Business
Shareholders, Dealers Differ On Certificates Verification Fees
Shareholders and dealers, have disagreed on the increasing
cost of verifying share certificates for the ongoing de-materialisation.
The disagreement among the capital market operators in Lagos
followed a circular by the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) stipulating
that the exercise was free.
Investigations showed that contrary to the SEC’s directives,
most stock broking firms still charge shareholders between N500 and N1,000 as
fees, depending on the location of the registrars.
SEC on March 13 issued the circular making January1, 2013,
the deadline for the de-materialisation of all share certificates.
According to the circular, all share certificates
de-materialised on or before January1, 2013, will be free while those that come
after attract an unspecified penalty.
It also said that the allotment of shares of public
offerings would be electronically transferred directly to the shareholders’
accounts in the Central Security Clearing System (CSCS).
Mr Sunny Nwosu, the National Coordinator, Independent
Shareholders Association of Nigeria (ISAN), said that shareholders were being
short changed by the dealers, in spite of their losses.
Nwosu described the charges for verification as part of the
market’s flaws affecting investor confidence.
The ISAN boss urged SEC to ensure that it implemented the
extant rules guiding the operations of the market.
He also charged SEC to emphasise inclusive capital market
regulation by partnering stockbrokers and shareholders on the development and
growth of the capital market.
Mr Boniface Okezie, the President of the Progressive
Shareholders Association of Nigeria (PSAN), described the inability of the
commission to protect the interest of local investors
as unfortunate.
Okezie said it was illogical that shareholders’ burden
increased daily through multiple taxes, in spite of the commissions earned by
the SEC, the Nigerian Stock Exchange (NSE) and dealers from their portfolio
investments.
Dr David Ogogo, the Chief Executive Officer of the Institute
of Capital Market Registrars (ICMR), Lagos, urged stakeholders who owned
capital to convene a meeting to address the current challenges facing the
market.
Ogogo suggested that the cost of verification should be
treated in isolation but in the context of service delivery in a depressed
capital market.
Mr Emeka Madubuike, the President of the Lagos-based
Association of Stock broking Houses of Nigeria (ASHON), said that the charges
were decided by the various firms.
Madubuike, who claimed the dealers were ignorant of the SEC
circular or notice on share certificate verification, noted that the commission
had failed to implement or enforce the order.
He said that the verification fee was for incidentals, such as
transportation and activities that would enable dealers’ personnel to follow up
on the investors’ instructions.
“The issue of brokers’ charges will be looked into and dealt
with so that it doesn’t act as an impediment to the de-materialisation policy,”
Madubuike said.
According to Alhaji Rasheed Yussuf, the immediate past
President of ASHON, the verification fees “are just transport expenses for the
prosecution of investors’ orders.
Business
Insecurity, Poor Power Supply Hamper Business Activities – Survey
Business in Nigeria remain under pressure as a result of insecurity and erratic power supply which continue to stifle productivity in the country.
This is even as new data from the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) indicate sustained improvements in economic activity.
This was the response of businesses in the CBN’s October 2025 Business Expectations Survey (BES) and the Purchasing Managers’ Index (PMI) report.
While the PMI showed that economic activity expanded for the 11th consecutive month, the BES revealed that businesses are still grappling with crippling operational constraints that threaten to reverse recent macroeconomic gains.
According to the BES conducted between October 6 and 10, firms identified insecurity (71.8 points) as the most critical challenge affecting operations nationwide. This was closely followed by insufficient power supply (70.9 points), multiple taxation (70.2 points), high interest rates (68.4 points) and financial constraints (65.6 points). Analysts say these constraints underscore the depth of structural weaknesses confronting Nigeria’s private sector.
Despite these challenges, the survey reported a rise in business optimism. The Business Confidence Index increased to 38.5 points in October from 31.5 in September. Firms also projected confidence levels to reach 45.6 points in November, with expectations of further improvement over the next three to six months.
However, sector analysts warn that the optimism remains fragile due to the lack of significant improvements in the operating environment.
The BES further showed a modest rise in capacity utilisation from 60.4% in September to 62.0% in October, suggesting that businesses have yet to deploy their productive capacity amid ongoing disruptions fully.
In contrast to the structural constraints highlighted in the BES, the PMI report indicated strengthening economic momentum. The composite PMI rose to 55.4 points, reflecting expansion across major components such as output, new orders, employment, inventories, and supplier delivery times.
