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Equities Lose N220b on Monday After Friday’s N236b Gain

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Nigerian Stocks

By Dipo Olowookere

The Nigerian Stock Exchange (NSE) recorded a 1.71 percent loss on Monday after the market achieved an increase of 1.87 percent last Friday.

It was observed that the decline posted by the equities market yesterday was mainly influenced by continued selloffs by investors.

While the All Share Index (ASI) depreciated by 602.81 points to finish at 34,663.48 points, the market capitalisation decreased by N220.1 billion to settle at N12.654 trillion.

Business Post reports that the volume of shares transacted by investors on Monday decreased by 37.75 percent, while the value rose by 26.49 percent.

At the close of business, investors traded a total of 220.5 million shares worth N3.2 billion compared with the 354.2 million equities valued at N2.5 billion exchanged last Friday.

It was a busy day for the Financial Services sector as it led the activity chart with 201.6 million shares exchanged for N2.4 billion, while the Consumer Goods industry followed with 6.5 million shares sold for N443 million.

A further breakdown showed that United Bank for Africa (UBA) emerged the most traded equity on Monday with an exchange of 42.7 million shares worth N354.8 million.

It was trailed by Zenith Bank, which sold 36.7 million shares valued at N804.1 million, and Access Bank, which exchanged 32.7 million equities for N310.4 million.

Skye Bank exchanged 18.3 million shares valued at N9.157 million, while FBN Holdings traded 15.6 million shares worth N151.6 million.

A look at the price movement chart indicated that the losers’ log was led by Nigerian Breweries, which lost N3 to close at N100 per share.

It was followed by Unilever Nigeria, which went down by N2.50k to settle at N52.50 per share, and GTBank, which decreased by N1.05k to finish at N36.95k per share.

PZ Cussons fell by N1 to close at N13.05k per share, while Zenith Bank reduced by 70 kobo to finish at N21.85 per share.

At the other side, Dangote Cement topped the gainers’ chart yesterday after adding N9.50k to its share value to end at N229.50k per share.

Newrest ASL Nigeria rose by 40 kobo to finish at N4.85k per share, while Stanbic IBTC Bank increased by 25 kobo to settle at N50.30k per share.

First City Monument Bank gained 10 kobo to close at N1.80k per share, while Cadbury Nigeria also went up by 10 kobo to close settle at N10.10k per share.

Dipo Olowookere is a journalist based in Nigeria that has passion for reporting business news stories. At his leisure time, he watches football and supports 3SC of Ibadan. Mr Olowookere can be reached via [email protected]

Economy

Nigeria Renews Push for West African Single Currency as ECOWAS Hold Talks

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ECOWAS Single Currency

By Adedapo Adesanya

Nigeria is stepping up engagement toward the creation of a regional single currency, following fresh consultations among West African monetary authorities, following constant delay of achieving the goal.

In an update by the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) via its X handle, the Governor of the apex bank, Mr Yemi Cardoso, led the country’s delegation to the Committee of Governors meeting held in Monrovia, Liberia, where policymakers reviewed progress and renewed discussions on establishing the long-proposed single currency known as the Eco.

Last year, the West African bloc announced that the single regional currency would be launched by 2027 to foster greater economic integration among member states by facilitating trade through a unified payment system, enhancing price stability and reducing inflationary pressures.

In the latest development, the CBN statement noted that the Nigerian delegation also included Deputy Governor (Economic Policy), Mr Muhammad Sani Abdullahi.

“The meeting formed part of statutory engagements jointly organised by the Economic Community of West African States alongside the West African Monetary Agency, the West African Monetary Institute, and the West African Institute for Financial and Economic Management. The consultations brought together financial regulators and economic policymakers across the sub-region to assess convergence benchmarks required for launching the unified currency”, the apex bank said.

The Eco project is designed to deepen economic integration among ECOWAS member states by providing a common legal tender that would facilitate cross-border trade, enhance price transparency and reduce transaction costs tied to multiple currency exchanges. The initiative has been under discussion for over two decades but has experienced repeated postponements as member countries struggle to meet strict macroeconomic convergence criteria.

