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Month: December 2025

Governor Zulum Approves N706.5 Million Scholarship Package for Borno Students

  • dollaers
  • December 2, 2025
  • Scholarships / Financial Aid
  • 0 comments

The Borno State Government has taken another significant step in strengthening its education sector, as Governor Babagana Umara Zulum has approved a fresh scholarship allocation worth N706.5 million to support students studying within Nigeria and abroad.

The announcement, made in Maiduguri on Monday by Dr. Bala Isa, Executive Secretary of the Borno State Scholarship Board, underscores the administration’s continued investment in human capital development and its commitment to ensuring that every willing and qualified student has access to learning opportunities.

According to Isa, the newly approved funding covers multiple categories of beneficiaries and is designed to take immediate effect. He emphasized that Governor Zulum’s initiative reflects the state’s long-standing objective of rebuilding and empowering its youthful population after years of insurgency-related setbacks.

Support for Orphans, Special Scholarship Beneficiaries, and Repatriated Students

The scholarship package has been structured to accommodate students across diverse programs and backgrounds. A major portion of the approval will support 300 orphans of fallen members of the Civilian Joint Task Force (CJTF)—a group whose contributions have been instrumental in assisting state and federal security agencies in combating Boko Haram terrorism.

Additionally, the funds will cover:

  • 206 students of the Federal University of Health Sciences, Azare, under the Borno State Special Scholarship Scheme.

  • 34 students of Al-Ansar University, Maiduguri.

  • Repatriated Borno students from Sudan, who returned to Nigeria following the crisis in that country and require financial support to regain academic stability.

Isa noted that these interventions are not merely financial commitments but are symbolic of the government’s recognition of the sacrifices of security volunteers, as well as its determination to ensure continuous learning for youths affected by regional or international instability.

Expanded Coverage for Nursing and Postgraduate STEM Students

A substantial part of the scholarship allocation has also been dedicated to improving health-related education and meeting the state’s future workforce needs.

According to the Executive Secretary:

  • 104 nursing students at the College of Nursing Sciences, Maiduguri preparing for their professional examinations will receive scholarship support.

  • 523 nursing students will receive a five-month upkeep allowance.

  • 304 postgraduate students pursuing Science, Technology, Engineering and Mathematics (STEM) programs in various Nigerian universities will benefit from the second tranche of their scholarship payments.

Isa explained that these targeted investments are aligned with Borno State’s broader strategy to rebuild its healthcare system and strengthen technical capacity across critical sectors. With the state continuing major reconstruction efforts after years of insurgency, equipping young professionals with relevant skills remains a priority.

Education as a Pillar of Reconstruction

Speaking further on the significance of the scholarship program, Isa said the intervention is a cornerstone in the state’s ongoing reconstruction, rehabilitation, and resettlement agenda.

“This financial intervention by His Excellency underscores the central role education plays in stabilizing and rebuilding Borno,” he stated. “It sends a clear message that no student will be left behind and that every young person committed to learning will be supported.”

He reassured that the Scholarship Board is committed to transparency, accountability, and prompt disbursement, ensuring that every approved beneficiary receives their allocation without delay.

Context: Borno’s Multi-Billion Naira Scholarship Investments

The latest approval builds on the state’s substantial education spending in recent years. In 2024, the government disbursed more than N9.7 billion in scholarships for both local and international students, reflecting Governor Zulum’s far-reaching education and workforce development strategy.

The 2024 interventions included:

  • N4.29 billion for over 30,000 undergraduates in Nigerian universities studying Medicine, Nursing, Engineering, Law, and Sciences.

  • N382 million for 335 postgraduate STEM students in local institutions.

  • N2.32 billion for 132 undergraduates in Medicine and Engineering programs in China and Egypt.

  • N2.69 billion for 287 postgraduate STEM students in India and Malaysia.

Current international beneficiaries span multiple countries, including India, Malaysia, China, and Egypt. Notably, these include:

  • 10 medical students at Jinzhou Medical University,

  • 30 at Anhui Medical University, and

  • 50 engineering students across various Chinese universities.

Locally, beneficiaries include nearly 1,000 nursing students in Maiduguri, 94 students at the University of Maiduguri Teaching Hospital, and 392 students at the Federal Polytechnic, Monguno.

Nigeria’s Public Debt Rises to N152.39 Trillion in Q2 2025 — NBS

  • dollaers
  • December 2, 2025
  • Debt
  • 0 comments

Nigeria’s total public debt stock continued its upward trajectory in the second quarter of 2025, reaching N152.39 trillion, according to newly released figures by the National Bureau of Statistics (NBS). The report, published on Monday, shows that the country’s total debt grew by 2.01% quarter-on-quarter, up from N149.38 trillion recorded in Q1 2025.

This latest increase underscores Nigeria’s deepening fiscal concerns, driven by expanding domestic and external borrowing needs, continuous revenue shortages, and structural inefficiencies hampering debt sustainability.

