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Stock Market Remains Bullish as Honeywell Flour Gains 10%

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Honeywell Flour

By Dipo Olowookere

Shares of Honeywell Flour Mills appreciated by 10.00 per cent on Thursday to N1.87, making the company the best performer at the Nigerian Exchange (NGX) Limited during the session.

The flour miller achieved this yesterday as a result of high demand for its stocks at the market, also making it the most traded by investors.

A total of 384.1 million units of the company’s equities worth N654.2 million exchanged hands during the session while Vitafoam in the distant second place traded 21.4 million shares worth N331.2 million.

FCMB traded 13.6 million stocks valued at N42.7 million, Japaul transacted 12.9 million shares for N6.4 million, while Sterling Bank traded 12.0 million equities valued at N18.5 million.

At the close of business, the buying pressure on Honeywell Flour drove the trading volume higher by 214.30 per cent to 570.2 million units from the previous day’s 181.4 million units.

Business Post reports that the trading value increased slightly by 9.23 per cent to N2.3 billion from N2.1 billion, while the number of deals rose by 4.58 per cent to 3,764 deals from 3,599 deals.

It was observed that the market sustained its upward movement on Thursday by 0.11 per cent despite recording 24 price losers and eight price gainers led by Honeywell Flour.

Wema Bank appreciated during the session by 3.95 per cent to 79 kobo, Flour Mills gained 3.10 per cent to sell at N29.90, AIICO Insurance rose by 2.11 per cent to 97 kobo, while GTCO expanded by 1.07 per cent to N28.40.

The worst-performing stock on Thursday was SFS REIT and it depleted by 9.99 per cent to N61.75, followed by Tripple Gee, which declined by 9.28 per cent to 88 kobo.

Regency Assurance decreased by 8.51 per cent to 43 kobo, Prestige Assurance depreciated by 8.33 per cent to 44 kobo, while Japaul deflated by 7.84 per cent to 47 kobo.

Apart from the industrial goods sector, which appreciated by 0.35 per cent yesterday, every other counter closed negative with the insurance index leading after it dropped 1.80 per cent.

The banking sector went down by 0.24 per cent, the energy counter reduced by 0.23 per cent, while the consumer goods sector depreciated by 0.02 per cent.

But when trading activities were closed for the session, the All-Share Index (ASI) went up by 41.60 points to 39,490.06 points from 39,448.46 points, while the market capitalisation rose by N22 billion to N20.575 trillion from N20.553 trillion.

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

Zichis Confirms Intention to Borrow from Capital Market

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zichis

By Aduragbemi Omiyale

One of the newest members of the Nigerian Exchange (NGX) Limited, Zichis Agro-Allied Industries Plc, has confirmed its intention to approach the capital market to raise funds, subject to shareholder and regulatory approval.

However, it denied reports suggesting it’s “set to undertake an Initial Public Offering (IPO) or related capital raising activity.”

In a notice on Monday, the firm affirmed proposing “to seek shareholders’ approval at its forthcoming Annual General Meeting (AGM) to raise additional capital, which may be through equity, debt, or a combination of both, subject to regulatory approvals and market conditions.”

“At this stage, the structure, timing, and details of any such capital raising have not been finalised, and no specific transaction has been concluded,” a part of the statement signed by the company secretary, Solomon Itsede, stressed.

Zichis expressed its commitment to upholding “the highest standards of corporate governance, transparency, and timely disclosure.”

“Accordingly, any material corporate actions or capital market activities will be formally communicated through the appropriate regulatory channels,” it said, advising shareholders and the investing public “to rely solely on official disclosures and filings made by the company through the NGX and other authorised regulatory platforms when making investment decisions.”

Zichis welcomed the “continued interest of investors and market participants in its operations and performance,” promising to remain focused on delivering sustainable value through disciplined strategic execution.

It also lauded the continued support of its shareholders, saying it remains committed to maintaining transparency in all its communications.

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Economy

NERC Orders Transparent Reporting of Transmission Loss Factors

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NERC

By Adedapo Adesanya

The Nigerian Electricity Regulatory Commission (NERC) has issued a directive to ensure transparency in reporting the Regional Electricity Transmission Loss Factor, as it remains above the 7 per cent threshold.

In a public notice posted on its official X (formerly Twitter) on Monday, the order, contained in No. NERC/2026/026 is aimed at improving transparency and efficiency in Nigeria’s power grid through enhanced reporting of Regional Transmission Loss Factors (TLF).

The regulator disclosed that the order is backed by the provisions of the Electricity Act 2023, which enables the commission to regulate, monitor, and ensure efficiency in the power sector.

According to the statement, the Data from the Nigerian Independent System Operator (NISO) indicate that the national average TLF was 8.71 per cent in 2024 but was reduced to 7.24 per cent in 2025.

The statement added that the report exceeds the 7 per cent benchmark approved by NERC in the Multi-Year Tariff Order (MYTO).

The statement reads, “The Order dated 8 April 2026 establishes a formal framework for reporting transmission losses across regions operated by the Transmission Company of Nigeria (TCN).

“Taking effect from 13 April 2026, the Order is backed by provisions of the Electricity Act 2023, which empower NERC to regulate, monitor, and ensure efficiency in the electricity market.”

The directive reads, “NISO to install smart meters at all boundary regional interconnection points by December 2026 to accurately measure energy flows for each region of the transmission network.

“NISO to measure and document all energy flow of power transformers at transmission substations.

“NISO to file quarterly reports on TLF to NERC on a regional basis.”

It added, “TCN to file an action plan by July 2026 on the reduction of TLF to a value within the 7 per cent approved benchmarks in the regions.

“TCN to ensure that TLF across transmission regions shall not exceed 6.5 per cent by December 2026.”

NERC concluded that the order is designed to strengthen accountability in transmission operations and support better grid performance through structured loss reporting.

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Economy

Dangote Refinery Plans Cross-border Listing of Shares

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Dangote Refinery Crude Supply to Local Refineries

By Adedapo Adesanya

Nigerian businessman, Mr Aliko Dangote, is planning to list shares of his $20 billion oil refinery on multiple African stock exchanges.

The landmark cross-border public offering on the continent was disclosed by the chief executive of the Nairobi Securities Exchange (NSE), Mr Frank Mwiti, following a meeting held last week in Lagos between Mr Dangote and several heads of African exchanges.

Last year, Mr Dangote unveiled plans to list a 10 per cent stake in his Lagos-based refinery on the Nigerian Exchange this year.

According to a Bloomberg report, citing an email from the chief executive of FirstCap, Mr Ukandu Ukandu, Stanbic IBTC Capital Limited, Vetiva Advisory Services Limited, and FirstCap Limited have been appointed as advisers for the initial public offering of Dangote Petroleum Refinery and Petrochemicals FZE.

Mr Mwiti said the proposed listing is designed to cut across multiple markets and deepen investor participation across the continent.

“The plan is to structure a pan-African IPO,” he said.

Bloomberg also reported that a spokesman for the Dangote Group confirmed that discussions had taken place between Mr Dangote and exchange officials but declined to provide further details.

In February 2026, Mr Dangote said that the IPO could be launched within the next five months.

“But individually Nigerians too will have an opportunity in the next maximum four or five months, they will actually be able to buy their shares,” he said at the time.

He added that investors would have flexibility in how they receive returns.

“People will have a choice either to get their dividends in naira or to get their dividends in dollars because we earn in Dollars.”

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