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Airtel Africa Pushes Mobile Money Listing to Second Half of 2026

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Airtel Money

By Adedapo Adesanya

Airtel Africa will delay the planned ​Initial Public Offering ​(IPO) of its mobile money ⁠business, Airtel Money, to the ​second half of ​2026, citing market uncertainties amid the ongoing Middle East ​war.

The telecoms ​group had earlier planned to list Airtel ‌Money ⁠in the first half of this year, but said that rising ​energy ​costs ⁠stemming from the war would ​likely result in ​higher ⁠inflation, which would weigh on its ⁠near-term ​profit margins.

The company controlled by billionaire Sunil Mittal’s Bharti Enterprises Limited could now raise between $1.5 billion and $2 billion selling shares in London, from a previously expected $4 billion.

London emerged as the most likely venue, although exchanges in the United Arab Emirates (UAE) and other parts of Europe have also been considered.

The delay will make it possible to finalise decisions on timing, valuation, and location.

The planned IPO reflects a broader strategy by Airtel Africa to unlock value from its mobile money unit, which has become a key growth driver as traditional telecom revenues face pressure.

Airtel Africa, which operates in 14 countries and is dual-listed in London and Lagos, is majority-owned by Indian billionaire Sunil Mittal through Bharti Enterprises.

The group has long signalled plans to spin off or list Airtel Money after years of rapid expansion as the mobile money sector in Africa continues to expand rapidly, driven by a young population increasingly adopting technology for financial services, making the continent a key market for fintech companies.

In September 2025, the telco reportedly picked Citigroup Incorporated as advisors for the planned IPO, which will see Airtel Money become a standalone entity before it can attain the prestige of trading on a stock exchange.

Estimating Airtel Money at around $2 billion is lower than its valuation of $2.65 billion in 2021. In 2021, Airtel Money received significant investments, including $200 million from TPG Incorporated at a valuation of $2.65 billion and $100 million from Mastercard. Later that same year, an affiliate of Qatar’s sovereign wealth fund also acquired an undisclosed stake in the unit.

Its customer base is over 52 million, compared to around 44.6 million users it had as of June 2025.

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

Why Nigeria’s $46.7 Billion War Chest Is a Game Changer for Forex Traders

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HFM forex trading platform

Nigeria’s foreign reserves rising to the $46.7 billion area has changed the mood around the naira. For a country that has spent years fighting dollar shortages, parallel market pressure, and nervous investor sentiment, that number feels like more than a headline. It feels like a cushion the market can finally see. Channels Television reported that Nigeria’s external reserves reached the $46.7 billion mark, helped by Eurobond proceeds and stronger foreign exchange inflows.

For traders in Lagos, Abuja, Port Harcourt, and Kano, reserves are not just central bank language. They affect liquidity, confidence, pricing, and the way buyers and sellers behave when dollar demand starts rising. A bigger reserve buffer is like extra fuel in the tank during a long trip. You still need good driving, but at least the fear of running empty is lower.

For anyone watching forex in Nigeria, this reserve build up matters because it can change how the market reads the naira. It does not mean the currency suddenly becomes risk free. It means the Central Bank of Nigeria has more room to manage pressure, support orderly trading, and calm panic when the market gets noisy.

Why Bigger Reserves Matter to the Naira

A strong reserve position tells traders that Nigeria has more external firepower. It can help the central bank meet foreign currency needs, manage short term shocks, and give investors more confidence that the country can handle external obligations.

Confidence Can Shift Market Behaviour

Currency markets run on confidence as much as numbers. When reserves are weak, importers may rush to buy dollars early because they fear scarcity. When reserves look stronger, that panic can reduce. You might see calmer pricing, narrower spreads, and fewer wild reactions to every rumour.

That is important in Nigeria, where the official and parallel markets have often moved with different moods. Stronger reserves can help traders believe that the market is less vulnerable to sudden stress.

The Central Bank Has More Room to Act

Reuters reported that Nigeria’s net foreign exchange reserves jumped to $34.8 billion by the end of 2025, while gross reserves also improved sharply. The Central Bank of Nigeria linked that improvement to stronger inflows, better reserves management, and reforms aimed at restoring confidence in the currency market.

That gives the central bank more room to guide the market. Not unlimited room, of course. But enough to make speculators think twice before betting too aggressively against the naira.

What This Means for Nigerian Traders

For traders, the biggest change is not just the reserve number itself. It is what the number may do to expectations. In forex, expectation can move price before policy does.

Naira Volatility May Become More Manageable

When reserves are healthier, the naira may still move, but the moves can become less disorderly. Traders may find that sudden panic spikes become less frequent if the market believes dollar supply is improving.

This matters for short term traders who watch intraday movement. It also matters for businesses that need to plan import payments. A trader in Lagos tracking USDNGN knows that confidence can change fast, but a stronger reserve position can make the market feel less like a guessing game.

Liquidity Is Still the Real Test

A reserve buffer only becomes meaningful when it improves actual access to dollars. Reuters reported that the CBN approved weekly foreign currency sales of up to $150,000 to licensed bureau de change operators as part of efforts to improve liquidity and broaden access to foreign exchange.

