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Month: January 2026

Academy Press, NCR Lead Gains as NGX All-Share Index Extends Nine-Day Rally to New Record High

  • dollaers
  • January 15, 2026
  • Equities, Stocks
  • 0 comments

The Nigerian equities market sustained its strong bullish momentum on January 14, 2026, as the Nigerian Exchange (NGX) All-Share Index (ASI) climbed to a fresh all-time high, extending its winning streak in the new year to nine consecutive trading sessions.

At the close of trading, the ASI advanced by 934.7 points, representing a 0.56% gain, to settle at 166,772.0 points, up from 165,837.3 points in the previous session. This marked the first time the benchmark index crossed the 166,000-point threshold, underscoring strong investor appetite for equities despite a moderation in trading activity.

Market capitalisation followed the same positive trajectory, rising from ₦106.1 trillion to ₦106.7 trillion, as investors added roughly ₦600 billion in value across 55,751 transactions. Although sentiment remained bullish, trading volume softened slightly, with 761.9 million shares exchanged compared to 1.13 billion shares in the prior session, suggesting more selective participation amid rising prices.

What the market data shows

The ASI’s daily gain lifted the market’s year-to-date return to 7.17%, reflecting growing confidence among both retail and institutional investors. The rally was driven largely by strong performances in selected mid-cap and small-cap stocks, with Academy Press Plc and NCR (Nigeria) Plc leading the advancers’ table.

Academy Press closed the session up 10.00% at ₦8.25, while NCR appreciated by 9.98% to ₦106.30. Other notable gainers included Triple Gee & Company Plc, Tantalizers Plc, and McNichols Plc, all of which posted gains of just under 10%, highlighting broad-based buying interest beyond blue-chip names.

On the flip side, profit-taking pressure weighed on a handful of stocks. May & Baker Nigeria Plc led the losers with a 9.79% decline to ₦28.55, followed by Coronation Insurance (WAPIC), which shed 6.76% to close at ₦3.31. Other decliners included Livestock Feeds, PZ Cussons Nigeria, and Eterna Plc, all closing the session in negative territory.

Activity by volume and value

In terms of trading volume, Access Holdings dominated activity with 53.4 million shares exchanged. It was followed by Lasaco Assurance with 38.9 million shares and Veritas Kapital Assurance with 32.7 million shares. Tantalizers and Deap Capital Management & Trust rounded out the top five most actively traded stocks by volume.

By transaction value, energy and telecom stocks attracted significant investor interest. Aradel Holdings led the chart with trades worth ₦8.9 billion, followed by Seplat Energy at ₦4.0 billion. MTN Nigeria, Zenith Bank, and Access Holdings also featured prominently among the most traded stocks by value.

SWOOTs and FUGAZ performance

Stocks Worth Over One Trillion Naira (SWOOTs) delivered a mixed performance during the session. Aradel stood out with a 5.54% gain, reinforcing the strong interest in energy-related equities. However, consumer names such as International Breweries dipped 0.67%, while Nigerian Breweries edged down 0.29%.

Within the FUGAZ banking group, sentiment was also mixed. Zenith Bank rose 1.47%, and First HoldCo gained 1.01%, reflecting continued investor preference for fundamentally strong banks. Access Holdings closed flat, while United Bank for Africa declined 1.63% and GTCO slipped 0.50%.

Why this matters

The ASI’s nine-day rally and record-breaking close above 166,000 points signal strong early-year momentum for the Nigerian stock market. Broad participation across mid-caps, selective gains among SWOOTs, and resilience in key banking stocks suggest sustained investor confidence, even as volumes ease.

While the market appears technically overbought in the short term—raising the possibility of a brief pullback—continued positive macro signals and earnings expectations could keep sentiment tilted to the upside in the near term. For now, the NGX’s record run underscores renewed optimism and the market’s growing appeal as an investment destination in 2026.

NELFUND Flags ₦927.98 Million Unpaid Student Upkeep Arrears, Blames Technical Glitches

  • dollaers
  • January 15, 2026
  • Education
  • 0 comments

The Nigerian Education Loan Fund (NELFUND) has identified ₦927.98 million in unpaid student upkeep allowances owed to 11,685 beneficiaries after a reconciliation exercise covering the 2024/2025 academic session.

The disclosure was made on Tuesday in Abuja by NELFUND’s Managing Director, Akintunde Sawyerr, while briefing journalists on the progress, impact, and operational challenges of the federal student loan scheme.

According to Sawyerr, the unpaid amounts were not the result of policy failure or deliberate withholding of funds, but stemmed largely from technical and operational issues, including failed transactions, network downtime, and unvalidated or incorrect bank account details submitted by students.