A sectoral breakdown showed that the agriculture sector recorded the most substantial improvement, with its PMI climbing to 57.5 points, marking 15 consecutive months of expansion. The services sector also expanded for the ninth straight month to 55.6 points, while the industry sector rose to 54.2 points, the highest in more than a year.
The CBN attributed the positive trends to improvements in the broader macroeconomic landscape, including declining inflation, which eased from 24.5% in January to 18.0% in September, and the year-to-date appreciation of the naira across both official and parallel markets.
The BES showed that the North-East posted the highest business confidence at 56.1 points, while the South-South recorded the lowest at 23.3 points, a trend linked to declining activity in oil-producing communities.
Business
FG Set To Launch Free National Financial Literacy Training For 100,000 Youths,
The Federal Government will on Tuesday, November 25, officially unveil a strategic programme for a free nationwide training of over 100,000 youth on financial literacy.
The Federal Ministry of Youth Development will launch the programme in collaboration with Investonaire Academy. Tagged, the “Financial Literacy, Investment, and Wealth Creation programme.”
The flagship initiative is designed to equip young Nigerians with essential financial skills, investment knowledge, and digital competencies for sustainable wealth creation.
A statement signed by the Director, Press and Public Relations, Federal Ministry of Youth Development, Omolara Esan, and made available to newsmen, confirmed that the launch of the programme, to be held in Abuja, would promote nationwide participation.
It added that the launch would bring together senior government officials, development partners, private sector leaders, and youth representatives to explore innovative approaches for improving financial capability and strengthening the economic prospects of young Nigerians.
Minister of Youth Development, Comrade Ayodele Olawande, would serve as the chief host, while the Minister of Women Affairs, Hajiya Imaan Sulaiman-Ibrahim, would grace the event as the Special Guest of Honour.
Also expected are representatives of key government institutions and private sector partners, including Dr Enefola Odiba, International Programme Director, Investonaire Academy, and Mr. Bashir Nurmohamed, Chief Executive Officer, Hantec Markets
The statement reads, “A major highlight of the event will be the unveiling of a free national financial literacy training programme targeting over 100,000 youths annually. The programme will be powered by a state-of-the-art Learning Management System (LMS) designed to enhance financial intelligence, investment capacity, and entrepreneurial readiness among Nigerian youth.
Lady Godknows Ogbulu
Business
‘Entrepreneurs, Not Foreign Aid Drive Nigeria’s Growth’
The chairman of the United Bank for Africa, Tony Elumelu, says Nigeria’s economic transformation will be driven by entrepreneurs, not government handouts or foreign assistance.
Elumelu, who spoke at the Grow Nigeria Conference 2.0 and themed ‘Empowering Nigeria’s Entrepreneurs: Building Institutions That Last’, in Lagos, Monday, said the nation’s future is already being shaped by business owners who refuse to settle for mediocrity.
Elumelu, who is also the founder of the Tony Elumelu Foundation, described Nigeria as an entrepreneurial nation but stressed the need to build institutions that can stand the test of time.
“Starting businesses is good. Sustaining them is critical, and that’s how we transform this economy,” he said.
He noted that many promising ideas fail because the systems and support structures necessary for growth are absent.
According to him, Nigeria’s renewal must come from the private sector, backed by strong governance frameworks and proper succession planning.
“Nigeria will not be built by government handouts or foreign aid. Government’s role is critical, but Nigeria will be built by entrepreneurs — by you, building businesses that create jobs, hope, and prosperity from the ground up,” he said.
Elumelu, however, emphasized that entrepreneurs cannot succeed in isolation.
“You need frameworks — clear governance, succession planning, and relentless focus on value. We need the right environment. We need a Nigeria where policies are predictable, infrastructure works, and financing is truly accessible,” he said.
He called for stronger alignment between public and private sector efforts, warning that progress would remain limited if institutions work independently rather than collaboratively.
Elumelu commended the Director-General of the Small and Medium Enterprises Development Agency of Nigeria (SMEDAN), Charles Odii, for ongoing reforms within the agency.
He further lauded President Bola Tinubu for appointing young Nigerians to lead key institutions and for prioritizing youth entrepreneurship.
“Let us cut the bureaucracy. Make finance and opportunity real, not theoretical. Let’s help Nigeria’s entrepreneurs move from surviving to winning.
“Every job we create fights insecurity. Every thriving business increases our tax base and accelerates prosperity for all,” Elumelu added.
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