Economy
Flour Mills Shareholders Agree Minority Stocks’ Buyout at N86 Per Share
By Dipo Olowookere
All is now set for the majority shareholders of Flour Mills of Nigeria Plc to acquire the stocks held by minority investors at N86 per unit.
This is because at the 64th Annual General Meeting (AGM) of the company held on Thursday, November 14, 2024, the resolution for the buyout scheme was passed by the shareholders.
At the gathering, the minority shareholders expressed their concerns that the firm could leave Nigeria after the acquisition, but the chairman of the board, Mr John Coumantaros, assured them nothing of such would happen.
According to him, Flour Mills has come to stay in the country no matter the condition, noting that the decision to buyout the minority stocks was for the good of the organisation.
“My late father, Mr George Coumantaros, started this company out of passion and special likeness for the Nigerian spirit which significantly aligns with his boisterous and can-do spirit.
“This passion is what drives me today, to ensure that we continue to grow and expand this business that is left for us not just as an organization and an establishment that will also provide jobs, feed the nation and enrich the lives of our people,” the chairman said at the meeting held in Lagos.
“For your loyalty, we will increase the per-share value to N86 and to reiterate, FMN will not leave Nigeria.
“FMN and Nigeria are inextricably bound together with Nigeria positioned as the headquarters of our pan-African growth story and the centre of excellence as we deepen investment in our different verticals,” Mr Coumantaros assured.
Business Post gathered that Flour Mills is embarking on an ambitious $1 billion investment plan to expand its presence and impact across the African continent over the next four years, which is anticipated to create new opportunities and unlock value for the company, its employees, and economies throughout Africa.
Beyond Nigeria, the flour miller plans to leverage the opportunities presented by the African Continental Free Trade Agreement (AfCFTA) to expand its reach across the continent, starting with the West Africa region.
Furthermore, its export ambitions is expected to contribute to improving Nigeria’s foreign exchange (FX) flows and boost the country’s export potential.
At the close of transactions on the floor of the Nigerian Exchange (NGX) Limited on Monday, Flour Mills shares depreciated by 1.46 per cent to N77.50 per unit.
Economy
CBN Gives BDC Operators Access to Buy FX from Official Market
By Adedapo Adesanya
The Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) has granted Bureaux de Change (BDC) operators temporary access to the Nigerian Foreign Exchange Market (NAFEM), which is the official market, as part of efforts to further strengthen the Naira in the currency market.
The CBN in a notice on Friday said BDC operators would have access to FX at the official market from December 19, 2024, to January 30, 2025, with a weekly cap of $25,000.
Transactions require upfront funding at prevailing rates and must follow a maximum of 1 per cent spread.
The Naira traded at the spot market at N1,541.38/$1 based on computation on the Bloomberg BMatch system computed by FMDQ Securities Exchange Limited.
The CBN recently launched the Electronic Foreign Exchange Matching System (EFEMS) to build transparency in the system, but this excluded street forex hawkers. This initiative has fortified the value of the Naira against the US Dollar at the official market.
The platform, which became operational on December 2, 2024, has enhanced operational efficiency in Nigeria’s FX market, with banks mandated to be on the system to trade forex.
The EFEMS initiative, according to Mrs Omolara Duke, the CBN’s director of the financial markets department, was designed to ensure “transparent, fair, and efficient FX trading, minimise counterparty risks, and enforce compliance with CBN regulations.”
Between December 2 when the new electronic trading platform commenced and December 19, 2024, the Naira recorded over N250 gain over the Dollar in the official FX market.
The CBN also issued comprehensive guidelines for the operations of the interbank foreign exchange (FX) trading system via EFEMS, pegging the minimum tradable amount at $100,000, with incremental clip sizes of $50,000.00, to promote transparency and efficiency in the FX market.
This development has forced currency speculators and illicit market operators to look elsewhere, pushing up demand to the parallel market and the BDCs.
To further ease the pressure on these unregulated markets, the CBN will allow BDCs to access the market with the hope of checking demand and further supporting the Naira.
Economy
Businesses Foresee Naira Depreciation in Q1 of 2025
By Adedapo Adesanya
A recent survey by the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) says businesses have projected depreciation of the Naira in the first three months of 2025.
In its Business Expectation Survey Report for November 2024, the CBN said despite this expectation, there are several businesses which expressed optimism about the macroeconomic environment.
The report noted that firms’ outlook on the volume of business activities, financial conditions, access to credit, volume of total orders and average capacity utilisation, were pessimistic.
“The overall confidence index (CI) on the macroeconomy indicated that businesses were optimistic in November 2024.
“Businesses expect the Naira to depreciate in the current month, next month and next 3 months but appreciate in the next 6 months,” the report said.
“The optimism on business outlook in the current month is driven by the opinion of respondents from all the sectors.
“The Construction Sector expressed optimism on its operations in the review month.
“The outlook of respondents on the volume of business activities, the volume of total orders, financial conditions, and access to credit were negative in the review month. the volume of business activity respondents expressed optimism on the volume of business activity for the next month and subsequent periods under review,” it added.
The report also showed that businesses hope to employ more workers in the month of December 2024 with the agriculture sector having the highest prospect for expansion.
Meanwhile, the CBN in its latest Consumer Expectation Survey Report said that consumers were pessimistic about the macro economy in November.
According to the CBN report, households projected a rise in the cost of transportation, rent, car/vehicle, house purchase, and medical expenses this month.
The report showed that 61.1 per cent and 57.6 per cent of respondents perceived that prices of non-durable and durable household items, though high, will keep declining this month and next month respectively.
Economy
Nipco, Two Others Revive NASD Index by 0.46%
By Adedapo Adesanya
The NASD Over-the-Counter (OTC) Securities Exchange recorded a 0.46 per cent gain on Thursday, December 19, boosted by three stocks, which closed higher at the close of transactions.
Nipco Plc improved its closing price by N13.64 during the trading day to N150.10 per share compared with the preceding trading day’s N136.46 per share, Geo-Fluids Plc gained 33 Kobo to end the session at N3.88 per unit versus Wednesday’s closing value of N3.55 per unit, and UBN Property Plc appreciated by 16 Kobo to settle at N1.89 per share, in contrast to midweek’s closing price of N1.73 per share.
On the flip side, Industrial and General Insurance (IGI) Plc depreciated by 1 kobo to trade at 17 Kobo per unit compared with the preceding trading session’s 18 Kobo per unit.
At the close of business, the market capitalisation of the bourse increased by N4.73 billion to finish the trading day at N1.034 trillion compared with the midweek trading session’s N1.029 trillion.
In the same vein, the NASD Unlisted Security Index (NSI) went up by 13.77 points to wrap the session at 3,017.07 points compared with 3,003.30 points recorded in the previous session.
On Thursday, the volume of securities traded by investors surged by 603.9 per cent to 2.3 million units from the 59.624 units recorded a day earlier.
However, the value of shares traded yesterday slumped by 48.9 per cent to N2.3 million from N4.6 million as the number of deals declined by 12 per cent to 22 deals from the 25 deals carried out on Wednesday.
Geo-Fluids Plc remained the most active stock by volume (year-to-date) with 1.7 billion units worth N3.9 billion, followed by Okitipupa Plc with 752.3 million units valued at N7.8 billion, and Afriland Properties Plc with 297.7 million units sold for N5.3 million.
Aradel Holdings Plc also remained the most active stock by value (year-to-date) with 108.7 million units valued at N89.2 billion, trailed by Okitipupa Plc with 752.3 million units sold for N7.8 billion, and Afriland Properties Plc with 297.7 million units worth N5.3 billion.
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