Scale of applications and disbursements

Sawyerr said the student loan programme has recorded significant uptake since its launch, reflecting strong demand across Nigeria’s tertiary education sector.

“As of today, 1,361,011 applications have been received, 864,798 students have benefited so far, and total disbursement stands at ₦161.97 billion,” he said.

He broke down the figure to show that ₦89.94 billion was paid directly to 263 tertiary institutions for tuition and institutional charges, while ₦72.03 billion was disbursed directly to students as upkeep allowances.

According to him, these numbers demonstrate the tangible impact of the scheme in easing financial pressures on students and their families, while expanding access to higher education.

Why the arrears occurred

On the identified ₦927.98 billion arrears, Sawyerr explained that a post-session review revealed that thousands of students did not receive their upkeep payments due to operational lapses rather than funding gaps.

“After the 2024/2025 academic session, it was revealed that 11,685 students had outstanding upkeep payments amounting to ₦927.98 million,” he said.

He added that management has approved a one-off reconciliation process that includes direct engagement with affected students, a grace period to update bank details, multi-layer validation checks, and immediate payment once verification is concluded.

Data validation underway

Also speaking at the briefing, the Executive Director of Operations at NELFUND, Mustapha Iyal, said the unpaid upkeep cases represent only a small fraction of beneficiaries from the more than 400,000 students covered during the 2024/2025 academic year.

He noted that many of the issues arose from incorrect or incomplete data submitted during application, prompting the fund to formally engage tertiary institutions to validate student records.

According to Iyal, feedback has already been received from over 100 institutions, and payment of the outstanding upkeep allowances is expected to commence shortly once verification is completed.

He also disclosed that applications for the 2025/2026 academic session opened in November 2025, with more than 200 institutions submitting student data. This has resulted in about 280,000 applications, with loan disbursements already reaching over 150,000 students.

On repayments, Iyal said the process has begun, as some beneficiaries who have graduated and secured employment have started repaying their loans in line with programme guidelines.

Strengthening the scheme

Sawyerr said NELFUND is also deepening partnerships with philanthropists, corporate organisations, and government agencies to enhance funding sustainability. He cited a ₦20 billion collaboration with the Federal Ministry of Education focused on Technical and Vocational Education and Training.

He added that recent reforms—such as amendments to the student loan law, removal of guarantor requirements, inclusion of upkeep allowances, and the fund’s ability to raise and invest resources—have strengthened the long-term viability of the scheme.

What you should know

NELFUND’s student loan programme continues to gain traction, with more than 200 tertiary institutions submitting updated student data for the 2025/2026 academic session. According to earlier reports, the University of Maiduguri led in applications, followed by Bayero University Kano, Federal University Dutsin-Ma, Ahmadu Bello University, and the University of Ilorin.

Sawyerr clarified that students of private universities are currently excluded due to high tuition costs, limited data on financial capacity, and funding constraints, but stressed that they are not permanently excluded from the programme.

ASUU Pushes for GDP-Based Research Funding, Seeks 1% Allocation for Nigerian Universities

  • dollaers
  • January 15, 2026
  • Education
  • 0 comments

The Academic Staff Union of Universities (ASUU) has renewed calls for a sustainable research funding framework that would allocate at least 1% of Nigeria’s Gross Domestic Product (GDP) to university research, innovation, and development.

The demand was reiterated on Wednesday in Abuja by ASUU President, Chris Pinuwa, during the formal unveiling of the 2025 re-negotiated agreement between the Federal Government and the union. According to him, decades of underinvestment in research have significantly weakened Nigeria’s higher education system and reduced its global competitiveness.

Chronic underfunding of research

Pinuwa said Nigerian universities have long struggled with inadequate research financing, limiting their ability to drive innovation, industrial development, and knowledge production.

“Nigerian universities have faced paucity of research funding for a very long time, and I am glad that research and development funding is a component of the 2025 ASUU–FG re-negotiated agreement,” he said.

He explained that the agreement provides for the transmission of the National Research Council Bill to the National Assembly for legislative consideration. If passed, the bill would institutionalise a funding mechanism that earmarks at least 1% of GDP annually for research, innovation, and development.

“The proposed bill shall provide for at least 1% equivalent of GDP as a source of funding for research, innovation and development. It is my belief that members of the National Assembly will expedite action on its passage,” Pinuwa added.

