliveries were all Nigerian and did not include any US WTI.
Deliveries of WTI had been anticipated in December, but did not materialise.
The Dangote Group said it is aiming for 350,000 barrels per day throughput in a first phase of operations.
It had achieved this mark in June as receipts hit 350,000 barrels per day but fell back after that. Since March, when crude delivery began to increase, estimated receipts have averaged a little under 275,000 barrels per day.
Recall that Dangote Refinery had bought some foreign cargoes when NNPC could not adequately supply it with the needed resources.
In July, President Bola Tinubu directed the NNPC to commence sales of crude oil in Naira to local private refiners as part of efforts to boost domestic capacity and reduce foreign exchange pressure on the economy.
Last month’s receipts included cargoes of Nigerian grades Escravos, Bonny Light, CJ Blend, Qua Iboe, and Erha.
Bonny Light was the largest single grade at 140,000 barrels per day.
It was disclosed that three deliveries on very large crude carriers (VLCC) helped boost receipts in the review month.
Argus added that no cargoes of Forcados or Amenam were delivered to Dangote last month, having previously been regular grades at the refinery.
Dangote Group is also maintaining a very consistent slate in terms of gravity and especially sulphur content.
Argus assessed Dangote’s December slate at a weighted average gravity of 36.3°API and under 0.2 per cent sulphur content, compared with 36.4°API and under 0.2 per cent sulphur in November. In March-December, the slate averaged 36.3°API and again, under 0.2 per cent sulphur.
Economy
Seplat Targets Oil Production of 120,000bpd in Six Months
By Adedapo Adesanya
Seplat Energy plans to increase its crude oil production by 140 per cent from about 50,000 barrels a day to roughly 120,000 barrels per day over the next six months, a top executive management disclosed this in a series of interviews with the Financial Times.
Recall that the Nigerian Upstream Petroleum Regulatory Commission (NUPRC) in October 2024 approved Seplat’s acquisition of Mobil Producing Nigeria Unlimited (MPNU) from ExxonMobil as part of a series of approvals.
The completion of the $1.28 billion Seplat-ExxonMobil deal has created Nigeria’s leading independent energy company, with the enlarged company having equity in 11 blocks (onshore and shallow water Nigeria); 48 producing oil and gas fields; 5 gas processing facilities; and 3 export terminals.
The acquisition of the entire issued share capital of MPNU adds the following assets to the Seplat Group: 40 per cent operated interest in OML 67, 68, 70 and 104; 40 per cent operated interest in the Qua Iboe export terminal and the Yoho FSO; 51 per cent operated interest in the Bonny River Terminal (‘BRT’) NGL recovery plant; 9.6 per cent participating interest in the Aneman-Kpono field; and approximately 1,000 staff and 500 contractors will transition to the Seplat Group.
“The assets have had very minimal investments until now,” the oil major’s chief financial officer, Mrs Eleanor Adaralegbe, told the newspaper.
“We expect that once we come in there will be an opportunity to grow that much further,” she added.
The company also plans to revive hundreds of Nigerian oil wells laying fallow, which according to Seplat’s chief executive, Mr Roger Brown, will be done in a collaborative effort with the state-owned Nigerian National Petroleum Company (NNPC) Limited as legally mandated in the country’s oil and gas industry.
“We have no concerns working with NNPC . . . There’s been a massive change with President Tinubu, realising that production is a great way of getting dollars into the country and supporting the currency,” Mr Brown said.
This was backed up by Seplat’s chief operating officer, Mr Samson Ezugworie, who noted that some of the assets will require time and investment so they can begin to produce again after being left idle.
“We have over 600 wells drilled and barely 200 of them are producing. We have significant idle wells that need to be rejuvenated and brought back into production within a short period of time.”
Economy
Nigeria’s External Debt Servicing Costs Jump 38% in Nine Months
By Adedapo Adesanya
Nigeria’s external debt servicing costs surged by 38 per cent in the first nine months of 2024, according to the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN).
The surge translated to Nigeria’s apex bank spending a whopping $3.53 billion to service the country’s debts, indicating a $970 million jump compared to $2.56 billion during the same period in 2023.
This was contained in CBN’s International Payment Data published on its website.
The increase underscored the intensifying fiscal pressures facing Nigeria’s economy amid dwindling revenues, inflationary pressures, and currency depreciation.
A month-by-month analysis highlighted the scale of the challenge and showed that in January 2024, Nigeria spent $560.52 million on external debt servicing, marking a sharp increase from $112.35 million in January 2023.
February 2024 followed with $283.22 million, slightly below the $288.54 million recorded the previous year.
March 2024 showed a decline, with $276.17 million spent, compared to $400.47 million in March 2023, a 31 per cent drop.
In April 2024, debt servicing rose to $215.20 million, a 132 per cent increase, compared to $92.85 million in April 2023.
May 2024 saw the highest monthly expenditure of $854.37 million, a staggering 287 per cent jump from $221.05 million in May 2023.
By contrast, June 2024 recorded $50.82 million, slightly lower than the $54.36 million spent in June 2023.
The mid-year trend showed mixed movements as debt servicing fell to $542.50 million in July 2024, a 15 per cent decline from $641.69 million in July 2023.
August 2024 followed a similar trajectory, with $279.95 million spent compared to $309.96 million the previous year, a 10 per cent reduction.
However, September 2024 marked an increase, with $515.81 million spent, up 17 per cent from $439.06 million in September 2023.
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