Author: Chike Ozohili

  • Russia-Ukraine Crisis Affecting Demand For Nigeria’s Crude, Says NNPCL

    Russia-Ukraine Crisis Affecting Demand For Nigeria’s Crude, Says NNPCL

    The Nigerian National Petroleum Company Limited (NNPCL) has provided insight into how the lingering conflict between Russia and Ukraine has impacted Nigerian crude oil inflows in the international oil market, leading to a dip in demand from the once-dependable Asian market at the onset of hostilities in the Eastern bloc.

    Maryamu Idris, Executive Director, Crude & Condensate, NNPC Trading Limited, who said this in a panel presentation at the Argus European Crude Conference in London, added that that the substantial price shocks impacting commodity and energy prices globally, the conflict between Russia and Ukraine has triggered a situation where India, a primary destination for Nigerian grades, increased its appetite for discounted Russian barrels to the detriment of some Nigerian volumes.

    “To illustrate the extent of this shift, Nigeria’s crude exports to India dwindled from approximately 250,000 barrels per day (bpd) in the six months preceding the February 2022 invasion of Ukraine to 194,000 in the subsequent six months afterwards. And so far, this year, only around 120,000 bpd of Nigerian crude volumes have made their way to India,” she said.

    On the other hand, she noted that the Nigerian crude flow to Europe has increased in a bid to fill supply gaps left by the ban on Russian crude, pointing out that six months before the war, 678,000 bpd of Nigerian crude grades went to Europe, compared to 710,000 bpd six months later and 730,000 bpd so far this year.

    “This trend makes it evident that Nigerian grades are increasingly becoming a significant component in the post-war palette of European refiners. Several Nigerian distillate-rich grades have become a steady preference for many European refiners, given the absence of Russian Urals and diesel. Forcados Blend, Escravos Light, Bonga, and Egina appear to be the most popular, and our latest addition — Nembe Crude – fits well into this basket. This was a strong factor behind our choice of London and the Argus European Crude Conference as the most ideal launch hub for the grade,” Idris also said.

    On production challenges, Idris remarked that, like many other oil-producing countries, Nigeria had faced production challenges aggravated by the COVID-19 pandemic, including reduced investment in the upstream sector, supply chain disruptions impacting upstream operations, ageing oil fields, and oil theft by unscrupulous elements. These factors, she said, contributed to production declines in the second half of 2022 and early 2023.

    Idris, however, noted that the challenges are fast becoming a thing of the past with the introduction and implementation of a new framework for the domestic petroleum industry (the PIA of 2021), rejuvenating the business landscape, and re-positioning NNPC Limited to adopt a more commercial approach to the management of the nation’s hydrocarbon resources.

    According to her, NNPC Limited has secured vital partnerships with notable financial institutions to promote upstream investments to restore and sustainably grow production capacity in the coming years.

    “NNPC Limited is championing concerted efforts in partnership with host communities and private stakeholders to address the security and environmental challenges in the Niger Delta to further fortify production growth. Suffice to say we have already begun seeing significant progress on the rebound. In September 2023, Nigeria recorded its highest crude oil and condensate output in nearly two years, reaching 1.72 million barrels per day. This, we believe, is just the beginning of our production rebound.”

    She affirmed that in addition to sustainably growing upstream production volumes, NNPC Limited is also increasing its participation in the downstream sector in line with a ‘wells-to-wheels’ approach, taking the country’s unique hydrocarbon molecules as close as possible to end-users.

    The vehicle for this, she said, is the restructured NNPC Trading Company, focused on growing NNPC’s presence in the global market for crude, condensate, gas, and petroleum products.

    The Argus Crude European Crude Conference Panel Session was held with the theme, ‘The Invisible Hand: How Are Shareholders and Asset Managers Meeting the Crude Industry? What Does This Mean for the Future of Crude in Europe?’

    Vice President Crude of Argus, James Gooder, moderated the event.

  • Banks’ Loans Hit N8.03trn In H1 2023 – Report 

    Banks’ Loans Hit N8.03trn In H1 2023 – Report 

    Oil and Gas, and manufacturing sectors lead other sectors in the amount of loans received from banks in the first half of 2023, accounting for 55.5 per cent of total N8.03 trillion to the economy as loans.

    This was revealed via data from the Sectoral Distribution of Credit by Deposit Money Banks published by the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) in the Statistical Bulletin for the second quarter of the year of 2023.

    The Oil and Gas sector got the largest share of N3.09 trillion representing 38.8 percent of fresh loans in the first half of 23, followed by the manufacturing sector which received N1.42 trillion or 17.5 per cent.

    The financial sector comprising the Finance, Insurance and Capital Market received the 3rd largest share of banks’ loans receiving N837 billion or 10.4 per cent of the new loans in the first half of 23.

    Trade and General Commerce received N670 billion representing 8.3 per cent while the Information, Communication and Technology sector received N517 billion representing 6.4 per cent of new loans in the first half 2023.

