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NSE May Sanction Union Bank, 13 Others Over Free Float Deficiencies

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By Dipo Olowookere

The Nigerian Stock Exchange (NSE) may soon wield its big stock on 14 companies over their inability to meet up with the minimum post-listing requirement with regards to free float of shares to the investing public.

The affected firms are AG Leventis Plc, African Paints Plc, Capital Hotel Plc, Caverton Offshore Support Group Plc, Champion Breweries Plc, Chellarams Plc, Ekocorp Plc, E-Tranzact International Plc, Great Nigeria Insurance Plc.

Others are Infinity Trust Mortgage Plc, Interlinked Technology Plc, The Tourist Company of Nigeria Plc, Transcorp Hotels Plc and Union Bank of Nigeria Plc.

The free float rule stipulates the minimum number of shares required by promoters of public companies listed on the NSE to be released to the investing public for trading at the stock market.

These firms are required to maintain a minimum free float of their shares for the set standards under which they are listed in order to ensure that there is an orderly and liquid market for their securities.

The free float requirement for companies on the Alternative Securities Market (ASEM Board) is 15 percent of market capitalization, Main Board is 20 percent of market capitalization, same as companies on the Premium Board (20 percent) of market capitalization or above N40 billion on the date the market regulator receives the Issuer’s application to list.

An information posted on the NSE website stated, “The following companies mentioned that have free float deficiencies have applied for waivers from the Quotations Committee of Management specifically provided compliance plans with tentative timelines to support their requests.

“The Quotations Committee of Management considered and approved an extended timeframe for the companies to regain compliance with the listing requirement. The companies are however required to also provide quarterly disclosure reports to the Exchange detailing their level of implementation of the compliance plans.”

According to checks by Financial Vanguard, the above 14 companies are still unable to meet the compliance date as approved by the NSE.

Findings revealed that AG Leventis has free float of 11.64 percent and deficiency of 8.36 percent or 1.901 billion shares with compliance due date of July 2017; African Paints 9.82 percent of free float and deficient of 10.18 percent or 381.969 million shares with compliance due date of December 31, 2017; Capital Hotel Plc 2.62 percent of free float and deficiency of 17.38 percent or 10.274 billon shares with compliance due date of October 31, 2017; and Caverton Offshore 17.40 percent and deficiency of 2.60 percent or 500.651million shares with compliance due date October 31, 2017.

Others are Champion Breweries Plc 17.30 percent of free float and deficiency of 2.70 percent or 1.222 billion shares, though undergoing restructuring; Chellerams Plc 14.87 percent of free float and deficiency of 249.402 million shares with compliance due date of February 28, 2018; Ekocorp Plc 11.84 percent of free float and deficiency of 8.16 percent or 343.630 million shares with compliance due date of October 31, 2017; and E-Tranzact International Plc 5.65 percent free float and deficiency of 14.35 percent or 10.667 billion shares with compliance due date of October 31, 2017.

Also Great Nigeria Insurance at 16 percent of free float has deficiency of 4 percent or 956.871 million shares with compliance due date October 31, 2017; Infinity Trust Mortgage 3.50 percent of free float and deficiency of 16.50 percent or23.831 billion shares with compliance due date of May 31, 2018; Interlinked Technology 14.50 percent of free float and deficiency of 5.50 percent or 89.782 million shares; The Tourist Company 3.58 percent of free float and deficiency of 16.42 percent or 10.303 billion shares, while delisting in progress; Transcorp Hotel 6 percent of free float and deficiency of 14 percent or 17.734 billion shares with compliance due date of December 12, 2017 and Union Bank Nigeria Plc 14.94 percent of free float and deficiency of 5.16 percent or 9.863 billion shares with compliance due date of June 30, 2017.

Meanwhile, further analysis showed that AG Leventis has applied for an extension of compliance date; Capital Oil is under regulatory watchlist; Champion Breweries has obtained NSE’s Quotation Committee of Management approval and is currently restructuring; Great Nigeria has concluded the first leg of the transaction for free float and Management of NSE has engaged the company on the next stage; The Tourist Company of Nigeria is under regulatory watchlist, while Union Bank has applied for an extension.

While reacting to the NSE’s position a source close to Transcorp said: “The company is aware of the free float deficiency and Management is working closely with the Stock Exchange to meet the free float requirement.

“We could have done this earlier before now but the market has not been favourable since last year but we hope that once the market is favourable, we will float more shares to the general public.”

Commenting on this, Managing Director/CEO, APT Securities & Funds Limited, Mallam Kasimu Kurfi, stated: “The situation depend on the market demand as long there is no demand it will take time to meet up the minimum flotation of 20 percent of the issued shares.

“You can see that despite effort of Dangote, still Dangote Cement Plc did not meet up with the minimum free float of share over years after listing on the Exchange. The better way is to give more time to the defaulters otherwise they may delist which is not good for the market.”