Breakdown of External and Domestic Debt

The NBS highlighted that Nigeria’s external debt climbed to N71.84 trillion (approximately $46.98 billion) in Q2 2025. Meanwhile, domestic debt rose to N80.55 trillion (about $52.67 billion).

In naira terms, external obligations accounted for 47.14% of total public debt, while domestic borrowings made up 52.86%. Analysts note that this split reflects the Federal Government’s attempt to maintain a balance between relatively cheaper foreign loans and the more predictable, but costlier, domestic debt instruments.

State-by-State Debt Distribution

The report also provided a detailed subnational breakdown of indebtedness.

Lagos State retained its position as the country’s most indebted state domestically, with a debt portfolio of N1.04 trillion in Q2 2025. It was followed by Rivers State, whose domestic debt stood at N364.39 billion. These two states, both major economic hubs, have consistently topped the debt charts due to their extensive infrastructure plans and large-scale development financing needs.

On the opposite end of the spectrum, Jigawa State recorded the lowest domestic debt at N852.49 million, followed by Ondo State, with N10.64 billion.

In terms of external subnational debt, Lagos again led with $1.04 billion, followed by Kaduna State with $658.70 million. The Federal Capital Territory (FCT) reported the lowest external debt figure at $19.26 million.

Federal Government Borrowed N6.17 Trillion in Six Months

Further insights from the Debt Management Office (DMO) reveal that the Federal Government borrowed heavily from the domestic market in the first half of 2025, securing N6.17 trillion within the six-month period.

Of this amount, N4.48 trillion was raised in Q1 2025, with an additional N1.70 trillion sourced in Q2. The borrowings were mobilized through traditional domestic instruments such as:

  • FGN Bonds,

  • Nigerian Treasury Bills (NTBs), and

  • Promissory Notes (P-Notes).

The Q2 borrowing figure represents a 2.26% increase compared to the previous quarter, marking continued fiscal pressures as the government seeks resources to finance budget deficits and critical expenditures.

Debt Service Burden Intensifies

Nigeria’s external debt service costs remain elevated. Nairametrics earlier reported that the country spent $932.1 million on external debt servicing in Q2 2025 alone.

A breakdown from the DMO shows that:

  • Multilateral lenders received $629.38 million—roughly 68% of all external debt service payments.

  • Bilateral creditors, including JICA, China Development Bank (CDB), and Agence Française de Développement (AFD), were paid $41.18 million collectively.

  • Commercial lenders, such as Eurobond holders and Unicredit SPA, received a total of $261.55 million.

The data highlights the mounting pressure of debt servicing on Nigeria’s already constrained revenue base.

Growing Concerns Over Debt Sustainability

Economic and capital-market experts continue to sound the alarm over Nigeria’s growing debt load. Speaking at the Capital Market Academics of Nigeria (CMAN) Q4 2025 Virtual Symposium, analysts warned that the country’s public debt profile is approaching unsustainable territory.

They noted that despite the government’s insistence that Nigeria’s debt-to-GDP ratio remains within global limits, the real challenge lies in:

  • weak and insufficient government revenues,

  • rising interest and debt-service obligations, and

  • persistent structural bottlenecks that limit fiscal flexibility.

These factors, experts caution, could erode Nigeria’s long-term financial stability and complicate future borrowing efforts.

Kaduna Governor Uba Sani Presents N985.9 Billion “People-Oriented” 2026 Budget to State Assembly

  • dollaers
  • December 2, 2025
  • Budget
  • 0 comments

Kaduna State Governor, Senator Uba Sani, on Monday laid before the Kaduna State House of Assembly a N985.9 billion Appropriation Bill for the 2026 fiscal year, describing it as one of the most people-focused and development-driven budgets the state has ever produced. The proposed spending plan—nearly N200 billion higher than the N790 billion budget for 2025—seeks to consolidate gains in security, infrastructure, education, healthcare, and rural development while deepening inclusive governance across all local government areas.

Presenting the budget at the historic Lugard Hall in Kaduna, the Governor emphasized that the exercise was far more than a constitutional obligation. It was, according to him, “a solemn civic engagement anchored on transparency, equity, accountability, and the welfare of every resident of Kaduna State.” He added that the 2026 proposal embodies renewal, resilience, and a far-reaching vision for progress in every home, ward, and community.

A Budget Built on Unprecedented Consultations

Governor Sani disclosed that the 2026 draft budget went through one of the broadest multi-level consultative processes ever implemented in Kaduna State. Stakeholders who shaped the fiscal plan included traditional rulers, civil society groups, women and youth associations, academics, business leaders, religious leaders, and vulnerable groups such as persons with disabilities and widows.

Engagements were conducted across all 23 local government areas, ensuring that grassroots concerns—from farmers to artisans, traders, teachers, and rural households—were directly reflected in the final document. The Governor said this approach strengthens participatory democracy and gives citizens a stronger sense of ownership over the state’s development priorities.

