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AfDB Tasks NGX, Other Stock Exchanges on Africa’s Financial Future

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domestic investors NGX

By Adedapo Adesanya

The African Development Bank (AfDB) has rallied stock exchanges to reinvent Africa’s financial future, noting that they will be a crucial lever for financing African economies.

Speaking at a convention at the lender’s headquarters in Abidjan, the AfDB President, Mr Sidi Ould Tah, said African bourses were vital to the continent’s destiny.

“As the architects of Africa’s capital markets, you are custodians of financial institutions and catalysts of our continent’s future,” he said at the start of the first session with heads of African securities exchanges, private equity funds and venture capital funds.

The meeting, a first of its kind between the Bank and African stock exchanges, aims to explore their role in long-term financing, with a focus on reforming how Africa’s capital is mobilised.

“The capital markets are the bedrock upon which long-term, sustainable economic growth is built,” Mr Ould Tah said, adding “by mobilizing patient capital, you provide our sovereigns and businesses with diversified funding sources, while offering investors, particularly institutional investors, a broader array of opportunities.”

He said the lender would take a comprehensive approach to capital market development, focusing on three key pillars: supporting capital market regulatory authorities, stock exchanges, and other intermediaries through technical assistance, institutional support projects, and policy-based operations; diversifying savings mobilization and market participants to promote product liquidity and deeper markets for credit enhancement companies, institutional investors, and other financial institutions; and research, training, and policy dialogue to enhance the capacity of Africa’s capital market stakeholders.

On his part, Mr Felix Edoh Kossi Amenounve, CEO of the West African Regional Stock Exchange (BRVM), highlighted the need for fundamental change.

“There are gaps between financing needs and available resources, but we need to think about the reforms needed to achieve the capitalisation of African pension funds. Because these funds were originally created to finance governments,” Mr Amenounve said.

Mr Donald Waweru Wangunyu, Non-Executive Director, Nairobi Stock Exchange, stressed the need for regional coordination in order to achieve “scaling up, policy coordination and implementation of reforms; we have good projects, but the obstacles are still there, ” he said.

Ms Sonia Ben Frej, Chairwoman of the Board, Tunis Stock Exchange, emphasised the problems of regulatory convergence and the need to update obsolete regulations.

Adedapo Adesanya is a journalist, polymath, and connoisseur of everything art. When he is not writing, he has his nose buried in one of the many books or articles he has bookmarked or simply listening to good music with a bottle of beer or wine. He supports the greatest club in the world, Manchester United F.C.

Economy

Nigeria Approves Fiscal Plan Proposing N54.5trn 2026 Budget

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Finance 35% of 2024 Budget

By Adedapo Adesanya

The Federal Executive Council (FEC) has signed off on a medium-term fiscal plan that projects spending of around N54.5 trillion in 2026, as it approved the 2026-2028 medium-term expenditure framework (MTEF), outlining Nigeria’s economic outlook, revenue targets, and spending priorities for the next three years.

The Minister of Budget and National Planning, Mr Atiku Bagudu, said oil price was pegged at $64 per barrel, while the exchange rate assumption for the budget year is N1,512/$1.

He said while the council set an oil production benchmark of 2.06 million barrels per day for 2026, the fiscal planning is based on a cautious 1.8 million barrels per day.

Mr Bagudu stated the exchange rate projection reflects the fact that 2026 precedes a general election year, adding that all the assumptions were drawn from detailed macroeconomic and fiscal analyses by the budget office and its partner agencies.

According to the minister, inflation is projected to average 18 per cent in 2026.

Mr Bagudu said based on the assumptions, the total revenue accruing to the federation in 2026 was estimated at N50.74 trillion, to be shared among the three tiers of government.

“From this projection, the federal government is expected to receive N22.6 trillion, states N16.3 trillion, and local governments N11.85 trillion,” he said.

“When revenues from all federal sources are consolidated, including N4.98 trillion from government-owned enterprises, total Federal Government revenue for 2026 is projected at N34.33 trillion —representing a N6.55 trillion or 16 per cent decline compared to the 2025 budget estimate.”

The minister said statutory transfers are expected to amount to roughly N3 trillion, while debt servicing was projected at N10.91 trillion.

He said non-debt recurrent spending — covering personnel costs and overheads — was put at N15.27 trillion, while the fiscal deficit for 2026 is estimated at N20.1 trillion, representing 3.61 per cent of gross domestic product (GDP).

The MTEF also projected that nominal GDP will reach over N690 trillion in 2026 and climb to N890.6 trillion by 2028, with the GDP growth rate projected at 4.6 per cent in 2026.

The non-oil GDP is also expected to grow from N550.7 trillion in 2026 to N871.3 trillion in 2028, while oil GDP is estimated to rise from N557.4 trillion to N893.5 trillion over the same period.