Also commenting the Executive Vice Chairman, High Cap Securities, Mr David Adonri said: “The Inability of the companies to comply with the free float is worrisome. It is to ensure that stocks ownership in public companies is not concentrated in few hands and to prevent price manipulation and dearth of liquidity. The earlier the defaulters comply, the better it is for the integrity of the capital market.

In his own remark, Managing Director/CEO, Sofunix Investment and Communications Limited and a Chartered Stock Broker, Mr Sola Oni said: “The NSE requires quoted companies to have a minimum 20 percent of its paid up share capital as free float or at least the value of its free float should be equal to N40 billion on the day the company is admitted to the Daily Official List of the Exchange.

The philosophy of free float is to hedge against high level of lock-in shares held by the company’s promoters. However, companies that fail to comply with the requirement have breached part of The Exchange’s Post Listing Requirements which they signed to uphold.

It portrays them as not transparent and reduces effective public participation in the companies’ ownership. This can attract sanctions from the Exchange.

“On the part of shareholders, a breach of free float rule obscures the real capitalization of such companies. It makes it difficult for shareholders to know the actual total value of a company for the purpose of investment decision. This particularly affects stockbrokers and other investment advisers in their advisory services on such companies.”

Reacting, the spokesperson for Independent Shareholders Association of Nigeria (ISAN), Mr Moses Igbrude said: “When market regulators failed or choose to bend the laws or their regulations to favour some players this scenario will be the case.

“Before now, core investors were not allowed to own more than 51 percent or 60 percent. This will allow for free float of shares. In the name of attracting certain companies to list on Stock Exchange the regulation was removed and the implication is what we are seeing in the market.

“The regulators also forgot that the strategic investors don’t trade their shares and it is the free float of shares in market that make prices.

“The removal or non-compliance to rule is one of the reasons why most delisted companies opted for that option, it made it a lot easy for a company with the intention to delist to gradually increase its percentage holdings over time by using their cronies to mop the shares.

“Share price of such stocks can easily be manipulated and it doesn’t reflect true market price, the likes of AG Leventis, Dangote group of listed companies falls in this category.

“I strongly advise the NSE and SEC to have the boldness and confidence to address this issue if they really want to have a global or international market as they want us to believe.

“A free float of companies’ shares is one major criteria to measure transparent and credibility of Stock Exchange.”

Another shareholder, activist, Mr Gbadebo Olatokunbo said: “The initial rule was that core investor will not hold more than 60 per cent of the issued capital. May be the NSE later knew that the policy wasn’t practicable and then relaxed, because I don’t know why after being quoted, you still want to enforce such policy.

“But for companies holding so much like 50/70 percent and above, my take is yes. Yes, because if you don’t, they (companies) will wake up from the wrong side of the bed one day and decide to buy-back from local-investors. It had happened in many companies e.g. Nigerian Bottling Company, NBC, 7up, Chellerams etc.

“I think companies should, if not must not hold more than 20/30 percent of their stocks after few years of quotation on NSE, our rules/regulations needs periodical reviews on citizen participation.”

Dipo Olowookere is a journalist based in Nigeria that has passion for reporting business news stories. At his leisure time, he watches football and supports 3SC of Ibadan. Mr Olowookere can be reached via [email protected]

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Economy

MRS Oil, FrieslandCampina Wamco Shrink NASD Index by 0.68%

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MRS Oil voluntary delisting

By Adedapo Adesanya

The duo of MRS Oil and FrieslandCampina Wamco Nigeria Plc weakened the NASD Over-the-Counter (OTC) Securities Exchange by 0.68 per cent on Friday, June 5.

MRS Plc lost N19.00 during the session to sell at N171.00 per share compared with Thursday’s value of N190.00 per share, and FrieslandCampina Wamco Nigeria Plc depreciated by N8.70 to finish at N181.68 per unit compared with the preceding session’s N190.38 per unit.

As a result, the market capitalisation further lost N22.59 billion to close at N2.607 trillion versus the N2.630 trillion it ended a day earlier, and the NASD Unlisted Security Index (NSI) dropped 37.76 points to settle at 4,358.32 points, in contrast to the previous day’s 4,396.08 points.

The alternative stock market closed the last trading day of this week with a price gainer, Central Securities Clearing System (CSCS) Plc, which gained 6 Kobo to quote at N78.40 per share compared with the preceding session’s N78.34 per share. However, it could not prevent the market from going down at the close of business.

Yesterday, the volume of securities bought and sold by investors went down by 50.0 per cent to 140,345 units from the preceding day’s 280,714 units, the value of stocks decreased by 16.5 per cent to N17.9 million from the previous session’s N21.5 million, and the number of deals carried out by market participants fell by 35.7 per cent to 27 deals from the 42 deals recorded on Thursday.

When trading activities closed for the day, Great Nigeria Insurance (GNI) Plc remained the most active stock by value on a year-to-date basis, with 3.4 billion units exchanged for N8.4 billion, trailed by Infrastructure Credit Guarantee (Infracredit) Plc with 2.3 billion units sold for N6.5 billion, and CSCS Plc with 64.7 million units traded for N4.4 billion.