Budget Structure and Sectoral Allocation

The Appropriation Bill forecasts N734.2 billion in recurrent revenue and N251.6 billion in capital receipts. In line with the administration’s focus on long-term development, capital expenditure accounts for 71% of the total budget.

Sectoral allocations include:

  • Education – 25%

  • Infrastructure – 25%

  • Health – 15%

  • Agriculture – 11%

  • Security – 6%

  • Social Development – 5%

  • Governance – 5%

  • Climate Action – 4%

As part of its community empowerment and grassroots development strategy, the government earmarked N100 million for each of Kaduna’s 255 wards under the Ward Development Committee initiative. Sani described it as the largest grassroots budgeting model in Nigeria, enabling communities to identify and execute projects that directly address their most urgent needs.

Review of 2025: Achievements Despite Headwinds

Governor Sani highlighted several notable achievements in the 2025 fiscal year, despite economic challenges, fluctuating federal allocations, and significant security concerns.

In the area of security, he said Kaduna had made measurable progress in combating banditry, kidnapping, and communal tensions. Many previously unsafe farmlands and schools were reopened, and peacebuilding interventions under the Kaduna Peace Model helped restore stability across volatile hotspots.

Infrastructure development also accelerated. The state is currently executing 140 road projects spanning 1,335 kilometers, with 64 already completed. These new roads have begun unlocking economic corridors and reconnecting rural communities neglected for decades.

The transport sector recorded major reforms, including:

  • The upcoming Kaduna Bus Rapid Transit (KBRT) system—Northern Nigeria’s first—featuring CNG-powered buses and digital ticketing.

  • An interstate bus terminal in Kakuri (75% completed).

  • A subsidised transport scheme that has saved residents over N500 million.

  • Continued progress on the Kaduna Light Rail Project, with Phase I covering Rigachikun–Sabon Tasha and Phase II connecting Millennium City–Rigasa.

  • Construction of new bus parks across the metropolis.

Agriculture and Food Security Gains

Agricultural investments surged from N1.4 billion in 2023 to N74.2 billion in 2025, enabling large-scale recovery of over 500,000 hectares of abandoned farmland. Farmers also benefited from expanded irrigation support, livestock vaccination campaigns, mechanisation programmes, seed distribution, and more than 900 truckloads of free fertiliser.

The Governor highlighted the state’s participation in the $510 million AfDB-supported Special Agro-Industrial Processing Zone, which positions Kaduna as a leading agro-industrial centre in West Africa.

Education and Health: Central Pillars of Human Capital Development

The administration recorded significant strides in education. In 2025 alone:

  • 535 schools were reopened,

  • 300,000 out-of-school children returned to classrooms,

  • 736 new classrooms were built,

  • 1,220 classrooms were renovated,

  • Over 33,000 teachers received training, and

  • New bilingual and vocational schools were established.

In the health sector, all 255 Primary Healthcare Centres were upgraded to Level 2 status, while 15 general hospitals were renovated and five more completed. The state also commissioned the 300-bed Bola Tinubu Specialist Hospital and implemented the CONMESS and CONHESS wage structures. Additional investments went into emergency response systems, oxygen plants, digital medical warehousing, and a N1 billion health insurance subsidy for vulnerable families.

Assembly Commends Proposal

Responding on behalf of the legislature, Speaker Yusuf Liman praised the budget as ambitious, comprehensive, and development-focused. He commended the Governor for empowering lawmakers with greater involvement in constituency projects—a first in Kaduna’s political history—and promised a thorough and transparent review process.

He assured residents that the Assembly would work harmoniously with the Executive to fast-track reforms and ensure balanced, statewide development.

Nigerian Stocks Start December in the Red as Market Sheds N200 Billion

  • dollaers
  • December 2, 2025
  • Stocks
  • 0 comments

The Nigerian equities market opened the new month on a distinctly bearish note, extending the cautious sentiment that has shaped trading in recent weeks. On the first trading day of December, the market lost a total of N200 billion in value, reinforcing concerns that the year-end period may be dominated by profit-taking and thin liquidity.

The benchmark All-Share Index (ASI) fell by 0.22% to close at 143,210.33 points, dragging year-to-date (YTD) performance down to 39.14%, compared to 39.44% at the end of the previous trading week. Market capitalization also slipped by N197.32 billion, settling at N91.09 trillion as sell-side pressure continued to outweigh bullish interest.

Selloffs in Key Blue-Chip Stocks Drive Market Lower

The downtrend was fuelled by notable declines across several heavyweight counters. International Breweries (INTBREW) led the losers with a steep 10.00% fall, followed by Dangote Sugar (-1.61%) and WAPCO (-0.45%). Losses in these stocks erased the modest gains recorded by some financial and consumer names such as UBA (+1.51%), Champion Breweries (+8.11%), and AIICO Insurance (+6.34%).