The apex bank noted that the meeting focused on evaluating member states’ performance against key economic indicators. These include inflation rate ceilings, fiscal deficit thresholds relative to gross domestic product, and foreign reserve adequacy, all considered critical safeguards for ensuring stability within a potential monetary union.

Despite many delays, ECOWAS latest move shows it may be aligning with Nigeria’s Minister of Foreign Affairs, Mr Yusuf Tuggar, saying last year that member states have started attaining benchmarks to see the goal actualised.

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Economy

NCS Denies Manipulating FX Rates in Import, Export Valuation

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customs exchange rate

By Adedapo Adesanya

The Nigeria Customs Service (NCS) has clarified how foreign exchange rates are applied in its import and export valuation, saying it neither determines nor alters rates used in cargo clearance.

The service, in a statement by its National Public Relations Officer, Mr Abdullahi Maiwada, explained that it relies solely on official figures transmitted by the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN).

Mr Maiwada stated that recent public commentary surrounding forex pricing, investor reactions, and customs valuation had prompted NCS to explain the operational framework guiding its digital clearance platform.

“It is worthy of note that the reported exchange rate of N1,451.63/US$ for February 6, 2026 did not originate from the B’Odogwu system.

“That figure was sourced from trade.gov.ng, a legacy public trade information portal that does not reflect live Customs processing data,” it stated.

According to him, all exchange rates used in trade processing are automatically integrated into its Unified Customs Management System, known as B’Odogwu, which it described as the sole official portal for declarations, clearance, and valuation.

“It is important to provide factual clarification on how exchange rates are received, processed, and applied within the NCS digital clearance system, B’Odogwu, a Unified Customs Management System which serves as the sole official platform for Customs declarations, clearance, and valuation,” the statement reads.

The NCS spokesman said the Service receives rates electronically from the apex bank and applies them uniformly across commands nationwide, ensuring transparency, predictability, and compliance with statutory fiscal and monetary policies.

He argued that NCS does not generate or manipulate exchange rates under any circumstances.

Instead, it explained that the platform operates structured data-integration protocols designed to ingest and apply exchange-rate feeds exactly as transmitted.

“For the avoidance of doubt, the Nigeria Customs Service does not independently determine, generate, alter, or apply margins to foreign exchange rates used for import and export valuation.

“All exchange rates applied within the B’Odogwu platform are official rates electronically transmitted by the Central Bank of Nigeria, which remains the competent authority for exchange rate determination under Nigeria’s monetary framework,” Mr Maiwada added.

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Economy

Dangote Gets $400m Chinese Construction Equipment for Refinery Expansion

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Dangote Group

By Aduragbemi Omiyale

To fast track the expansion of its Lagos-based refinery, Dangote Group has sealed a $400 million construction equipment deal with one of the leading manufacturers of construction machinery in China, XCMG Construction Machinery Company Limited.

A statement from the conglomerate disclosed that beyond refining, the expansion programme will see polypropylene production increase from 900,000 metric tonnes per annum to 2.4 million metric tonnes per annum.

Urea capacity in Nigeria will be tripled from 3 million to 9 million metric tonnes per annum, in addition to the 3 million metric tonnes per annum capacity in Ethiopia, strengthening the Group’s position as the largest urea producer globally.

There are plans to expand the Dangote Petroleum Refinery and Petrochemicals from 650,000 barrels per day to 1.4 million barrels per day, positioning it to become the largest refinery in the world.

The Chinese deal will enable Dangote Group to acquire additional wide range of advanced construction equipment to support ongoing and forthcoming projects across refining, petrochemicals, agriculture and large-scale infrastructure development. The new equipment will complement existing assets deployed for the refinery expansion, which is expected to be completed within three years.

Production capacity for Linear Alkyl Benzene (LAB) will also be increased to 400,000 metric tonnes per annum, positioning the Group as the largest producer in Africa and strengthening supply to the detergent and cleaning agents manufacturing industry. Additional base oil production capacity also forms part of the broader expansion programme.

Dangote Group described the agreement as a strategic investment aimed at deepening its construction footprint and accelerating its ambition to build a $100 billion enterprise by 2030.

“The additional equipment we are acquiring under this partnership will significantly enhance execution across our projects. With this investment, we are positioning ourselves to become the number one construction company in the world,” it stated.

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