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Economy

61 Equities Inspire NGX Index to 1.76% Week-on-Week Growth

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NGX 30 Index

By Dipo Olowookere

The Nigerian Exchange (NGX) Limited recorded 1.76 per cent week-on-week growth last week on the back of a continued buying interest.

The demand for Nigerian stocks has continued to grow as a result of renewed investor confidence in the domestic equity market because of its resilience amid challenging macroeconomic environment.

Last Monday, the National Bureau of Statistics (NBS) revealed that inflation rate jumped by 34.60 per cent in November 2024, but despite this, the All-Share Index (ASI) and the market capitalisation appreciated by 1.76 per cent to close the week at 101,129.09 points and N61.303 trillion, respectively.

In the same vein, all other indices finished higher except the industrial goods and sovereign bond sectors, which depreciated by 0.86 per cent and 0.06 per cent, respectively while the ASeM index closed flat.

In the week, 61 equities appreciated versus 51 equities in the previous week, 26 shares lost weight versus 35 shares of the earlier week, and 66 stocks closed flat versus 67 stocks of the preceding week.

MRS Oil topped the gainers’ chart after it chalked up 36.36 per cent to trade at N180.00, Eterna appreciated by 32.36 per cent to N29.45, Honeywell Flour expanded by 31.52 per cent to N6.05, Livestock Feeds jumped 30.16 per cent to N4.10, and Coronation Insurance increased by 26.87 per cent to N1.70.

On the flip side, John Holt lost 18.67 per cent to N5.88, Multiverse shed 18.58 per cent to trade at N4.60, University Press declined by 16.27 per cent to N3.50, Tantalizers slumped by 13.04 per cent to N1.60, and PZ Cussons dwindled by 8.00 per cent to quote at N23.00.

Business Post reports that in the trading week before Christmas, investors bought and sold 2.536 billion shares worth N91.382 billion in 51,406 deals, in contrast to the 2.729 billion shares valued at N49.845 billion traded in 43,298 deals a week earlier.

Financial stocks led the activity chart with 1.680 billion units sold for N23.486 billion in 22,766 deals, contributing 66.24 per cent and 25.70 per cent to the total trading volume and value, respectively.

ICT equities followed with 201.287 million units worth N3.155 billion in 2,840 deals, and services shares recorded a turnover of 182.275 million units valued at N7.961 billion in 3,019 deals.

The trio Sterling Holdings, Wema Bank and eTranzact accounted for 623.895 million shares worth N3.981 billion in 1,544 deals, contributing 24.61 per cent and 4.36 per cent to the total trading volume and value, respectively.

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

SEC Raises Fraud Alert on Voya Investment Management

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Voya Investment Management

By Aduragbemi Omiyale

The Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) has accused an investment online platform, Investment Management (VIM), of operating illegally in the Nigerian capital market.

In a notice obtained from the website of capital market regulator by Business Post, Voya Investment was accused of deceiving unsuspecting members of the public with fake certificate of identity verification, purportedly issued by SEC.

The agency emphasised that Voya Investment is not authorised to operate in the nation’s capital market because it is not registered to do so.

“The operators of this platform claim to offer investment services in Nigerian stocks and other financial instruments purportedly under the supervision of the Commission. Voya Investment Management is also parading a certificate of identity verification purportedly issued by the commission.

“The commission hereby informs the public that Voya Investment Management (VIM) is NOT REGISTERED or licensed by the commission to carry out any activity in the Nigerian capital market,” parts of the statement stressed.

The organisation further declared that, “The certificate being paraded by Voya Investment Management was neither issued nor endorsed by SEC Nigeria as the commission does not issue certificates of identity verification.

“Furthermore, claims by VIM that it is supervised, licensed, or approved by the commission to undertake operations in the capital market are false, misleading and fraudulent.”

It added that, “Complaints received by the commission regarding the fraudulent activities of VIM and the misleading information by the company to the investing public that it is licensed by the commission, bear clear characteristics of illegal investment schemes designed to defraud unsuspecting members of the public.”

“Accordingly, the public is advised to refrain from dealing with Voya Investment Management (VIM) , as any person who engages with the entity or its representatives does so at his/her own risk.

“The commission hereby reiterates that transacting in the Nigerian capital market with unregistered entities exposes investors to financial risks including fraud and potential loss of investments.

“The investing public is therefore reminded to VERIFY the status of companies and entities purporting to offer investment opportunities in the capital market on the commission’s dedicated portal – www.sec.gov.ng/cmos, prior to transacting with such companies and entities.”