Governance and autonomy concerns

Beyond funding, the ASUU president raised concerns over what he described as persistent governance weaknesses in Nigeria’s university system. While university autonomy is recognised in principle and partially backed by law, he said implementation remains weak, allowing continued external interference in university affairs.

He cited the frequent dissolution of governing councils and undue interference in the appointment of vice-chancellors as practices that undermine meritocracy and institutional stability. According to him, such actions often lead to internal crises, litigation, staff polarisation, and prolonged disruptions to academic activities.

Pinuwa also warned against the growing trend of prolonged acting vice-chancellorships in some institutions, stressing that weak oversight of governing councils and principal officers threatens the integrity of the university system.

Standards in new universities under scrutiny

The ASUU president further criticised promotion practices in some newly established federal universities of education. He alleged that due process and established criteria for professorial appointments were being compromised in some cases.

According to him, the conversion of colleges of education into universities should not translate into a dilution of academic standards. He warned that erosion of promotion benchmarks and governance norms could have lasting consequences for the credibility of Nigeria’s higher education sector.

Pinuwa called on vice-chancellors and governing councils of affected institutions to urgently review questionable promotions and administrative practices, stressing that safeguarding standards and strengthening autonomy are as critical as securing sustainable research funding.

What you should know

The newly unveiled agreement concludes the renegotiation of the 2009 ASUU–FG agreement and is designed to address long-standing issues around funding, welfare, and stability in Nigeria’s university system.

Key provisions include a review of academic staff remuneration, approved by the National Salaries, Income and Wages Commission, and scheduled to take effect from January 1, 2026. Under the agreement, academic staff salaries will increase by 40%, delivered through a consolidated academic tools allowance built into the salary structure to support research, publications, conferences, and related activities.

Previously earned academic allowances have also been restructured to improve transparency and accountability, while a new professorial credit allowance has been introduced for professors and academic readers to support research and administrative responsibilities.

ASUU maintains that without a GDP-linked research funding framework, Nigeria’s universities will continue to lag behind peers in Africa and globally, regardless of salary and welfare improvements.

Yobe State Clears Gratuities Backlog with ₦15.4bn Payout to Retirees

  • dollaers
  • January 15, 2026
  • Finance, Government
  • 0 comments

The Yobe State Government has announced that it has fully cleared outstanding gratuity obligations owed to retirees of both the state and local governments, spending a total of ₦15.4 billion to offset arrears accumulated over several years.

The disclosure was made on Wednesday in Damaturu by the Secretary to the State Government (SSG), Alhaji Baba Wali, during a press briefing marking six years of the administration of Governor Mai Mala Buni.

According to Wali, the payments have eliminated all gratuity liabilities, providing long-awaited relief to retired public servants across the state. He described the clearance of the backlog as a major social intervention by the administration, aimed at restoring dignity and financial stability to retirees who had waited years for their entitlements.

Security, jobs, and capacity building

Beyond gratuity payments, the SSG outlined several interventions undertaken by the state since 2019. On security, he said the government had procured 250 operational vehicles and 500 motorcycles for security agencies, while more than 300 patrol and specialised vehicles were rehabilitated. In addition, over 2,000 vigilantes, hunters, and hybrid force operatives were engaged to complement formal security operations across the state.

In employment and human capital development, Wali disclosed that the government had recruited 6,449 workers and organised about 35 training programmes for more than 6,395 civil servants. He added that over 26,000 teachers had been trained or retrained, while more than 4,000 teaching and non-teaching staff were recruited into primary and secondary schools statewide.

Infrastructure and social services

On infrastructure, the SSG said approximately 500 kilometres of roads had either been completed or were ongoing. Key projects include the Geidam–Bukarti, Damagum–Gubana, Nguru–Bulanguwa, and Fika–Maluri roads.

He also revealed that the ₦22 billion flyover and underpass project in Damaturu, being executed by Triacta Nigeria Limited, is expected to be delivered in the first quarter of 2026.

In the education sector, Wali said the administration constructed six model schools, seven mega schools, nine girls’ secondary schools, and eight co-educational secondary schools. He added that the government continues to pay WAEC, NECO, and NABTEB registration fees for all students in the state.

Healthcare interventions include the construction or rehabilitation of Primary Healthcare Centres in 140 of the state’s 178 wards, the procurement of 88 tricycle ambulances, and the enrolment of over 300,000 residents into the state health insurance scheme. He also said drugs worth ₦2.3 billion were supplied to the Yobe Drugs and Medical Consumable Management Agency.

On transportation and power, the SSG noted that the state acquired 20 buses for the Yobe Transport Corporation, sold over 100 vehicles at subsidised rates, electrified 25 villages, extended power to more than 200 locations, and ensured 24-hour electricity in all general hospitals.