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Economy

Operators Exploit Loopholes in PIA to Frustrate Domestic Crude Oil Supply—Dangote

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By Aduragbemi Omiyale

There seems to be a deliberate effort to starve local crude oil refiners from getting supply, foremost African businessman, Mr Aliko Dangote, has said.

He said loopholes in the Petroleum Industry Act (PIA) are being exploited to ensure private refiners like the Dangote Petroleum Refinery import the commodity, making consumers pay more for petroleum products.

Mr Dangote insisted that Nigeria has no justification for importing crude or refined petroleum products if existing laws were properly enforced.

Speaking during a visit by the South South Development Commission (SSDC) to the Dangote Petroleum Refinery and Fertiliser Complex in Lagos, he noted that the PIA already establishes a framework that prioritises domestic crude supply.

According to him, several oil companies routinely divert Nigerian crude to their trading subsidiaries abroad, particularly in Switzerland, forcing domestic refineries to buy from these offshore entities at a premium of four to five dollars per barrel.

“The crude is available. It is not a matter of shortage. But the companies move everything to their trading arms, and we are forced to buy at a premium. Meanwhile, we do not receive any premium for our own products,” he said.

He disclosed that he has formally written to the Federal Government, urging it to charge royalties and taxes based on the actual price paid for crude, to prevent revenue losses and to discourage practices that disadvantage local refiners.

Mr Dangote said the Nigerian National Petroleum Company (NNPC) remains the primary supplier honouring domestic supply obligations, providing five to six cargoes monthly. However, the refinery requires as many as twenty cargoes per month from January to operate optimally.

Describing the situation as “unsustainable for a country intent on genuine industrial growth,” Mr Dangote argued that Africa’s economic future depends on value addition rather than perpetual raw material export.

“It is shameful that while we exported one point five million tonnes of gasoline in June and July, imported products were flooding the country. That is dumping,” he said.

On report by the Nigerian Midstream and Downstream Petroleum Regulatory Authority (NMDPRA), that the refinery supplied only 17.08 million litres of the 56.74 million litres consumed in October 2025, Mr Dangote said that the refinery exports its products if regulators continue to permit dumping by marketers.

Addressing Nigeria’s ambition to achieve a $1 trillion economy, Mr Dangote said the target is attainable through disciplined policy execution, improved power generation and a revival of the steel sector.

“You cannot build a great nation without power and steel. Every bolt and nut used here was imported. That should not be the case. Nigeria should be supplying steel to smaller African countries,” he said.

He also underscored opportunities for partnership with the SSDC in agriculture, particularly in soil testing and customised fertiliser formulation, noting that misuse of fertiliser remains a major reason Nigerian farmers experience limited productivity gains.

“We are setting up advanced soil testing laboratories. From next year, we want to work with the SSDC to empower farmers by providing accurate soil assessments and customised fertiliser blends,” Mr Dangote said.

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Economy

Flex Raises $60m to Scale Finance Platform

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By Aduragbemi Omiyale

A $60 million Series B equity round has been completed by a financial technology (fontech) company, Flex, to scale its all-in-one business and personal finance platform for high-net-worth middle-market business owners.

The funding round was led by Portage, with participation from CrossLink Capital, Spice Expedition, Titanium Ventures, Wellington, Companyon Ventures, Florida Funders, FirstLook Partners, Tusk Venture Partners and others, bringing its total equity funding to $105 million.

The company is building Artificial Intelligence (AI) agents across every product pillar to streamline both its internal operations and customer experiences—like credit underwriting agents to deeply understand every business, expense agents, payment workflows, cash management agents, and back-office ERP agents into a single “motherboard” for business owners.

Flex’s vision is to provide every business owner a team of high quality finance agents to run their backoffice like an enterprise. This AI-driven architecture not only improves customer experience but also drives a structurally lower cost base for Flex, enabling it to operate with a lean headcount.

In turn, Flex delivers AI-powered Owner Insights, transforming the data generated from customer activity into a beautiful, intuitive experience that positions Flex as their “AI CFO.”

“Our mission is to build the private bank ambitious business owners have always deserved.

“Middle-market business owners employ 40% of Americans, but the financial system has never been designed around their complex needs.

“Flex is the first platform that supports every step of their financial lives, from the moment they earn revenue to the moment they spend it personally.

“Unlike many of our FinTech peers who focus on saving large enterprises money, we focus on helping ambitious owners make more money,” the chief executive of Flex, Mr Zaid Rahman, said.

A Partner at Portage, Jake Bodanis, said, “Flex is building a category-defining financial institution. The company has proven that middle-market business owners are both massively underserved and extremely valuable customers when given the right financial infrastructure. Flex’s hypergrowth and best in class capital efficiency speaks to how powerful this model is.”

Flex was created to give these high net worth owners a single place to run both their business and personal finances.

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