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Economy

Nigerian Stocks Gain 0.08% Despite Weak Sentiment

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Nigerian Stocks

By Dipo Olowookere

The positive momentum on the floor of the Nigerian Stock Exchange (NSE) continued on Tuesday despite having more sellers than buyers at the market.

Business Post reports that despite this, the market breadth closed negative yesterday with 18 price losers and 13 price gainers, indicating that the advance/decline ratio weakened by 0.7x.

It was observed the 0.08 percent appreciation posted by the NSE on Tuesday was buoyed by the gains recorded by MTN Nigeria during the trading session.

At the close of transactions yesterday, the All-Share Index (ASI) increased marginally by 21.65 points to finish at 27,586.79 points, while the market capitalization was jerked up by N10.5 billion to N13.421 trillion.

On the price movement chart, MTN Nigeria claimed the top position with a price appreciation of N1.50k to settle at N140 per share, with International Breweries claiming the second spot after gaining N1 to close at N11 per unit.

Ecobank rose by 40 kobo to finish at N7.70k per unit, UBA chalked up 20 kobo to trade at N6.40k per share, while Access Bank also improved its share value by 20 kobo to end at N6.70k per share.

On the flip side, Nestle Nigeria on Tuesday ended its positive run for some days now with a price depreciation of N19, emerging as the heaviest price loser to close at N1300 per unit.

Dangote Flour went down by 95 kobo to finish at N20.05k per share, Union Bank dropped 40 kobo to settle at N6.60k per share, Sterling Bank declined by 20 kobo to end at N2.30k per share, while Flour Mills shed 20 kobo to trade at N13.50k per share.

A look of the sectoral performance indicated that only the industrial and insurance posted gains, growing by 0.08 percent and 1.79 percent respectively.

Business Post reports that the banking index fell by 0.34 percent, the consumer goods by 0.36 percent and the energy sector by 0.18 percent.

The activity chart looked strong on Tuesday with the volume of shares traded by investors rising by 172.08 percent, the value of transacted equities increasing by 136.36 percent and the number of deals executed improving by 10.06 percent.

At the close of business yesterday, investors traded 294.4 million shares worth N3.5 billion in 3,337 deals compared with the 108.2 million equities worth N1.5 billion transacted in the previous session in 3,032 deals.

A further analysis showed that shares of UAC Property were the most traded during the session, accounting for 61.7 million units worth N50.6 million.

Access Bank exchanged 55.1 million equities worth N369.4 million, GTBank traded 52.0 million units of its stocks for N1.4 billion, Transcorp exchanged 26.5 million shares for N27.0 million, while UAC Nigeria traded 15.7 million equities valued at N74.2 million.

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

Verto Introduces Dollar Business Accounts to Power US–Africa Trade Flows

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verto

By Adedapo Adesanya

Vert, a global cross-border payments platform, has announced a new solution under Verto Business Accounts that enables US-registered businesses to move money seamlessly between the United States and Africa.

With the ability to open a US Dollar account in their business name and have access to trusted emerging market payment rails, companies can now receive, hold, and transfer funds faster, more cost-effectively, and with greater control.

US-registered businesses with operations in Africa often encounter significant banking limitations, with US banks frequently delaying or blocking transactions to or from African markets, imposing high or hidden FX costs, and offering limited access to Emerging Market payment corridors. Businesses without a US bank account registered in their own name must rely on fragmented tools or intermediaries to move funds to Africa, creating operational inefficiencies and slowing growth.

Verto’s new solution directly addresses these challenges by giving US-domiciled businesses access to named USD accounts and a robust cross-border payment infrastructure, enabling them to move funds and settle transactions in local currencies with speed and efficiency.

Built for venture-backed startups, import-export SMEs, and investors funding emerging market innovation, this solution will enable clients to receive funds directly into a named USD business account from US based customers or investors, convert and settle between USD and local currencies such as NGN and KES quickly and at lower cost, as well as hold, receive, and pay in 48 currencies from a single dashboard.

The solution will also allow users to pay contractors, suppliers, and offshore teams instantly via local payment rails. It also equips teams with virtual cards to spend in 11 currencies without fees and leverage specialised onboarding and monitoring that navigates both US and African regulatory requirements

By combining US and African compliance expertise, Verto’s Business Accounts empowers companies to maintain a US domestic presence for investors, customers, and suppliers while using deep-liquidity rails to pay global contractors and settle trades in local currencies efficiently, ensuring uninterrupted trade, payroll, and investment flows, without the risk of blocked or delayed transactions.