What you should know

Yobe State’s clearance of gratuity arrears and infrastructure investments build on broader development efforts. In 2024, the African Development Bank approved a $50 million loan for the Yobe State Environmental and Climate Change Action Project (ECCAP), part of a $101.34 million programme to address climate vulnerabilities, improve food security, and enhance livelihoods for over 3.5 million residents. The project also received $30 million co-financing from the Arab Bank for Economic Development in Africa.

In April 2025, the Federal Government commissioned the first phase of a 400-kilowatt solar power plant at the Yobe State University Teaching Hospital in Damaturu under the Renewed Hope Agenda, a move expected to cut power costs, reduce outages, and improve healthcare delivery.

Overall, the state government says the clearance of gratuity arrears underscores its commitment to fiscal responsibility, social welfare, and long-term development.

Vitafoam Insider Offloads ₦33m Worth of Shares in Year-End NGX Transactions

  • dollaers
  • January 15, 2026
  • Companies
  • 0 comments

Vitafoam Nigeria Plc has disclosed that a senior insider sold company shares valued at about ₦33.01 million in a series of year-end transactions on the Nigerian Exchange Limited (NGX), a move that has drawn market attention amid the company’s strong earnings performance.

In a filing dated January 13, 2026, Vitafoam Nigeria Plc notified Nigerian Exchange Limited that its Company Secretary and Legal Adviser, Mr. Sanni Olalekan Akeem, disposed of 356,029 ordinary shares over two trading sessions—December 30 and 31, 2025—in compliance with insider-trading disclosure rules.

Breakdown of the transactions

According to the disclosure, the sales were executed in multiple tranches, rather than a single block trade, indicating active participation during the year-end trading window. Deal prices ranged from ₦90.15 to ₦93.30 per share, producing an aggregate consideration of ₦33,010,150.15. The average sale price across the transactions was approximately ₦92.43.

The largest single deal involved 94,092 shares sold at ₦93.30, while the smallest was a 100-share sale at ₦93.10. All transactions were completed at prevailing market prices on the NGX, suggesting no unusual discounting or off-market arrangements.

As Company Secretary and Legal Adviser, Mr. Akeem qualifies as an insider with access to price-sensitive, non-public information, making prompt disclosure mandatory under NGX rules and Securities and Exchange Commission guidelines. The filing indicates full compliance with these transparency requirements.

How investors may read the move

Insider dealings often attract scrutiny, but market watchers caution against over-interpreting such sales in isolation—particularly when they occur after strong price performance or near year-end, when portfolio rebalancing and liquidity needs are common. Importantly, the disclosure does not point to any deterioration in Vitafoam’s fundamentals.

On the contrary, the company recently announced robust full-year results and shareholder rewards, including a 1-for-5 bonus (script) issue and a proposed ₦3.00 dividend per share, both slated for consideration at its 64th Annual General Meeting on March 5, 2026, in Lagos. The bonus proposal involves capitalising ₦125.08 million from retained earnings to issue 250,168,812 new ordinary shares of 50 kobo each.

Share price performance

Vitafoam’s shares closed on January 14, 2026 at ₦99.00, up 1.2% from the previous close of ₦97.80. The stock opened the year at ₦92.00 and has since gained 7.61%, ranking 71st on the NGX year-to-date performance table.

The longer-term picture has been even more striking. In 2025, Vitafoam’s share price surged by about 300%, ending the year at ₦92.00 and placing the stock among the top 10 best performers on the NGX—an advance supported by a dramatic turnaround in earnings.

Fundamentals driving the rally

For the 2025 financial year, Vitafoam reported a 1,775% jump in profit before tax, from ₦1.15 billion in 2024 to ₦21.48 billion. Profit after tax climbed 1,427% to ₦14.54 billion, while group revenue rose 35% to ₦111.38 billion. Basic earnings per share improved sharply to ₦9.43, compared with a 72 kobo loss a year earlier.

Management attributed the performance to revenue expansion, pricing adjustments, and tighter cost controls, reinforcing investor confidence and underpinning the stock’s strong valuation.

Bottom line

While insider sales naturally invite attention, Vitafoam’s year-end disclosure appears procedural and transparent, executed at market prices and against a backdrop of exceptional operating performance and shareholder-friendly actions. For many investors, the company’s earnings momentum and capital return plans remain the dominant narrative as 2026 unfolds.