The broader market weakness also tracked lower activity levels, as total traded volume dipped by 19.74%, while traded value fell by 6.82%. Despite the overall drop in turnover, Cornerstone Insurance emerged as the most actively traded stock, with a massive 908.82 million units exchanged—valued at N4.59 billion—as the counter continued to witness speculative movements following last week’s accumulation by institutional players.

Key Market Indicators at a Glance

  • All-Share Index (ASI): -0.22% to 143,210.33 points

  • Market Capitalization: -0.22% to N91.09 trillion

  • Year-to-Date Return: 39.14%

  • Volume of Trades: Down 19.74% to 466.18 million units

  • Value of Trades: Down 6.62% to N18.67 billion

  • Total Deals: Up 40.26% to 28,956

  • Gainers: 19

  • Losers: 26

Top Gainers

  • NCR: +9.97% to N60.10

  • Sunassur: +9.18% to N4.28

  • Champion Breweries: +8.11% to N14.00

  • Mecure: +7.58% to N29.80

  • Guinea Insurance: +7.27% to N1.18

Top Losers

  • International Breweries: -10.00% to N10.35

  • RT Briscoe: -9.80% to N3.10

  • Cornerstone Insurance: -7.83% to N5.53

  • DAAR Communications: -6.52% to N0.86

  • Regalis: -4.81% to N0.99

Market Breadth Turns Negative as Decliners Outnumber Advancers

Market breadth closed in the negative territory, with 26 losers against 19 gainers, reflecting broad investor caution. The selloffs were particularly intense in the Consumer Goods and Insurance sectors.

International Breweries suffered the sharpest decline, reinforcing the pressure that has trailed breweries amid rising costs and competitive headwinds. RT Briscoe and Cornerstone Insurance, which had seen significant demand last week, also came under heavy profit-taking.

Despite the gloomy tone, the market still recorded notable block trades in key banking stocks. Institutional investors showed continued interest in counters such as Wema Bank, AccessCorp, Fidelity Bank, and Zenith Bank, pointing to a selective accumulation strategy even in a cooling market.

Context: A Reversal From Last Week’s Gains

The negative start to December contrasts with the performance recorded on November 28, when the market gained N180 billion amid mild recovery across Consumer Goods (+0.57%), Banking (+0.25%), and Industrial Goods sectors. However, the Insurance sector—despite contributing the highest turnover—remained under pressure, signalling structural fragilities and high speculative trading activity.

Bearish Mood Persists Into the New Month

Monday’s downturn reinforces the broader bearish momentum that has shaped the market in recent weeks. With liquidity tightening ahead of year-end and investors showing greater sensitivity to valuation risks, analysts expect a mixed trading pattern in the days ahead—dominated by short-term repositioning, selective accumulation, and periodic profit-taking.

The market’s ability to rebound may depend heavily on macroeconomic signals, institutional flows, and sentiment around key financial and industrial stocks.

Ellah Lakes’ N235 Billion Public Offer: Strategic Masterstroke or a Costly Leap of Faith?

  • dollaers
  • December 1, 2025
  • Business, Investment
  • 0 comments

Ellah Lakes Plc has launched one of the most ambitious capital-raising efforts on the Nigerian capital market in 2025: a public offer of 18.8 billion shares aimed at raising N235 billion. The proceeds are dedicated entirely to the acquisition of Agro-Allied Resources & Processing Nigeria Ltd (ARPN), a move the company believes will transform it into a major agro-industrial powerhouse.

The offer, which opened on 10 November at N12.50 per share, is scheduled to close on 5 December 2025. Investor sentiment has been lively. The stock price rose from N11.05 on the offering day to N13.85 last week, signalling optimism about the growth potential this acquisition could unlock for Ellah Lakes.

A Transformative Asset—What ARPN Brings to the Table

For Ellah Lakes, ARPN represents immediate scale, real operations, and tangible cash flow—three critical ingredients the company has historically lacked. Over the last twelve months, ARPN generated N1.62 billion in revenue and N335 million in net profit. The company controls more than 22,000 hectares of land and operates integrated processing facilities, with strong commercial relationships including a notable supply chain link with Dufil Prima Foods, a major FMCG player.

Depending on the final subscription level, the acquisition could reshape Ellah Lakes almost overnight. The company’s revenue base could expand more than twentyfold. Combined pre-offer assets amount to roughly N81 billion, with minimal debt exposure of under N500 million. Once the N235 billion equity injection is added, Ellah Lakes’ shareholders’ funds would rise from N36.5 billion to well above N271 billion. Total assets would grow to N316 billion, placing the company among Nigeria’s most well-capitalized agro-industrial firms.

ARPN’s financial outlook further strengthens the appeal. The company is projected to deliver N2.25 billion in tax-adjusted EBIT and N2.74 billion in free cash flow by 2026, with revenue forecast to reach as high as N76 billion by 2030. Its vertically integrated operations—from plantation to processing—offer cost efficiencies, yield stability, and scalability.

The Valuation Puzzle: Rational or Excessive?