GNI Plc also ended the session as the most traded stock by volume on a year-to-date basis, with 3.4 billion units worth N8.4 billion, followed by Infracredit Plc with 2.3 billion units transacted for N6.5 billion, and Resourcery Plc with 1.1 billion units valued at N415.7 million.

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Economy

NGX Index Rebounds 0.15% on Renewed Interest in Financial Stocks

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Financial Stocks

By Dipo Olowookere

Renewed interest in financial stocks and others lifted the Nigerian Exchange (NGX) Limited by 0.15 per cent on Friday.

Customs Street closed higher yesterday despite the 1.37 per cent loss recorded by the consumer goods sector as a result of profit-taking.

This was offset by gains in the other key sectors of the local bourse, as the insurance counter chalked up 1,14 per cent. The banking space appreciated by 0.90 per cent, the industrial goods segment grew by 0.46 per cent, and the energy sector expanded by 0.01 per cent.

Consequently, the All-Share Index (ASI) went up by 366.00 points to 242,593.31 points from 242,227.31 points, and the market capitalisation gained N235 billion to close at N155.594 trillion compared with the previous day’s N155.359 trillion.

The trio of International Energy Insurance, Abbey Mortgage Bank, and DAAR Communications improved by 10.00 per cent each yesterday to N7.26, N9.35, and N1.98, respectively, while Zichis advanced by 9.39 per cent to N32.38, with Sovereign Trust Insurance up by 8.70 per cent to N2.50.

On the flip side, Academy Press lost 9.84 per cent to quote at N8.25, University Press depreciated by 9.73 per cent to N5.10, Africa Prudential dipped by 2.63 per cent to N12.95, Chams crumbled by 2.44 per cent to N4.00, and International Breweries slipped by 1.59 per cent to N12.35.

Business Post reports that the market breadth index was positive during the session after recording 37 appreciating equities and 14 depreciating equities, implying strong investor sentiment.

Abbey Mortgage Bank led the activity chart with a turnover of 164.1 million units worth N1.5 billion, Ellah Lakes sold 76.7 million units for N767.2 million, Access Holdings transacted 44.8 million units valued at N1.1 billion, Linkage Assurance exchanged 23.0 million units worth N41.2 million, and The Initiates traded 20.2 million units for N562.1 million.

At the close of trades, market participants transacted 608.5 million units worth N32.0 billion in 53,826 deals versus the 588.5 million units valued at N27.9 billion executed in 57,352 deals in the previous session. This showed that the number of deals eased by 6.15 per cent, the volume of transactions rose by 3.40 per cent, and the value of transactions soared by 14.70 per cent.

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Economy

Naira Depreciates to N1,362/$1 at Official Market

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Naira 4 Dollar

By Adedapo Adesanya

The Naira further depreciated against the United States Dollar by N3.46 or 0.25 per cent to N1,362.21/$1 from N1,358.75/$1 in the Nigerian Autonomous Foreign Exchange Market (NAFEX) on Friday, June 5.

However, it appreciated against the Pound Sterling in the same market window during the session by N4.47 to trade at N1,823.59/£1 compared with the previous day’s N1,828.06/£1, and gained N7.00 against the Euro to sell at N1,574.58/€1, in contrast to Thursday’s closing price of N1,581.58/€1.

For another trading session, the Nigerian Naira maintained stability against the Dollar in the parallel market and the GTBank forex counter on Friday at N1,375/$1 and N1,372/$1, respectively.

The Naira is expected to remain strong in the near term, backed by a rise in external reserves, which are nearing $50 billion, enhancing analysts’ confidence about its outlook in the second half of 2026.

Heightened global uncertainty has reduced the incentive for importers and corporates to demand FX, as cautious trade weighs on import needs. Analysts estimate a $40 billion net FX position for the year, a projection anchored in oil windfall gains.

As for the cryptocurrency market, prices remained depressed following a strong US jobs report that spurred markets to price in higher-for-longer interest rates, sending Treasury yields and the dollar up while hammering stocks, especially AI-related names. Crypto markets saw heavy leverage washouts with about $1.6 billion in positions liquidated over 24 hours.

Ethereum (ETH) gave up 4.9 per cent to trade at $1,584.68, Solana (SOL) fell by 3.3 per cent to $63.22, Bitcoin (BTC) crashed by 1.9 per cent to $61,333.23, Dogecoin (DOGE) slipped by 1.8 per cent to $0.0821, and Ripple (XRP) moderated by 1.8 per cent to $1.09.

Further, TRON (TRX) dropped 1.6 per cent to sell at $0.3197, Binance Coin (BNB) slumped by 1.0 per cent to $581.18, and  Cardano (ADA) declined by 0.4 per cent to $0.1589, while the US Dollar Tether (USDT) gained 0.07 to sell at $0.9997, and US Dollar Coin (USDC) closed flat at $0.9998.

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