TETFund to Disburse N6.452 Billion to Tertiary Institutions in 2026 Intervention Cycle

  • dollaers
  • January 14, 2026
  • Education
  • 0 comments

The Tertiary Education Trust Fund (TETFund) has announced plans to disburse N6.452 billion to beneficiary tertiary institutions across Nigeria under its 2026 intervention cycle, as part of ongoing efforts to strengthen infrastructure, research capacity, and academic output in the higher education sector.

The disclosure was made on Tuesday in Abuja by the Executive Secretary of TETFund, Sonny Echono, during a stakeholders’ workshop with heads of beneficiary institutions focused on the 2026 disbursement guidelines. The engagement brought together vice-chancellors, rectors, and provosts to clarify allocation structures, compliance expectations, and performance benchmarks for accessing funds.

According to Echono, the 2026 intervention is designed around uniform allocations for universities, polytechnics, and colleges of education, reflecting the Fund’s strategy to promote equity while driving measurable impact across Nigeria’s tertiary education system. Under the approved framework, each university will receive N2.525 billion, polytechnics will get N1.871 billion, while colleges of education will be allocated N2.056 billion each.

He explained that the total direct disbursement represents about 90.75% of the intervention funds, comprising 50% annual direct disbursements and 43.75% special direct disbursements. In total, 271 beneficiary institutions are expected to receive allocations under the annual direct disbursement component alone, with funding provided regardless of an institution’s age, size, or student enrolment.

Echono said the 2026 funds would be deployed to strengthen critical physical infrastructure, upgrade academic programmes, and enhance research, innovation, and knowledge production across universities and other tertiary institutions. He noted that improving the quality, relevance, and global competitiveness of Nigerian research remains a central objective of the intervention.

A key highlight of the 2026 cycle is the integration of the Tertiary Education, Research, Applications and Services (TERAS) platform into the Nigerian Research and Education Network (NgREN). According to Echono, this initiative is aimed at improving access to global academic resources, expanding digital research collaboration, and modernising ICT-driven learning and research systems across institutions.

Beyond infrastructure and digital upgrades, Echono disclosed that TETFund is intensifying investments in research and development facilities, including laboratories and workshops. He revealed that four research laboratories are expected to be completed and commissioned within the year, while two additional facilities have commenced construction and are scheduled for completion next year.

In the agricultural sector, the Fund is transitioning large university farms to modern greenhouse systems and advanced equipment, a move aimed at boosting productivity, reducing labour intensity, and strengthening practical agricultural training and research. Similarly, the ICT roadmap will be expanded through enhanced digital services, experience centres, substation-based internet access, and international education research partnerships.

Echono also urged heads of institutions to fully utilise their 2025 allocations, stressing that future disbursements would increasingly be tied to performance, enrolment levels, and demonstrated progress. Institutions with significant unutilised funds, he warned, would not be eligible for fresh allocations until existing resources are effectively deployed.

In context, TETFund’s 2026 intervention builds on a steady expansion in funding over recent years. In 2024, the Fund approved over N643 billion for public tertiary institutions, while the 2025 cycle rose to about N700 billion, with more than 91% earmarked for direct disbursements. The 2026 plan signals continued commitment to using targeted funding as a catalyst for sustainable growth, innovation, and improved educational outcomes across Nigeria’s tertiary education landscape.

FG Eyes N500bn Green Bond Issuance to Fund Climate Projects in 2026

  • dollaers
  • January 14, 2026
  • Economy News
  • 0 comments

The Federal Government is planning to raise as much as N500 billion through the issuance of green bonds in 2026, as Nigeria intensifies efforts to finance climate-related and environmentally sustainable projects through alternative funding sources.

The disclosure was made by the Minister of Environment, Balarabe Abbas Lawal, during the ongoing Abu Dhabi Sustainability Week on Tuesday, according to a report by Bloomberg.

The proposed issuance underscores Nigeria’s growing reliance on climate-linked debt instruments as part of a broader strategy to diversify funding away from oil revenues and conventional borrowing, while addressing mounting environmental and climate challenges.

What the Federal Government is saying

According to Lawal, proceeds from the planned green bond sale would be directed towards projects that improve air quality, expand access to clean cooking fuels, and combat deforestation across the country. He noted that these areas remain critical priorities for Nigeria, given their direct links to public health, climate resilience, and sustainable economic development.

The minister explained that the initiative aligns with Nigeria’s wider environmental sustainability goals and international climate commitments, while also taking advantage of increasing global investor appetite for green and sustainable finance instruments.