Yet, the opportunity comes with significant valuation questions. ARPN’s acquisition price, slightly above N200 billion, assumes rapid growth, sustained profitability, and timely expansion of its 30MT/hr mill—an ambitious target for a business that only turned profitable in 2025.

Furthermore, ARPN’s valuation was determined using a steep 24.2% discount rate, underscoring the level of market-perceived risk. Although ARPN’s N32 billion debt will not transfer to Ellah Lakes, the blended cost of capital for the merged entity still hovers around 22%—a demanding hurdle rate. Simply put, the combined company must execute flawlessly to justify the price being paid. Any delays, operational hiccups, or weaker-than-expected yields could erode shareholder value.

This makes the acquisition both strategically compelling and financially precarious. The deal clearly fits Ellah Lakes’ long-term vision, but the margin for error is exceptionally narrow.

Ellah Lakes’ Existing Valuation: A Company Betting on the Future

A close look at Ellah Lakes’ current valuation reveals a simple truth: investors are not paying for the company as it is today but for what it hopes to become. Without ARPN, the valuation appears stretched. With ARPN, the growth narrative becomes credible. The acquisition is not one option among many—it is the backbone of Ellah Lakes’ future strategy.

Should Investors Subscribe? Promise Meets Risk

From a strategic standpoint, the arguments in favour of the offer are persuasive. ARPN brings scale, operating assets, profitability, and a growth runway that Ellah Lakes has long sought. The enlarged balance sheet would be one of the strongest in the sector, giving the company the financial depth to pursue expansion and withstand shocks.

However, the risks are equally significant. ARPN’s valuation is aggressive, its projections optimistic, and integration demands high levels of managerial discipline. Agriculture is inherently unpredictable—climate, logistics, and regulatory hurdles can derail even well-structured plans.

For investors, the Ellah Lakes offer is not a conservative play. It is a bold, high-conviction bet. The stock has previously traded at highs of N17.66, offering psychological comfort about potential upside. Short-term gains at the N12.50 offer price are possible, but long-term performance depends entirely on whether Ellah Lakes can harness ARPN’s potential and turn that promise into sustained, operational excellence.

In essence, the offer represents both a transformative opportunity—and a costly gamble.

Dangote Refinery Commits to Supplying 1.5 Billion Litres of Petrol Monthly From December

  • dollaers
  • December 1, 2025
  • Business
  • 0 comments

Dangote Petroleum Refinery has announced its readiness to fully meet Nigeria’s domestic petrol demand, pledging to supply 1.5 billion litres of Premium Motor Spirit (PMS) monthly—equivalent to 50 million litres per day—beginning December 2025. This output is scheduled to further increase to 1.7 billion litres per month, or 57 million litres per day, starting in February 2026 as refining operations expand.

The refinery formalised this commitment in a letter addressed to the Nigerian Midstream and Downstream Petroleum Regulatory Authority (NMDPRA). Dated November 30, 2025, and signed by the company’s Chief Executive Officer, David Bird, the correspondence requested regulatory cooperation to ensure seamless operations, transparent reporting, and uninterrupted product distribution nationwide.

Call for Onsite Verification and Full Transparency

As part of its plan to build public trust and assure market stability, Dangote Refinery invited NMDPRA officials to be physically present at the refinery from December 1, 2025. Their role would be to verify and publicly publish the refinery’s daily production figures, stock levels, and product availability.

In the letter, Bird emphasised that real-time transparency is critical to boosting public confidence, especially at a time when Nigerians remain concerned about irregular supply patterns, import dependency, and rising fuel prices. Publishing daily output data—across online platforms and print media—would, according to the refinery, help dispel doubts about domestic capacity and demonstrate the refinery’s consistency in meeting national demand.

Operational Challenges and the “Nigeria First” Supply Policy

The refinery also appealed to NMDPRA to ensure the smooth importation of crude oil, feedstock, and blending components necessary for its operations. According to the letter, Dangote Refinery continues to face delays in vessel clearance, which disrupt refining schedules, inflate operational costs, and ultimately affect consumers at the pump.

Bird described these delays as avoidable inefficiencies, noting that eliminating them would strengthen Nigeria’s fuel security and support the federal government’s “Nigeria First” policy—a strategy prioritising domestic refining over import-driven supply chains.

“The Dangote refinery is ready and able to supply Nigeria’s PMS needs,” Bird stated. “We will appreciate your support to secure Nigeria’s domestic fuel security and abundance. Please allow the ‘Nigeria First’ policy to work to the benefit of all Nigerians.”

A Potential Turning Point for Nigeria’s Downstream Sector

The refinery’s pledge comes at a critical time for Nigeria’s downstream sector, which for years has struggled with unpredictable supplies and chronic dependence on imported petrol. Despite modest contributions from smaller local refineries, imports remain the backbone of domestic PMS availability.

Dangote Refinery—Africa’s largest single-train refinery—has long been positioned as a transformative project for Nigeria’s energy ecosystem, with the potential to reverse decades of fuel import dependence. The commitment to supply more than 50 million litres daily represents a major step toward that goal.

