Economy
Supply Glut Worries Weaken Oil Prices
By Adedapo Adesanya
Oil prices settled 1 per cent lower on Tuesday as investors worried about a supply glut after Iranian and US delegations made progress in their talks, with Brent crude losing 65 cents or 1 per cent to close at $64.09 per barrel and the US West Texas Intermediate (WTI) crude declining by 64 cents or 1.04 per cent to sell for $60.89 a barrel.
Iranian and US delegations wrapped up a fifth round of talks in Rome last week, signaling that some form of co-operation is ongoing.
While signs of limited progress emerged, there were many points of disagreement that were hard to breach, notably the issue of Iran’s uranium enrichment.
If nuclear talks between the US and Iran fail, it could mean continued sanctions on Iran, which would limit Iranian oil supply, while any resolution could add Iranian supply to the market.
Meanwhile, there are expectations that the Organisation of the Petroleum Exporting Countries and its allies (OPEC+) will decide to increase output at a meeting this week.
Another meeting on Saturday is likely to agree to a further accelerated oil output hike for July.
The United Arab Emirates (UAE), a member of the alliance, said the group must consider rising oil demand when it makes decisions about production levels.
The OPEC+ alliance is doing its best to balance the oil market, UAE’s Energy Minister Suhail, Mr Mohamed Al Mazrouei said at an Abu Dhabi forum on Tuesday.
“But it is not enough only this group, we need the help of others, and we need to be mindful of the demand,” Mr Al Mazrouei added.
OPEC+ has already announced two consecutive production increases for May and June, each of 411,000 barrels per day, triple the volume the group had previously planned.
Another 411,000 barrels per day output hike is among the options which the OPEC+ member countries that have been withholding output are discussing for the July production.
Supporting prices, US President Donald Trump’s decision to extend trade talks with the European Union (EU) until July 9 alleviated immediate fears of tariffs that could suppress fuel demand.
Market analysts noted that while easing trade concerns were supportive, prices remain limited until it is clear what OPEC+ will decide on Saturday.
Also helping prices, a wildfire in the Canadian province of Alberta prompted the temporary shutdown of some oil and gas production.
Economy
Renaissance Hits Oil in OML 74 Exploration Well to Lift Nigeria’s Production Outlook
By Adedapo Adesanya
Nigerian domestic oil producer Renaissance Energy has recorded its first major oil discovery since taking over Oil Mining Lease (OML) 74 last year, following the successful drilling of an exploration well offshore Nigeria in a development that could support the country’s efforts to boost crude oil production and replenish reserves.
Preliminary results showed about 1,000 feet (305 metres) of crude oil-bearing reservoirs across seven zones, with data and fluid tests confirming light oil in high-quality reservoirs, Renaissance said in a statement, without providing further details.
OML 74 is a large shallow-water block in the eastern Niger Delta off Nigeria’s coast and holds at least eight previously undeveloped discoveries.
Renaissance, which now owns Shell’s former onshore and shallow-water assets, operates Nigeria’s largest upstream joint venture with 18 oil leases, two export terminals and a FPSO vessel in the oil-rich delta.
Commenting on Tuesday, Mr Tony Attah, the managing director/chief executive of Renaissance, said the discovery reflects the company’s renewed focus on exploration and its commitment to boosting Nigeria’s long-term oil production.
“The success of JK-004, just over one year after assuming operatorship of these assets, demonstrates the strength of our exploration programme,” he said.
He lauded the Nigeria Upstream Petroleum Regulatory Commission (NUPRC), adding that the exploration performance reflected the collaboration with the company’s joint venture partners comprising the Nigerian National Petroleum Company Limited (NNPC), TotalEnergies Limited and Agip Energy and Natural Resources.
He added that the NNPC Group Chief Executive Officer, Mr Bayo Ojulari, and the Executive Vice President, Upstream, Mr Udobong Ntia, provided the needed strategic guidance with commitment for value delivery across the joint venture assets.
On his part, the Vice President of Exploration and Chief Explorer at Renaissance, Mr Johnbosco Uche, said the exploration success was due to the company’s subsurface excellence, technical rigour, and disciplined approach to reserve replacement.
“The JK-004 well provides a strong foundation for accelerated maturation with clear pathways to early development and value realisation,” the Chief Explorer said, adding that the strategic location of JK-004 near an existing field would enable rapid commercialisation.
