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Economy

Sterling Holdings, Access Holdings, SET Dominate Activity Chart on NGX

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Sterling Bank

By Dipo Olowookere

The trio of Sterling Holdings, Access Holdings, and Secure Electronic Technology dominated the activity chart of the Nigerian Exchange (NGX) Limited last week.

In the five-day trading week, which ended on Valentine’s Day on Friday, the three stocks accounted for 455.469 million units worth N5.273 billion in 6,654 deals, contributing 18.87 per cent and 9.50 per cent to the total trading volume and value, respectively.

Business Post reports that a total of 2.414 billion shares worth N55.512 billion were traded in 80,988 deals last week compared with the 3.051 billion shares valued at N98.350 billion transacted in 72,535 deals a week earlier.

Financial equities dominated with 1.398 billion units sold for N24.039 billion in 31,919 deals, contributing 57.92 per cent and 43.30 per cent to the total trading volume and value, respectively.

Services shares recorded a turnover of 247.303 million units worth N1.165 billion in 6,277 deals, and consumer goods stocks exchanged 153.776 million units valued at N3.939 billion in 8,405 deals.

The week was bullish, with 65 qppreciating equities versus 58 appreciating equities in the preceding week. A total of 31 shares depreciated compared with 34 shares of the previous week, and 54 stocks closed flat, in contrast to the 58 stocks recorded a week earlier.

Honeywell Flour gained 47.06 per cent to trade at N14.00, UPDC improved by 45.95 per cent to N3.78, VFD Group rose by 30.63 per cent to N58.00, Smart Products Nigeria soared by 30.00 per cent to 26 Kobo, and Sunu Assurances jumped by 27.94 per cent to N6.41.

On the flip side, DAAR Communications depleted by 13.58 per cent to 70 Kobo, International Energy Insurance weakened by 10.80 per cent to N2.23, BUA Foods crumbled by 10.00 per cent to N373.50, Golden Guinea Breweries staggered by 9.91 per cent to N7.09, and Eunisell shrank by 9.67 per cent to N12.05.

When the bourse closed for the week, the All-Share Index (ASI) increased by 2.00 per cent to 108,053.95 points and the market capitalisation went up by 2.78 per cent to N67.418 trillion.

Also, all other indices ended in green territory except the NGX Main Board, banking, AFR Bank Value, AFR Div Yield, MERI Growth, consumer goods and energy sectors, which went down by 0.79 per cent, 0.24 per cent, 0.39 per cent, 1.26 per cent, 1.03 per cent, 3.63 per cent and 2.30 per cent, respectively, while the sovereign bond index closed flat.

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 dipo.olowookere@businesspost.ng

Economy

Nigeria’s Oil Production Drops 64,000b/d to 1.401m/d in April 2025

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libya oil production

By Adedapo Adesanya

Nigeria’s average daily crude oil production declined by 64,000 barrels per day or 4.4 per cent to 1.401 million barrels per day in April 2025 from 1.465 million barrels per day recorded in the preceding month (March).

The Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC) April Monthly Oil Market Report revealed this, saying the numbers are based on direct communication from the producing countries.

The report also indicated that oil production fell by 6.6 per cent below OPEC’s 1.5 million barrels per day quota, and approximately 32 per cent belief of the country’s 2025 budget target of 2.06 million barrels per day.

Nigeria’s persistent shortfalls in meeting government production targets comes from challenges such as underinvestment and rampant oil theft, all contributing to suppressed output.

Nigeria’s oil production peaked at 2.5 million barrels decades ago and despite ambitious 3-4 million barrels promises by subsequent governments, the highest actualisation in recent times have been 1.8 million barrels per day.

The decline in oil production since then and the falling oil prices in the international market are likely to strain fiscal revenues, worsening budgetary pressures

Market analysts have pointed out that this will impact national reserves, thereby reducing the availability of resources for developmental spending.

While the government has no control over global oil prices, it can, to some extent, meet its OPEC production quota.