Lawal added that emerging markets are increasingly turning to climate-linked financing, citing countries such as Saudi Arabia and Hungary, which have successfully deployed green bonds to fund environmental and infrastructure projects. For Nigeria, he said, green bonds offer a way to support climate action without increasing pressure on traditional debt channels or relying excessively on volatile oil revenues, which remain the country’s primary source of foreign exchange.

Why this matters

Climate financing is becoming increasingly important for Nigeria as it confronts worsening environmental challenges, including air pollution in major urban centres, rapid deforestation, and limited access to clean and affordable energy solutions for millions of households.

Green bonds allow the government to attract a pool of environmentally focused investors while ensuring that borrowed funds are channelled into projects with measurable environmental and social benefits. This dual impact—economic development alongside environmental protection—has made green bonds one of the fastest-growing segments of the global debt market.

For Nigeria, the strategy also supports ongoing fiscal and structural reforms aimed at improving transparency, accountability, and efficiency in public finance. Because green bond proceeds are ring-fenced for specific projects, they typically come with enhanced reporting and monitoring requirements, which can strengthen investor confidence and public oversight.

Nigeria’s track record with green bonds

Nigeria is not new to the green bond market. The country has previously issued sovereign green bonds that recorded strong investor demand, reinforcing confidence in its climate-linked debt instruments.

Last year, the Federal Government issued a N50 billion green bond that was oversubscribed, attracting more than twice the amount on offer. Nigeria’s inaugural sovereign green bond was also fully subscribed, signalling sustained interest from both domestic and international investors.

These successful issuances have positioned Nigeria as a leading African sovereign issuer in the green bond space, providing a foundation for the much larger N500 billion issuance being considered for 2026.

Broader climate finance push

The proposed green bond sale comes amid wider efforts by the administration of Bola Tinubu to mobilise climate finance. In November 2025, Nigeria unveiled an ambitious plan to attract up to $3 billion annually through its National Carbon Market Framework and Climate Change Fund. The framework is designed to monetise carbon credits while supporting climate mitigation and adaptation projects.

Experts in energy and climate policy have also urged the government to scale up investments and incentives for large-scale solar deployment nationwide, arguing that it could unlock an estimated $2.5 billion carbon market opportunity for the country.

As global capital increasingly shifts towards sustainable finance, Nigeria’s planned N500 billion green bond issuance could play a pivotal role in funding climate solutions, strengthening environmental resilience, and positioning the country as a key participant in the global green finance ecosystem in 2026 and beyon

Sambo Dasuki Trial: EFCC Witness Details Alleged Movement of N33.2bn from NSA Account

  • dollaers
  • January 14, 2026
  • Regulations
  • 0 comments

An investigator with the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC) has provided detailed testimony on how N33.2 billion allegedly earmarked for arms procurement was moved from the Office of the National Security Adviser (ONSA) to private individuals and companies, as the trial of former National Security Adviser Sambo Dasuki continued in Abuja.

The testimony was delivered on January 13, 2026, before Justice C.O. Agbaza of the Federal Capital Territory High Court, sitting in Maitama. The proceedings form part of the long-running prosecution of Dasuki, who served as National Security Adviser under former President Goodluck Jonathan.

According to a statement released by the EFCC via its official X (formerly Twitter) account, the commission’s first prosecution witness, Dr. Michael Adariku, traced multiple transactions allegedly executed from the ONSA account between April and May 2015. Adariku, an investigator with the EFCC, was led in evidence by prosecution counsel Rotimi Jacobs, SAN.

Alleged transfers from ONSA account

The witness told the court that the ONSA account, domiciled with Zenith Bank, recorded several large transfers within a short period in the final weeks of the Jonathan administration. One of the transactions highlighted during testimony occurred on April 17, 2015, when N600 million was allegedly transferred to Acacia Holdings Limited. At the time, the company’s account reportedly had a balance of just over N27,000.

According to the EFCC, subsequent movements from the beneficiary accounts were allegedly used for land acquisitions, property transactions, and other private expenditures within the Federal Capital Territory. Investigators further claimed that some of the funds were routed through companies and individuals linked to the second defendant, Aminu Baba Kusa, a former General Manager of the Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation (NNPC), allegedly acting through agents and business facilitators.

Companies and properties allegedly involved

Dr. Adariku reportedly named several entities that received portions of the funds, including Reliance Referral Hospital Limited, Medical Practice Limited, Fastman Investment Ltd, and Namuduka Ventures Ltd. According to his testimony, some of the monies were allegedly used to purchase large parcels of land in Kyami District, Kwali, Wasa District, and other parts of Abuja.