“We believe founders building across borders should not be constrained by the limitations of traditional banking,” said Ola Oyetayo, CEO of Verto. “Providing named accounts in the US empowers businesses with the funds they need to operate globally, connecting the US and Africa more efficiently without friction.”

With over 8 years of experience and $25 billion in annual global cross-border transaction volume, Verto continues to provide the infrastructure, expertise, and trusted payment rails businesses need to operate confidently across borders and scale globally.

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Economy

PEBEC Blocks Introduction of New Policies by MDAs

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PEBEC

By Adedapo Adesanya

The Presidential Enabling Business Environment Council (PEBEC) has directed Ministries, Departments, and Agencies (MDAs) to suspend the introduction of new policies and regulatory changes to prevent disruptions to businesses.

The directive was issued in a statement by PEBEC director-general, Mrs Zahrah Mustapha-Audu, on Monday in Abuja, noting that the move is part of the Federal Government’s broader effort to improve regulatory quality, ensure policy consistency, and strengthen Nigeria’s ease of doing business environment.

The council emphasised that the suspension will remain in place until all MDAs fully comply with the Regulatory Impact Analysis (RIA) Framework, which governs evidence-based policymaking across government institutions.

The council said the directive is aimed at ensuring that all government policies are backed by verifiable data and do not negatively impact businesses or investors.

“It is imperative to emphasise that no new reform or policy will be permitted to proceed without being grounded in clear, verifiable evidence,” said Mrs Mustapha-Audu.

“The framework provides the structured mechanism through which such evidence-based decisions can be rigorously developed, assessed, and validated.

“This directive is necessary to prevent policy shocks that may adversely affect businesses, investors, and citizens, as well as to eliminate policy inconsistencies and frequent reversals.”

She added that the government remains committed to working collaboratively with regulators and does not intend to embarrass any institution.

The Regulatory Impact Analysis (RIA) Framework, introduced in January 2025, is designed to improve transparency and ensure that policies undergo proper evaluation before implementation.

All MDAs are required to align new policies and amendments with the RIA framework before approval and rollout.

The framework has been circulated by the Office of the Secretary to the Government of the Federation (SGF) and is available on the PEBEC website.
MDAs are encouraged to seek technical support from the PEBEC Secretariat to ensure proper implementation.

Exceptions to the directive will only be granted in cases of urgent national interest, subject to appropriate approvals.

PEBEC noted that the framework will help institutionalise evidence-based policymaking, enhance transparency, and improve stakeholder confidence in government decisions.

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Economy

DMO Sells 3-Year FGN Savings Bond at 14.082% for April Batch

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FGN Savings Bond

By Aduragbemi Omiyale

Subscription for the Federal Government of Nigeria (FGN) savings bonds for April 2026 has opened, a circular from the Debt Management Office (DMO) on Tuesday, April 7, 2026, confirmed.

The debt office is selling the retail debt instrument for this month in two tenors of two years and three years.

Offer for the savings bonds opened today and will close on Friday, April 10, 2026, a part of the disclosure stated.

The 2-year FGN savings bond due April 15, 2028, is being sold at a coupon rate of 13.082 per cent per annum, while the 3-year FGN savings bond due April 15, 2029, is being sold at a coupon rate of 14.082 per cent per annum.

The interests are paid every quarter, and the bullet repayment to subscribers on the maturity date.

The bonds are sold at N1,000 per unit, subject to a minimum subscription of N5,000 and in multiples of N1,000 thereafter, subject to a maximum subscription of N50 million.

Interested investors are required to reach out to the stockbroking firms appointed as distribution agents by the DMO via the agency’s website.

An FGN savings bond qualifies as securities in which trustees can invest under the Trustee Investment Act. It also qualifies as government securities within the meaning of the Company Income Tax Act (CITA) and the Personal Income Tax Act (PITA) for tax exemption for pension funds, amongst other investors, meaning it is tax-free.

It can be used as a liquid asset for liquidity ratio calculation for banks, and is listed on the Nigerian Exchange (NGX) Limited to allow for easy exit (liquidation) before maturity by selling at the secondary market.

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