That is where traders should stay alert. If reserves rise but market access stays tight, pressure can return. The real question is simple: are dollars reaching the market smoothly?

Why This Is Bigger Than One Currency Pair

Nigeria’s reserve strength does not only affect USDNGN. It can shape inflation expectations, import costs, investor flows, and even sentiment toward local assets.

Importers May Feel Less Pressure

Many Nigerian businesses rely on imported goods, machinery, fuel, medicine, electronics, and raw materials. When dollar supply improves, pricing pressure can ease. It may not happen overnight, but it can reduce the sense of panic that often filters into consumer prices.

Think of a spare parts dealer in Ladipo or a medicine importer in Lagos. If dollar access becomes more predictable, pricing decisions become easier. That can slowly help business planning.

Investors Watch the Same Signal

Foreign investors also watch reserves closely. Stronger reserves suggest better external stability, and that can make Nigerian assets look less risky. It does not erase concerns about inflation, policy consistency, or oil production, but it helps the story.

For traders, this means reserves can influence more than the chart. They can affect the entire mood around Nigerian markets.

Conclusion

Nigeria’s $46.7 billion reserve war chest is a game changer because it gives the naira something markets always respect: backing. It can improve confidence, reduce panic demand, support liquidity efforts, and make traders rethink one way bets against the currency.

Still, reserves are not a magic shield. Oil earnings, dollar demand, inflation, policy discipline, and investor trust still matter. The smartest Nigerian traders will not treat this as a reason to relax. They will treat it as a signal to watch the market more closely, because when confidence returns, currency behaviour can change quickly.

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Economy

Champion Breweries Better Positioned to Capitalise on Emerging Opportunities

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champion breweries 50th agm

By Aduragbemi Omiyale

Shareholders of Champion Breweries Plc have been given the assurance to enjoy more value for investment in the brewery giant because of the strategies put in place by the board and management.

The chairman of Champion Breweries, Mr Imo-Abasi Jacob, while speaking at the recently-concluded landmark 50th Annual General Meeting (AGM) of the organisation in Uyo, Akwa-Ibom State, stressed that the firm was now “better positioned to navigate future uncertainties and capitalise on emerging opportunities.”

He further said, “Champion Breweries Plc now operates from a more stable and resilient platform, characterised by improved profitability, a strengthened capital base, and a clearer strategic direction.”

According to him, the performance of the company in the first quarter of 2026 attests to this fact, as it sustained its growth momentum, with a 69 per cent year-on-year increase in revenue to N14.36 billion, while operating profit rose to approximately N3.02 billion, driven by improved efficiency and disciplined cost management.

Despite softer consumer demand and lower domestic volumes, Champion Breweries maintained a strong gross profit margin of 48 per cent, while profit after tax stood at approximately N881 million.

In the 2025 fiscal year, the organisation grew its revenue by 43 per cent to N29.80 billion, while post-tax profit rose by 119 per cent to N1.79 billion, reflecting the success of its margin-led growth strategy.

This sterling performance inspired the board to declare a dividend of 7 Kobo per share, which was approved by shareholders at the AGM.

Mr Jacob described the financial year as a defining phase in the company’s evolution, noting that it successfully transitioned from recovery into a stronger growth phase, driven by improved profitability, disciplined operations, strategic capital raising, and expansion initiatives.

“The year under review represents a defining phase in the company’s evolution, one in which Champion Breweries Plc transitioned from a position of recovery to one of measurable growth, strengthened profitability, and strategic repositioning,” he said.

He noted that the firm’s successful rights issue strengthened its capital structure, broadened shareholder participation, and reinforced investor confidence in its long-term strategy.

“Our successful engagement with the capital market during the year was not only a strategic financing milestone, but also a strong vote of confidence from shareholders and stakeholders in the future of Champion Breweries Plc,” he stated.

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Economy

Sunu Assurances Extends Closure of N9.3bn Rights Issue to June 3

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SUNU Assurances Nigeria

By Aduragbemi Omiyale

The deadline for the N9.34 billion rights issue of Sunu Assurances Nigeria Plc has been extended to Wednesday, June 3, 2026.

This followed the approval granted by the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) for the company to shift the closure date by two weeks.

Business Post reports that the exercise was initially scheduled to end on Wednesday, May 20, 2026, but the apex regulatory agency in the Nigerian capital market has allowed the rights issue to now close next Wednesday.

The Sunu Assurances rights issue opened on Monday, April 13, 2026, and the organisation is offering 2,075,285,714 ordinary shares of 50 Kobo each at N4.50 per share on the basis of five new ordinary shares for every existing 14 ordinary shares held as of the close of business on Thursday, February 12, 2026.

Funds from the rights issue will be used by the non-life insurer to meet the N15 billion minimum capital requirement introduced under the Nigerian Insurance Industry Reform Act (NIIRA) 2025.

The National Insurance Commission (NAICOM) has directed operators in the country’s underwriting sector to shore up their capital base on or before July 31, 2026.

“We are positioning early to meet the new benchmark and enhance our capacity to underwrite larger and more complex risks,” the company’s chairman, Mr Kyari Abba Bukar, stated.

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