The EFCC further alleged that part of the funds was converted into foreign currency and transferred outside Nigeria. The witness told the court that between April 1 and May 6, 2015, a cumulative sum of N150 million was transferred to Medical Practice Limited, a company said to be associated with the wife of the second defendant. Additional transfers, the EFCC claimed, were converted into dollars and euros before being moved to offshore accounts allegedly linked to Baba Kusa.

Background to the case

Dasuki is standing trial alongside Baba Kusa, Acacia Holdings Limited, and Reliance Referral Hospital Limited on a 32-count charge bordering on criminal breach of trust and the alleged diversion of N33.2 billion in public funds meant for national security and arms procurement.

The former NSA was first arraigned on December 14, 2015, alongside Shuaibu Salisu, the former Director of Finance and Administration at ONSA, on a 19-count charge involving an alleged N15.5 billion fraud. Following Salisu’s removal from the case, the charges were amended. On May 11, 2018, Dasuki and other defendants were re-arraigned on an expanded 32-count charge involving N33.2 billion. Additional cases were also filed against him, including one alongside former Minister of State for Finance Bashir Yuguda, over an alleged N19.4 billion diversion.

The trial, which has suffered repeated adjournments over the years, was again adjourned to January 14, 2026, for continuation.

Nigerian Banking Stocks Poised for 2026 Rally Despite Recapitalisation and Tax Risks

  • dollaers
  • January 14, 2026
  • Bank, Stocks
  • 0 comments

Nigeria’s banking sector is increasingly being tipped by market analysts as one of the strongest equity investment opportunities for 2026, despite lingering concerns around recapitalisation, dividend sustainability, and evolving tax policies. Analysts sampled by Nairametrics argue that stronger capital buffers, improving macroeconomic stability, and expectations of clearer regulatory direction from the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) have laid the groundwork for a potential re-rating of banking stocks in the year ahead.

Leading this optimistic view is Tajudeen Olayinka, Chief Executive Officer of Wyoming Capital & Partners Limited, who believes the ongoing recapitalisation exercise has fundamentally strengthened banks’ balance sheets. According to him, the fresh capital injections—while dilutive in the short term—have positioned banks to expand credit creation and deepen deposit mobilisation as economic conditions stabilise.

“The business of a bank is asset creation and liability generation, and the economy is now in a better position to support that,” Olayinka said, noting that Nigeria has moved beyond the most severe phase of post-reform economic dislocation experienced in 2023. He added that fears surrounding dilution are often exaggerated, pointing out that several banks that completed capital raising early were still able to pay dividends on newly issued shares, in some cases exceeding prior-year payouts.

Olayinka explained that the scale of equity issuance was largely driven by the CBN’s recapitalisation framework, which recognises only paid-up capital and share premium—excluding retained earnings. This regulatory approach, he said, compelled even fundamentally strong banks to raise equity at relatively depressed market valuations. As a result, many banking stocks are now trading at deep discounts to book value, creating what he described as a rare mispricing opportunity for long-term investors.

Caution persists amid dividend and regulatory uncertainty

Despite the bullish narrative, some market operators urge restraint. Garba Kurfi, Chief Executive Officer of APT Securities & Funds Ltd, said investors remain firmly in a “wait-and-see” mode following the release of banks’ management accounts. He noted that weaker interim dividend payouts—significantly below prior-year levels—have heightened scepticism, particularly against the backdrop of recapitalisation uncertainty and recent regulatory actions involving institutions such as Aso Savings & Loans and Union Homes.

Kurfi stressed that until the CBN officially announces which banks have fully met recapitalisation requirements, claims by individual lenders remain speculative. “That announcement will determine the direction of banking stocks,” he said.

He also highlighted a structural constraint that could limit sharp price appreciation: the sheer volume of outstanding banking shares, often ranging between 40 billion and 50 billion units. Compared with companies like Seplat Energy or Nestlé Nigeria, whose smaller share bases support higher nominal prices, banks may require strong and consistent dividend payouts to justify significant valuation upside.

Tax policy adds another layer of risk

Beyond sector-specific dynamics, analysts warn that broader policy risks could influence equity performance in 2026. Muda Yusuf, Convener of the Centre for the Promotion of Public Enterprise (CPPE), has cautioned that the proposed increase in capital gains tax from 10% to 30% could dampen investor confidence, particularly among large institutional investors who dominate market liquidity.

While Yusuf acknowledged Nigeria’s improving growth outlook and the possibility of moderating interest rates—factors that could favour equities over fixed income—he warned that sharply higher taxes could undermine market momentum just as confidence is rebuilding.