The refinery’s willingness to open its operations to regulatory scrutiny further signals confidence in its production capacity and a bid to establish itself as the dominant supplier of PMS within the country.

Regulatory Insights and National Consumption Trends

The NMDPRA recently reported that Nigeria consumed an average of 56.74 million litres of petrol daily in October 2025. Of this amount, 27.6 million litres were supplied through imports, while 17.08 million litres came from domestic refining operations.

Although the gap remains significant, the regulatory authority noted that the share of locally sourced PMS has been rising gradually. Dangote Refinery’s new production plan—if executed consistently—could not only close the supply deficit but potentially allow Nigeria to eliminate PMS imports altogether.

Implications for Fuel Security and Economic Stability

If successful, Dangote’s monthly supply of 1.5–1.7 billion litres marks a major milestone in Nigeria’s quest for energy self-sufficiency. Reduced reliance on imports could stabilise pump prices, improve foreign exchange savings, and ease pressure on the naira—long strained by high dollar demand from fuel importers.

Moreover, the refinery’s operational scale provides an opportunity for the government to reposition Nigeria as a regional petroleum hub capable of exporting surplus products across West and Central Africa.

As the December rollout approaches, stakeholders will be watching closely to assess whether Dangote Refinery’s output and distribution can match its ambitious commitments—and whether regulatory collaboration will ensure the “Nigeria First” policy delivers on its promise of fuel security, affordability, and transparency.

Atiku Calls for Independent Inquiry Into N17.5 Trillion Pipeline Security Expenditure

  • dollaers
  • December 1, 2025
  • Finance
  • 0 comments

Former Vice President Atiku Abubakar has demanded an immediate, transparent, and independent investigation into the staggering N17.5 trillion reportedly spent by the President Bola Ahmed Tinubu administration on pipeline security and related costs within a single fiscal year.

Atiku described the expenditure as unprecedented, deeply troubling, and a “moral indictment” on the federal government, warning that such a vast outlay—coming at a time of widespread economic hardship—raises fundamental questions about accountability and governance.

In a statement issued by the Atiku Media Office on Sunday night, the former Vice President noted that the expenditure figure, as reflected in the Nigerian National Petroleum Company Limited’s (NNPCL) 2024 audited financial statements, exceeds Nigeria’s total spending on fuel subsidy for more than a decade. According to him, this scale of expenditure makes the report one of the most significant financial controversies in Nigeria’s recent history.

A Spending Pattern That Raises Concerns

Atiku emphasized that the N17.5 trillion allocation dwarfs the N18 trillion spent on fuel subsidy over a 12-year period—an intervention that, in his words, directly cushioned economic pressure for millions of Nigerians by stabilising transportation costs and keeping food prices within reach. By contrast, he argued, the current administration has committed nearly the same amount in one year to pipeline security—an area that has long been plagued by opacity, overlapping contracts, and political patronage.

He described the development as alarming, alleging that the bulk of the funds appears to have been channeled to companies and individuals with close political ties to President Tinubu. The statement characterised the expenditure as “one of the most brazen financial scandals in our nation’s history,” adding that such spending cannot be justified under any fiscally responsible framework, especially amid declining living standards and a weakened currency.

Allegations of Opaqueness and Cronyism

According to the statement, the administration’s elimination of petrol subsidy—presented as a bold step toward fiscal responsibility—has now been overshadowed by what Atiku called “grand larceny dressed as public expenditure.”

He argued that while Nigerians now purchase petrol at over N1,000 per litre in several states, the NNPCL recorded massive expenditures under categories such as “energy-security costs” and “under-recovery”—terms he said remain vague and insufficiently explained to the public.

Citing NNPCL’s audited figures, Atiku pointed out that:

  • N7.13 trillion was spent on energy-security costs; and

  • N8.67 trillion was spent on under-recovery within the same financial year.

These amounts, he said, are deeply questionable given the administration’s repeated insistence that petrol subsidy has been fully removed.

Atiku stressed that Nigerians deserve full disclosure, not only to ascertain the legitimacy of these allocations but also to determine whether the expenditures align with national priorities during a period of severe inflation, rising food insecurity, and weakening consumer purchasing power.

Context From NNPCL’s Financial Performance

The controversy emerges against the backdrop of strong financial reporting by the NNPCL. In its recently released audited financial statement for the year ended 2024, the national oil company posted:

  • N45.1 trillion in revenue, representing an 88% year-on-year increase; and

  • N5.4 trillion in Profit After Tax, a 64% jump from 2023.

The figures reflect consistent growth, as NNPCL recorded a net profit of N3.297 trillion in 2023—a 28% increase from the N2.548 trillion posted in 2022.

However, Atiku argues that these profit figures do not in any way reduce the need for scrutiny, especially when expenditure items of such magnitude appear inconsistent with the government’s stated fiscal direction.