Therefore, the government must intensify efforts by enforcing stricter penalties for oil theft, while fostering greater collaboration with local communities.

Simultaneously, there is a need to attract investment in the sector by ensuring that regulatory bodies and the judiciary work together to provide an enabling environment for investment and modernisation of oil infrastructure.

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Economy

USDT/Naira Stablecoin Pair Emerges Most Traded on Crypto Exchanges

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USDT-Naira Stablecoin Pair

By Modupe Gbadeyanka

A new report has shown the wide adoption of digital currencies in Nigeria despite efforts by the authorities to discourage the use of crypto.

The Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) has yet to lift the ban of crypto transactions through the banking system in the country after almost five years.

In a report made available to Business Post by a venture capital firm, Hashed Emergent, it was stated that the USDT/Naira stablecoin pair has become the most traded on centralized exchanges, with stablecoin transfers in Nigeria nearing $3 billion in the first quarter of 2024, signalling the practical adoption of blockchain for real-world challenges like inflation and cross-border payments.

Last year, Nigeria ranked second globally for crypto adoption, according to Chainalysis, with $59 billion in crypto value received—$24 billion of that in stablecoins.

Stablecoin trading has overtaken Bitcoin trading on centralized exchanges, reflecting changing behaviour: for many, crypto is not speculative—it’s practical; it is how people hedge against inflation, send money, and make real-world payments.

According to the report, national agencies and multiple state governments are already implementing blockchain-based solutions across areas like identity verification, land registries, education records, and healthcare systems.

These aren’t pilots; they’re operational systems designed to improve transparency, efficiency, and trust in public services.

However, integration into existing public infrastructure remains a key challenge. Many legacy systems lack the technical readiness or interoperability needed for seamless adoption, and institutional capacity gaps—such as limited digital skills and fragmented procurement processes—continue to slow implementation.

Without addressing these bottlenecks, the long-term impact of public sector blockchain adoption may remain limited despite early momentum.

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Economy

ExxonMobil Plans $1.5bn Investment in Usan Deepwater Oil Field

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ExxonMobil PENGASSAN protest

By Adedapo Adesanya

ExxonMobil is planning a $1.5 billion investment in deepwater exploration and development of the Usan oilfield in Nigeria.

The Nigerian Upstream Petroleum Regulatory Commission (NUPRC) revealed this in a statement, noting that commitment will be implemented between this current quarter (Q2 2025) and 2027.

This announcement, it said, was made during a visit by ExxonMobil’s Managing Director in Nigeria, Mr Shane Harris, to the Commission’s Chief Executive of the NUPRC, Mr Gbenga Komolafe.

The company proposed a Final Investment Decision (FID) for late Q3 2025, subject to final Field Development Plan (FDP) approval as well as internal and partner funding approvals, the upstream regulator added.

According to the NUPRC, this is in addition to investment targeted at the accelerated development of the Owowo and Erha deepwater oil fields, amongst others.

Mr Harris, while speaking, stated that the planned capital deployment reflects ExxonMobil’s confidence in Nigeria’s upstream potential and its dedication to playing a pivotal role in the sector’s growth.

He also voiced ExxonMobil’s support for the NUPRC’s “Project 1 Million Barrels” initiative, which aims to increase Nigeria’s crude oil production to 2.4 million barrels per day in the medium term.

The initiative has gotten commitments from other oil firms operating in the country since it was floated last year.

On his part, the NUPRC Chief Executive, Mr Komolafe, welcomed the announcement, reaffirming the NUPRC’s role as a business enabler and pledging regulatory support to facilitate ExxonMobil’s operations.

Mr Komolafe highlighted the importance of sustained collaboration between regulators and investors to meet Nigeria’s production and energy security goals, highlighting compliance with the Domestic Crude Supply Obligation (DCSO) and the need for transparent pricing and accountability in the sector.

“The commission is committed to the implementation of Section 109 of the PIA, which addresses the subject of willing buyer, willing seller, and we urge producers to comply,” he stated.

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