Economy
Naira Falls at Official Market, Black Market, Peer-to-Peer
By Adedapo Adesanya
The Naira had a bad day against the Dollar in the different segments of the foreign exchange (FX) market on Tuesday, December 12, amid a shrinking supply of forex into the market as festive activities are gradually picking up.
In the Peer-to-Peer (P2P) section, the Nigerian currency shed N5 against the US Dollar to trade at N1,223/$1 compared with the preceding day’s value of N1,218/$1.
Also, in the parallel market window, the domestic currency depreciated against the American currency by N40 during the trading session to sell at N1,250/$1, in contrast to the previous trading session’s N1,210/$1.
In the Nigerian Autonomous Foreign Exchange Market (NAFEM), the Naira weakened against the greenback yesterday by 0.09 per cent or 74 Kobo to close at N865.03/$1 compared with Monday’s N864.29/$1.
Data from the FMDQ Securities Exchange showed that the value of forex transactions recorded yesterday stood at $99.09 million, 25.2 per cent or $33.37 million lower than the $132.46 million.
However, in the official market, the local currency closed flat against the British Pound Sterling and the Euro during the trading day at N1,269.34/£1 and N1,088.59/€1, respectively.
Meanwhile, in the cryptocurrency market, network activity, an increase in DeFi TVL, and other factors point are helping Cardano (ADA) continue on its current bull run as it rose 9.8 per cent to trade at $0.5977.
The last time Cardano went on this continued price gain, its blockchain network was still behind on smart contract functionality. However, the network has changed since then, with Cardano now one of the fastest-growing blockchains in terms of smart contracts.
Further, Binance Coin (BNB) recorded a 4.8 per cent rise to sell at $253.12, Solana (SOL) jumped by 3.9 per cent to $70.03, Ripple (XRP) appreciated by 0.6 per cent to $0.6222, Litecoin (LTC) grew by 0.3 per cent to quote at $72.70, Dogecoin (DOGE) increased by 0.2 per cent to $0.0962, and Ethereum (ETH) went up by 0.02 per cent to $2,219.06, while Bitcoin (BTC) depreciated by 0.2 per cent to $41,734.50, with the United States Tether (USDT) and US Dollar Coin (USDC) remaining unchanged at $1.00 apiece.
Economy
Federal, State, LG Councils Share N2.3trn FAAC Allocation
By Adedapo Adesanya
The Federation Account Allocation Committee (FAAC) has shared a total of N2.300 trillion among the federal government, state governments, and Local Government Councils from the revenue generated in May 2026.
The amount is slightly higher than the N2.257 trillion distributed last month, according to a statement issued by the Head of Information at the Federal Ministry of Finance, Mrs Efe Ovuakporie.
The FAAC allocation was confirmed at its June 2026 meeting following consideration of revenue receipts for the month of May.
The total distributable revenue of N2.300 trillion comprised N1.611 trillion from statutory revenue and N688.785 billion from Value Added Tax (VAT).
From the distributable amount, the federal government received N818.680 billion, while state governments got N759.141 billion. Local Government Councils were given N534.277 billion, and oil-producing states received N188.132 billion as 13 per cent derivation revenue.
The gross statutory revenue for the month stood at N2.652 trillion, representing an increase of N273.623 billion compared to the N2.378 trillion recorded in April 2026.
FAAC reported significant increases in collections from Companies Income Tax (CIT), Capital Gains Tax (CGT), Stamp Duties, Petroleum Profit Tax (PPT), Hydrocarbon Tax (HT), and oil royalties during the period under review.
However, collections from Import Duty, Value Added Tax (VAT), Excise Duty, and Common External Tariff (CET) levies recorded declines compared to the previous month.
Gross VAT revenue for May 2026 stood at N743.668 billion, lower than the N806.617 billion collected in April 2026.
The committee noted that despite the decline in VAT collections, overall revenue performance for the month was strengthened by improved receipts from petroleum-related taxes and Companies Income Tax.
Economy
NGX Suspends Trading in Fortis Global Insurance Equities
By Aduragbemi Omiyale
Trading in the equities of Fortis Global Insurance Plc on the floor of the Nigerian Exchange (NGX) Limited has been suspended.
The action was taken on Wednesday, June 17, 2026, by the regulatory subsidiary of the NGX Group Plc, NGX Regulation (NGX RegCo) Limited.
It was to prevent investors from buying and selling the company’s securities on the stock market ahead of its share reconstruction.
According to a circular signed by the Head of Issuer Regulation Department of NGX RegCo, Mr Godstime Iwenekhai, the suspension is also to determine the shareholders who are entitled to receive the reconstructed shares.
“Trading license holders and the investing public are hereby notified that trading in the shares of Fortis Global Insurance Plc was suspended on Wednesday, June 17, 2026.
“The suspension is necessary to prevent trading in the shares of Fortis Global Insurance Plc to enable the Company’s Registrars and the Central Securities Clearing System Plc (CSCS) to reconcile their books for the listing of the reconstructed shares on Nigerian Exchange Limited (NGX).
“The suspension is also required for the purpose of determining the shareholders who are entitled to receive the reconstructed shares,” the notice stated.
Economy
NUPRC, NRS to Strengthen Oil Revenue Collection
By Modupe Gbadeyanka
Efforts are being made to deepen collaboration to promote transparency and accountability in the collection of oil and gas revenue in Nigeria.
Two key organisations involved in this, the Nigerian Upstream Petroleum Regulatory Commission (NUPRC) and the Nigeria Revenue Service (NRS), recently held a strategic meeting to further work on ways to achieve this goal.
The chief executive of NUPRC, Mrs Oritsemeyiwa Eyesan, was at the headquarters of the tax-collecting agency in Abuja on Wednesday.
In discussions with the chairman of NRS, Mr Zacch Adedeji, she praised him for driving reforms that culminated in the enactment of the NRS Act.
Speaking on the transfer of revenue collection responsibilities, Mrs Eyesan said the process had been seamless, highlighting her organisation’s efforts to create an enabling environment for operators in the oil and gas industry.
She further revealed that Nigeria had the potential to produce 1.9 million barrels per day, having hit a peak production of 1.86 million barrels per day in May.
In his response, the NRS chairman praised NUPRC for its dynamism, professionalism and transparency, promising continued collaboration with the commission, particularly on matters relating to the transfer of revenue collection functions under the new Act.
“I collect revenue. I don’t generate revenue. Wherever revenue is, I work on it and keep an account for you. So, I’m helping you to collect your royalties,” Mr Adedeji said.
He pledged that the NRS would continue to support the commission to achieve its shared objective of increasing government revenues in a fair, transparent and sustainable manner.
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