A Call for Accountability

Atiku insisted that the only way to restore public trust is through an independent probe conducted by credible, neutral institutions. He emphasized that such an inquiry must not be handled by individuals or bodies with political or institutional ties to the Tinubu administration.

He maintained that Nigerians have the right to know who received the contracts, how much was paid to each contractor, what specific services were delivered, and whether the spending aligns with global benchmarks for pipeline surveillance and energy infrastructure protection.

Without such transparency, Atiku warned, the allegations surrounding the N17.5 trillion expenditure could further erode investor confidence, damage Nigeria’s global reputation, and worsen the already fragile economic environment.

The issue is likely to intensify national debates around public finance management, subsidy removal, and the governance of Nigeria’s petroleum resources as the country heads into another fiscal cycle.

Nigeria’s New Tax Act May Undermine Business Competitiveness, Investor Confidence — Report

  • dollaers
  • December 1, 2025
  • Tax
  • 0 comments

A new economic assessment by the Alliance for Economic Research and Ethics LTD/GTE has raised significant concerns over the Nigeria Tax Act, 2025, warning that several provisions in the newly enacted law could weaken business competitiveness, dampen investor confidence, and reduce Nigeria’s attractiveness as an investment destination in Africa.

Signed into law in June 2025 and scheduled for nationwide implementation on January 1, 2026, the Nigeria Tax Act represents one of the most extensive attempts at tax reform in the country’s recent history. It consolidates more than a dozen existing tax laws into a unified framework aimed at modernizing tax administration, boosting transparency, and expanding government revenue amid persistent fiscal pressures.

A Major Restructuring of Nigeria’s Tax Framework

According to the Alliance’s analysis, the government’s stated objectives include reducing tax leakages, tightening compliance, curbing evasion, and ensuring that all sectors of the economy contribute equitably to national development. The reforms are also intended to stabilize revenue inflows in the face of declining oil earnings and rising public debt.

However, the report notes growing unease among businesses, investors, and industry stakeholders, many of whom believe the scale of the changes—and the speed of implementation—could impose severe financial and administrative burdens. Analysts argue that the absence of adequate transitional arrangements may disrupt business planning, heighten uncertainty, and increase the cost of doing business in Nigeria.

The Alliance summarized its concerns succinctly: “The severe increase in the Capital Gains Tax, the imposition of a new Development Levy, the uncertainty cast upon the Free Trade Zones, and the unusual domicile of the Single Window Trade Platform threaten to cripple the very investment and business growth that Nigeria desperately needs to secure its long-term economic future.”

Key Provisions Drawing Criticism

One of the most contentious elements of the Act is the sharp increase in Capital Gains Tax (CGT) for companies, from 10% to 30%. This aligns CGT with the corporate income tax rate—a shift that analysts describe as unprecedented in modern Nigerian tax policy. According to the report, the move represents “a seismic shock to the investment landscape,” as higher CGT could reduce investor returns, discourage mergers and acquisitions, and diminish venture capital and private equity activity.

Another significant change is the introduction of a 4% Development Levy on assessable profits. While the government argues that consolidating multiple small levies into a single charge will improve efficiency, experts warn that the new levy could strain companies operating on thin margins, including manufacturers, retailers, agribusiness firms, and logistics operators.

The Act also introduces a 15% minimum tax rate for multinational corporations with turnover above €750 million, as well as for large domestic companies earning over N50 billion annually. Though aligned with global OECD standards, the requirement is expected to increase compliance costs and administrative workload for affected corporations.

Equally controversial is the removal of longstanding tax incentives for Free Trade Zone (FTZ) operators. Previously considered a cornerstone of Nigeria’s investment promotion strategy, FTZ incentives attracted manufacturers, exporters, and logistics firms to Nigeria. The report describes their abrupt abolishment as “ambiguous and destabilizing,” warning that Nigeria may lose investors to regional competitors offering more predictable incentives.

The Act also expands taxation on digital assets, updates personal income tax bands to become more progressive, and centralizes several administrative functions under a Single Window Trade Platform—a decision the report says lacks clarity on governance structure.

Potential Economic Risks Identified

The Alliance warns that the cumulative effect of the new measures could have far-reaching consequences for Nigeria’s economy. The 200% CGT increase, for instance, is projected to slow long-term capital formation, discourage startup investment, and weaken the deal-making environment essential to innovation-driven growth.

Similarly, the 4% Development Levy may worsen inflationary pressures, particularly for sectors already facing high energy and logistics costs.

Removing FTZ incentives, analysts argue, could redirect investment flows to emerging African markets such as Ghana, Rwanda, and Ethiopia, which are currently lowering business costs and simplifying regulatory frameworks to attract foreign direct investment (FDI).

Large corporations will also face increased reporting obligations under the minimum tax regime, raising compliance costs and potentially reducing operational efficiency.