The chief executive of the Nigerian Upstream Petroleum Regulatory Commission (NUPRC), Mrs Oritsemeyiwa Eyesan, described the feat as a perfect alignment with the commission’s vision of growing the nation’s reserves “to future-proof sustainable national growth,” and pledged to continue building the enabling regulatory environment required to support the Nigerian oil and gas industry.
Economy
Xenergi Begins Mandatory Takeover of 1.63% Premier Paints Shares
By Aduragbemi Omiyale
The mandatory takeover bid of about 1.63 per cent shares held by minority shareholders of Premier Paints Plc by Xenergi has been launched.
Business Post learned that the exercise will open at 8 am on Monday, July 13, 2026, and close on Friday, August 7, 2026, and it concerns shareholders of Premier Paint, excluding Xenergi Plc, whose names appear in the register of members of Premier Paint on the qualification date, which was Monday, July 6, 2026.
Xenergi is looking to acquire a total of 2 million shares of Premier Paints at N38 per unit, amounting to N76 million.
The reason for this offer is to enable Xenergi comply with Section 142(4) of the ISA Act 2025 and Rules 445 – 448 of the SEC New Rules and Amendment dated August 30, 2021, following its acquisition of a 49.60 per cent majority equity stake in Premier Paint.
On June 8, 2026, Xenergi Plc acquired 61,003,350 ordinary shares in Premier Paint, representing a 49.60 per cent equity stake.
Xenergi Plc and Premier Paint Plc executed a Share Sale and Purchase Agreement detailing the terms and conditions of the acquisition. The acquisition was concluded following receipt of the required regulatory approvals from the Federal Competition & Consumer Protection Commission (FCCPC), the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) and the Nigerian Exchange (NGX) Limited.
In accordance with Section 142(4) of the ISA Act 2025, Xenergi is required to make a takeover bid to all the other shareholders of Premier Paint.
Consequently, on May 25, 2026, the board of Xenergi granted approval for a Takeover to be made to all qualifying shareholders, for the acquisition of the offer shares.
Economy
Tax Reforms Lift Nigeria’s Revenue to N21.6tn in H1 2026
By Adedapo Adesanya
Nigeria generated N21.6 trillion in tax revenue in the first half of 2026, representing a 49 per cent year-on-year increase from the corresponding period of 2025, as recent tax reforms and improved compliance continued to boost government collections.
According to a report by CSL Stockbrokers, the strong performance extends Nigeria’s recent revenue growth trajectory, with total tax collections increasing from N12.3 trillion in 2023 to N21 trillion in 2024 and N28.3 trillion in 2025.
The report attributed the growth to the digitalisation of tax administration through a national electronic invoicing system, the implementation of four tax reform laws that took effect in January 2026, the transition of the Federal Inland Revenue Service (FIRS) to the Nigeria Revenue Service (NRS) with an expanded revenue collection mandate, and stronger compliance across the oil and non-oil sectors.
It also noted that Executive Order 9, signed in February 2026, has strengthened revenue collection by requiring upstream oil and gas companies to remit royalties, taxes and production-sharing contract profit oil directly to the Federation Account.
The report said non-oil taxes accounted for 76 per cent of total NRS collections during the review period, reflecting a gradual broadening of the country’s tax base and reducing dependence on hydrocarbon-related revenues.
It added that the improvement helped raise Nigeria’s tax-to-GDP ratio to 13 per cent from 10.3 per cent, although the figure remains below the government’s medium-term target of 18 per cent and the average recorded by many African peers.
CSL said sustaining the current pace of revenue growth would require continued legislative backing and effective implementation of the new tax framework.
The report recommended incorporating the provisions of Executive Order 9 into permanent legislation through amendments to the Nigeria Tax Administration Act or the Petroleum Industry Act to provide greater legal certainty for upstream revenue remittances.
It also identified nationwide implementation of the new tax laws, wider adoption of electronic invoicing, improved taxpayer compliance and continued digitalisation of tax administration as key measures to support further gains in domestic revenue mobilisation.
According to the report, stronger and more predictable government revenues could improve Nigeria’s fiscal sustainability by narrowing the fiscal deficit while creating additional fiscal space for infrastructure development and social spending, provided expenditure remains disciplined.
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