Outlook: opportunity tempered by policy signals

Taken together, analysts agree that Nigeria’s banking sector stands at a critical inflection point. Stronger capital positions, improving macroeconomic indicators, and discounted valuations have positioned bank stocks as a lagging but potentially high-upside segment of the equity market in 2026. However, the pace and scale of any rally will depend on three decisive factors: regulatory clarity from the CBN, dividend outcomes for the 2025 financial year, and the broader policy environment—particularly taxation—that will shape investor appetite.

As analysts at Coronation Merchant Bank noted, while banking stocks underperformed in 2025 due to higher provisioning and the end of pandemic-era forbearance, the sector is well placed to become a major driver of market growth in 2026 as macroeconomic stability gradually returns.

Gold Refinery Begins Operations in Lagos as $600m Lithium Plant Nears Launch

  • dollaers
  • January 14, 2026
  • Manufacturing
  • 0 comments

The Federal Government has announced the commencement of operations at a high-purity gold refining plant in Lagos, marking a significant milestone in Nigeria’s push to transform its solid minerals sector from raw material exports to value-added industrial processing. The development was disclosed in a statement issued on Tuesday by Segun Tomori, media aide to the Minister of Solid Minerals Development, Dele Alake.

According to the statement, the Lagos facility is part of a broader national strategy aimed at repositioning Federal Government of Nigeria as a leading minerals processing hub in Africa. In addition to the newly operational refinery, the government revealed that three more gold refineries are currently at different stages of development across the country. These projects are expected to significantly curb illegal mineral exports, improve traceability, and strengthen investor confidence in Nigeria’s mining value chain.

Value-addition strategy gains traction

Speaking on the significance of the projects, Alake said they underscore the success of the government’s value-addition policy, which prioritises domestic processing of minerals over the export of unrefined ores. He noted that the approach is designed to boost government revenue, create skilled jobs, and enhance Nigeria’s competitiveness in the global mining industry.

“Nigeria’s value-addition policy is yielding results, with a high-purity gold refinery now operational in Lagos,” the minister said. He added that expanding refining capacity would help formalise the sector, improve transparency, and ensure that mineral exports are properly accounted for through verifiable supply chains.

$600m lithium processing plant ready in Nasarawa

Beyond gold, the government also confirmed that a $600 million lithium processing plant in Nasarawa State has been completed and is now awaiting formal commissioning. The facility is expected to play a strategic role in supporting battery manufacturing, particularly for electric vehicles and renewable energy storage systems.

According to Alake, the lithium plant positions Nigeria to tap into the rapidly growing global demand for critical minerals required for the green energy transition. He said the project is also expected to attract additional foreign and local investments, deepen industrial linkages, and stimulate economic activity in host communities.

Strategic talks with Saudi Arabia

The minister made these disclosures during a bilateral meeting with Saudi Arabia’s Minister of Industry and Mineral Resources, Ibrahim Al-Khorayef, held ahead of the Future Minerals Forum in Riyadh, scheduled for January 13 to 15. The meeting focused on strengthening cooperation between Nigeria and Saudi Arabia in minerals development, industrialisation, and technology transfer.

Alake praised Saudi Arabia for using the Future Minerals Forum as a platform to align national mineral strategies with global supply needs across Africa, the Middle East, Asia, and Europe. He said Nigeria is keen to deepen partnerships by leveraging areas of comparative advantage between both countries.

“There are areas where Saudi Arabia excels and others where Nigeria has strengths. We are keen on structuring agreements that enable meaningful, balanced and constructive engagement,” he said.

Priority areas and ESG focus

According to the minister, priority areas for collaboration include capacity building, training of mining professionals, mineral exploration, and technology transfer. He noted Saudi Arabia’s strengths in exploration technologies and geological data management, while highlighting Nigeria’s vast landmass and abundance of critical minerals and rare earth elements.

Alake also emphasised the importance of mineral traceability, environmental, social and governance (ESG) standards, and mine-pit remediation in future partnerships. He said traceability must anchor international cooperation, supported by clear timelines and robust monitoring mechanisms to enhance investor confidence and sustainability.

Market outlook for gold

The renewed focus on domestic refining comes amid a strong global outlook for gold. According to the World Gold Council, gold prices are projected to rise by 15–30% in 2026, following an exceptional performance in 2025. The precious metal recorded more than 50 all-time highs last year and delivered returns exceeding 60%, reinforcing its status as a strategic asset.

With gold refining now underway in Lagos and lithium processing capacity ready in Nasarawa, Nigeria appears poised to play a more prominent role in global mineral supply chains, particularly as demand accelerates for resources critical to industrial growth and the global energy transition.

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