Opportunities Amid the Concerns

Despite the criticisms, the report acknowledges that the Tax Act contains provisions that could improve long-term fiscal sustainability. The 15% minimum tax may help level the playing field between multinational firms and domestic competitors. Consolidating several levies into a single Development Levy simplifies the tax system, while existing exemptions for SMEs ensure that micro and small enterprises retain room for reinvestment and growth.

If effectively implemented, the reforms could expand Nigeria’s tax base, reduce leakages, and strengthen public-sector accountability.

Regional Competitiveness Under AfCFTA

The report compares Nigeria’s tax direction with ongoing reforms in other African economies:

  • Ghana is removing nuisance taxes to attract investment.

  • Ethiopia is cutting tariffs for AfCFTA members.

  • Rwanda continues to prioritize regulatory stability to attract FDI.

Analysts warn that Nigeria’s heavier tax burden could erode its competitiveness under the African Continental Free Trade Area (AfCFTA), particularly as manufacturing and export-oriented firms seek lower-cost bases across the continent.

Recommendations and Conclusion

To mitigate risks, the Alliance recommends moderating the CGT increase through a phased approach beginning at 15%, redesigning FTZ incentives rather than abolishing them, issuing comprehensive implementation guidelines through the Federal Inland Revenue Service (FIRS), and aligning tax reforms with AfCFTA competitiveness goals.

Ultimately, the report cautions that if strategic adjustments are not made, the Nigeria Tax Act, 2025 may “function more as a constraint than a catalyst” for economic growth. With other African markets aggressively improving their business environments, Nigeria must carefully recalibrate its approach before the Act takes effect in January 2026.

Nigeria Receives $20.9 Billion in Capital Inflows in 2025, Signalling Strong Investor Confidence — Cardoso

  • dollaers
  • December 1, 2025
  • Finance
  • 0 comments

Nigeria has recorded one of its strongest external sector performances in nearly a decade, attracting $20.98 billion in foreign capital inflows in the first ten months of 2025. This was disclosed by the Governor of the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN), Olayemi Cardoso, during the 60th Annual Bankers’ Dinner, where he highlighted the country’s improving macroeconomic stability, renewed policy credibility, and rising investor confidence.

According to Cardoso, the $20.98 billion figure represents a significant leap—amounting to a 70% increase over total capital inflows recorded in 2024 and an extraordinary 428% surge compared to the $3.9 billion inflows captured in 2023. The governor noted that this dramatic improvement reflects a clear shift in global investor appetite for Nigerian assets, driven by reforms aimed at strengthening the foreign exchange market, enhancing transparency in financial operations, and rebuilding trust in monetary policy.

Although the National Bureau of Statistics (NBS) has only released capital importation data for the first quarter of 2025—showing Nigeria attracted $5.6 billion during Q1—Cardoso confirmed that inflows accelerated sharply across subsequent quarters. According to NBS historical data, capital imports stood at $3.9 billion in 2023 and $12.3 billion in 2024, making the 2025 performance particularly impressive.

External Sector Sees Decisive Improvement

The CBN governor further revealed that Nigeria’s current account balance strengthened significantly over the course of the year. The balance rose by more than 85%, climbing from $2.85 billion in the first quarter to $5.28 billion by the second quarter of 2025. Cardoso attributed this improvement to rising non-oil export earnings, improving FX inflows, and reforms that have made the FX market more efficient and market-driven.

Nigeria’s foreign reserves have also enjoyed a major boost, reaching $46.7 billion by mid-November 2025—its highest level in almost seven years. With over ten months of import cover, the country’s external buffers are now at their strongest point in a decade.

A particularly notable development, Cardoso stressed, is that the reserves are being rebuilt “organically—not through borrowing.” Instead, the growth is being driven by improved FX market functioning, stronger non-oil exports, and revitalized capital inflows. This marks a significant departure from previous periods where external reserve accumulation was often supported by external debt.

Non-Oil Exports, Remittances Drive Momentum

Despite oil production averaging between 1.45 million and 1.52 million barrels per day in 2025, the non-oil sector remained the standout growth driver. Cardoso reported that non-oil exports expanded by over 18% year-on-year, supported by improved competitiveness brought about by a more flexible and market-determined exchange rate regime.

The governor also highlighted improvements in diaspora remittances, which grew by approximately 12% in 2025. He attributed this rise to enhanced transparency and settlement efficiency in the FX ecosystem, as well as increased trust in official remittance channels. Further growth is expected in 2026 as adoption of the Non-Resident Bank Verification Number (BVN) system—launched earlier in the year—continues to rise.

CBN Maintains Flexible FX Strategy

Cardoso reiterated the CBN’s commitment to maintaining a flexible exchange-rate framework that allows the naira to function as a shock absorber while reducing excess volatility. According to him, the FX reforms implemented over the past year are central to restoring macroeconomic stability and positioning Nigeria to attract sustainable long-term investment.

With capital inflows surging, external reserves rising, and remittances strengthening, Nigeria’s external sector appears poised for continued recovery heading into 2026.

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