Economy
Deap Capital, Two Others Get N5m Fine From NSE
By Dipo Olowookere
The trio of Deap Capital Management & Trust Plc, Greif Nigeria Plc and Thomas Wyatt Nigeria Plc, all listed on the Nigerian Stock Exchange (NSE), have been fined a cummulative sum of N5 million.
In a regulatory document, Deap Capital suffered the heaviest fine from the three companies; N3.8 million, from the total amount they were all fined.
The reason for this heavy fine on Deap Capital was because of its refusal to submit the company’s audited financial statements for the 2019 fiscal year as at when due.
The company’s runs a financial year that ends September and instead of filing the results to the NSE within 90 days, December, the firm submitted the statements on February 5, 2020.
On its part, Thomas Wyatt Nigeria was slammed with N700,000 for its failure to file the third quarter results for the period ended September 30, 2019 within the required time.
According to the stock exchange management, this firm submitted its Q3 earnings on February 6, 2020 and for this unnecessary delay, it received the above sanction.
In the same document, it was revealed that Greif Nigeria was fined N500,000 by the exchange over its delay in filing the full year audited results for the year ended October 31, 2019. The organisation submitted the earnings on February 3, 2020.
The NSE explained that it applies sanctions in accordance with the Rules for Filing of Accounts and Treatment of Default Filing, Rulebook of The Exchange (Issuers’ Rules).
This move was put in place to make companies listed on the exchange file their financial results on time and maintain high standards so as to keep the integrity of the stock market high.
In recent times, there had been calls for NSE to begin to make directors of the companies to pay these fines and not passed to the shareholders, who were not behind the reason for the sanctions. It has been argued that these directors put the companies in trouble because they know the fines would not be paid from their pockets, but from the firms’ purses.
Economy
Volume-led Revenue Growth, Others Raise Lafarge Africa’s Q1’26 PAT by 101%
By Aduragbemi Omiyale
The profit after tax (PAT) of Lafarge Africa Plc for the first quarter of 2026 more than doubled to N97.95 billion from N48.64 billion in the same period of last year.
This was largely driven by volume-led revenue growth, sustained cost discipline, and prudent financial management.
Analysis of the results filed with the Nigerian Exchange (NGX) Limited, the leading provider of innovative and sustainable building solutions noted that it improved its net sales by 35 per cent year-on-year to N334.88 billion from N248.35 per cent in the corresponding period of 2025, supported by improved volumes, enhanced plant stability, and distribution efficiency, while operating profit went up by 97 per cent to N141 billion.
According to the chief executive of Lafarge Africa, Mr Lolu Alade-Akinyemi, these numbers “reflect continued progress in executing our strategic priorities” and also “underscore our continued focus on delivering sustainable value to our shareholders.”
He stated that sustained revenue growth and continued progress on cost and efficiency initiatives were responsible for the rise in operating profit.
Mr Alade-Akinyemi noted that the company will continue to leverage the industrial and technical expertise of its partner, Huaxin Building Materials Ltd, to further enhance operations and unlock additional efficiency gains.
He stated that the company would continue to focus on disciplined capital deployment and tight cost control in its operations while unlocking opportunities aligned with its growth priorities, explaining that the company’s volume growth, evident in sustained momentum in consumer demand, resulted from easing macroeconomic pressures and reduced global supply chain disruptions.
“We anticipate continued market expansion from Nigeria’s infrastructure and construction sector demand, underpinned by improving economic fundamentals and demand across key segments.
“Within this context, we remain focused on capturing volume growth opportunities across its operating markets, while maintaining disciplined cost optimisation initiatives to safeguard margins amidst global tensions,” he said.
While expressing profound appreciation to customers and loyal stakeholders for their support, he noted that the company would continue to do its best to deliver consistent performance and long-term value to shareholders.
“Our sustainability-led growth model continues to anchor our long-term value creation agenda, supported by the effective execution of our strategic priorities and an unwavering commitment to operational excellence,” he added.
Economy
Cooking Gas Price Soars 12.6% as Nigerians Struggle to Survive
By Adedapo Adesanya
The average price of refilling a 5kg cooking gas cylinder surged 12.60 per cent in March 2026 to N7,655.73 from N6,799.18 in February 2026, according to the latest estimates by the National Bureau of Statistics (NBS).
The NBS disclosed this in its Cooking Gas Price Watch for March, released this week.
It disclosed that on a year-on-year basis, the 5kg price climbed 4.55 per cent from N7,322.49 in March 2025, as Nigerians suffer the ripple effect of the Middle East crisis.
Kaduna had the highest state price at N9,212.21, followed by Lagos at N8,909.73, and Taraba at N8,802.78, while Bauchi recorded the lowest at N6,295.40, with Osun at N6,457.35, and Ondo at N6,598.10.
By zone, the North-West led at N8,137.81, trailed by the North-East at N7,890.53, while the South-South had the lowest at N7,300.95.
For 12.5kg cylinders, prices jumped 15.62 per cent month-on-month to N19,652.83 from N16,997.94 in the previous month, and rose 6.48 per cent year-on-year from N18,456.24.
Nasarawa hit the highest at N23,418.12, followed by Kaduna at N23,030.52, and Akwa Ibom at N22,816.74. Bauchi was lowest at N15,738.50, then Osun at N16,143.38, and Ondo at N16,495.25. The North-West zone averaged at N20,701.66, with the South-East lowest at N18,432.63.
The rise in the price of cooking fuel came as the closure of the Strait of Hormuz affected prices of liquified natural gas (LNG) and over 10 billion cubic feet per day (Bcf/d) of global LNG supplies. Coupled with other issues like volatile exchange rates, global market swings, and high transport costs to northern rural areas, the cost continued to bite.
LPG, priced in US Dollars, faces higher landing costs from Naira devaluation and imported supply reliance.
Economy
NGX Group Shareholders Approve One-For-Three Bonus Share Issue
By Aduragbemi Omiyale
The one-for-three bonus share issue proposed by the board of Nigerian Exchange (NGX) Limited has been approved by shareholders.
The approval was given at the 65th Annual General Meeting (AGM) of the organisation on Wednesday. They also authorised the payment of the proposed N2.00 per share dividend for 2025.
Shareholders applauded the board and management for the group’s performance and strategic direction, urging continued focus on growth and long-term value creation.
They okayed the re-election of Mr Umaru Kwairanga as the chairman, Okechukwu Itanyi as an independent non-executive director, and Mrs Ojinika Olaghere as an independent non-executive director.
Speaking at the event, the president of New Dimension Shareholders Association, Mr Patrick Ajudua, commended the leadership of the firm for delivering a strong financial outcome, noting that the results reflect both improved market conditions and deliberate strategic execution.
“The numbers speak to a business that is gaining strength and direction,” he said.
Similarly, the chairman of the Progressive Shareholders Association of Nigeria, Mr Boniface Okezie, lauded the group’s commitment to innovation and infrastructure development.
“The market is becoming more forward-looking, supported by strong leadership at the Group level. Initiatives around market infrastructure and participation are yielding results, and this is positive for investors,” he noted.
Mr Kwairanga, while addressing investors, appreciated them for their continued support and reaffirmed the board’s commitment to sustainable value delivery, saying, “The progress recorded reflects the strength of the group’s strategy and the performance of its operating businesses.
|As a board, our responsibility is to ensure disciplined oversight, uphold strong governance standards, and position NGX Group to deliver sustainable, long-term value to shareholders.”
The chief executive of NGX Group, Mr Temi Popoola, said, “This next phase is about deepening momentum. Our priority is to scale infrastructure, broaden participation, and unlock new pathways for capital formation.”
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