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Economy

PwC Projects 4.3% GDP Growth for Nigeria in 2026

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GDP Nigeria growth

By Adedapo Adesanya

PwC Nigeria has projected that Nigeria’s real Gross Domestic Product (GDP) would grow at about 4.3 per cent this year, supported by higher crude oil production and stronger performance in dominant sectors.

The consultancy firm gave this projection in its Economic Outlook 2026 released on Wednesday.

It also said the Naira is expected to remain broadly stable through 2026, underpinned by ongoing reforms by the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) and improved portfolio inflows.

Headline inflation is also projected to moderately ease, supported by the CBN’s tight monetary policy stance, rebasing effects, and improved stability in the foreign exchange market.

With regards to interest rate, the PwC report said with inflation trending down, the apex bank may cautiously ease its monetary policy stance this year.

The report, however, said fiscal sustainability risks are expected to persist, driven by low revenue to GDP, fiscal leakages, higher spending and elevated debt service obligations.

PwC Nigeria said with fiscal constraints persisting, they reinforce the importance of capital efficiency and balance-sheet discipline.

Against this backdrop, PwC Nigeria highlights practical imperatives for business leaders in 2026: making selective investment bets in attractive sectors and regions, and scenario-planning for macroeconomic and geopolitical shocks.

Other imperatives for business leaders include adapting business models and cost structures for resilience, accelerating digital transformation and responsible AI adoption, and strengthening regulatory and tax compliance as reforms move from design to execution.

The firm noted that Nigeria recorded improvements in macroeconomic stability in 2025 following key monetary and foreign-exchange reforms, with inflation easing, exchange-rate conditions stabilising, and external reserves strengthening.

Speaking on this, the Country Senior Partner, PwC Nigeria, Mr Sam Abu, said: “PwC Nigeria’s Economic Outlook 2026 provides forward-looking analysis of key macroeconomic indicators and what they signal for the economy and for business leaders.

“Nigeria has achieved improved macroeconomic stability over the past year. The focus now is how that stability is translated into sustainable economic growth, and how businesses position for 2026. For companies, this stability provides a more predictable operating environment for planning, investment, and growth decisions.”

On his part, the Partner and Chief Economist, PwC Nigeria, Mr Olusegun Zaccheaus, said, “Globally, growth is projected at around 3.1 per cent, while merchandise trade growth slows to about 0.5 per cent, keeping oil prices, capital flows, and access to foreign inflows as key channels influencing Nigeria’s growth and FX liquidity.

“Domestically, improved monetary effectiveness has reduced volatility and clarified pricing, cost, and funding signals, even as fiscal pressures, security challenges, and weak household purchasing power continue to shape sector outcomes.”

According to Mr Zaccheaus, “growth is more likely to remain concentrated in services and selected capital-intensive sectors, placing a premium on disciplined capital allocation and sector selection.”

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Economy

NASD OTC Exchange Capitalisation Climbs to N2.185trn

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NASD OTC securities exchange

By Adedapo Adesanya

The NASD Over-the-Counter (OTC) Securities Exchange further appreciated by 1.08 per cent on Wednesday, January 7,  pushing the market capitalisation higher by N23.38 billion to N2.185 trillion from the preceding session’s closing value of N2.162 trillion.

Also during the trading session, NASD Unlisted Security Index (NSI) further went up by 39.08 points to close at 3,653.04 points compared with the 3,613.96 points recorded on Tuesday.

The midweek session witnessed a rise in the share prices of three securities on the unlisted securities market, with Central Securities Clearing System (CSCS) Plc adding N3.40 to close at N42.14 per share versus the preceding day’s N38.74 per share.

Further, FrieslandCampina Wamco Nigeria Plc expanded by N3.05 to finish at N59.92 per unit compared with the N56.87 per unit it ended a day earlier, and Geo-Fluids Plc jumped by 10 Kobo to end at N6.88 per share versus N6.78 per share.

Yesterday, the volume of securities rose by 39.0 per cent to 1.9 million units from the previous day’s 1.4 million units, the value of securities surged by 29.5 per cent to N36.3 million from N28.0 million, while the number of deals slid by 19.6 per cent to 45 deals from 56 deals.

The most active stock by value on a year-to-date basis was CSCS Plc with 1.1 million units exchanged for N41.6 million, followed by Geo-Fluids Plc with 2.9 million units valued at N19.4 million, and Okitipupa Plc with 49,424 units worth N11.0 million.

In terms of volume, Industrial and General Insurance (IGI) Plc led with 2.9 million units traded for N1.9 million, trailed by Geo-Fluids Plc with 2.9 million units sold for N2.9 million, and CSCS Plc with 1.1 million units traded for N41.6 million.

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