    General Services and Constructions received N398 billion and 348 billion respectively representing 5.0 per cent and 4.3 per cent of new loans in the first half of 23.

    The Power and Energy sector received N287 billion representing 3.6 per cent while the public sector (government) received N125 billion representing 1.6 per cent of new loans in the first half of 23.

    However, banks’ lending to the Mining & Quarrying sector declined by 16.6 per cent or N502 million in the first half of 2023, as lending to the sector dropped to N29.59 billion as the end of June from N30.09 billion at the beginning of the year.

    Similarly, lending to the Education sector dropped by 11 per cent to N84.19 billion at the end June from N94.4 billion at the beginning of the year.

  • Bulls Lead As Domestic Equities Gain N88bn

    Bulls Lead As Domestic Equities Gain N88bn

    The Nigerian equities market on Wednesday closed on a positive note, gaining 158.71 basis points.

    The NGX All Share Index also appreciated by 0.22 per cent to 70773.31 points from 70613.60 points traded.

    Market capitalisation of listed equities also increased by N88 billion  to N38.885 trillion from N38.797 trillion reported the previous day.

    The trading result for the day showed that Japaul Gold led gainers table in percentage terms, gaining 9.87 per cent to close at N1.67 per share, Mecure followed with a gain of 9.80 per cent to close at N3.25 per unit, Prestige insurance added 9.76 per cent to close at N0.45 per unit, Cornerstone Insurance up by 9.72 per cent to close at N1.58 per share while Omatek increased by 9.62 per cent to close at N0.57 per share.

    Conversely, Caverton Business Solutions recorded the highest loss with 9.87 per cent to close at N1.37 per share, Meyer Pant trailed with a loss of 9.85 per cent to close at N2.47 per share, SCOA Plc fell by 9.60 per cent to close at N1.13 per share, Thomas Way dipped by 8.60 per cent to close at N3.72 per unit, UPDC dropped by 8.26 per cent to close at N1.11 per share.

    Volume of activities increased by 139.061 million, representing 30.95 per cent as investors traded 558.344 million shares valued at N9.794 billion in 6401 deals against 449.283 million shares worth N5.444 billion exchanged hands the previous day in 7100 deals.

    Transactions in the shares of FBNHoldings Plc led market activities with 209.898 million shares valued at N4.042 billion, United Bank for Africa followed with account of 53.724 million shares worth N1.099 billion, Universal insurance traded 43.685 million shares cost N10.194 million, Fidelity Bank exchanged 22.253 million shares worth N203.733 million, Unity Bank exchanged 18.028 million shares valued at N16.860 million.

  • NNPC/Aiteo JV Launches Nembe Crude Oil Grade, Exports Double 950,000 Barrels

    NNPC/Aiteo JV Launches Nembe Crude Oil Grade, Exports Double 950,000 Barrels

    The NNPC/ Aiteo Joint Venture has announced the introduction of Nembe Crude Oil Grade, a new crude oil grade into the international crude oil market.

    According to a statement signed by Chief Corporate Communications Officer NNPC Ltd, Olufemi O. Soneye, the announcement of the Nembe Crude Oil Blend, produced by Aiteo, the Operator of the NNPC/Aiteo Oil Mining Lease (OML) 29 Joint Venture (JV), was made at the ongoing Argus European Crude Conference in London, on Tuesday.

    OML 29, an asset located onshore Nigeria, is operated by Aiteo Eastern Exploration & Production Ltd, Africa’s leading indigenous hydrocarbon producer, following a historic acquisition from Shell in 2014.

    The Nembe Crude was previously blended with the popular Bonny Light grade and exported via the Bonny Oil & Gas Terminal.

    The unique selling point of the Nembe Crude Oil grade with an API gravity was highlighted by both the Aiteo E & P and NNPC Limited Leadership at the Argus Conference in London.

    The Nembe Crude Oil grade also has a low sulphur content and low carbon footprint due to flare gas elimination, fitting perfectly into the required spec of major buyers in Europe.

    Two cargoes of 950,000 barrels each of the Nembe Crude Oil grade have since been exported to France and the Netherlands. With its attractive Assay of API 29 and low sulphur content, the Nembe Crude Oil grade commands a premium to the global Brent benchmark. 

    With the NNPC-Aiteo OML 29 JV back onstream, Nigeria now boasts of an additional crude oil export of 2 Cargoes at 950,000 barrels each per month and 1.2 Bcf of export gas monthly. 

    This remarkable achievement signals the commencement of activities at Nigeria’s newest crude oil terminal, the Nembe Crude Oil Export Terminal (NCOET), which was licensed in line with the extant laws and Crude Oil Terminal establishment regulations.

    The terminal was conceived as a Floating Storage and Offloading Vessel (FSO) with a storage capacity of two (2) Million Barrels and the ability to offload crude oil to any export tanker from AFRAMAX to Very Large Crude Carriers (VLCC).

    It has a loading capacity of 25,000 barrels per hour and will be exporting over 3.6 million barrels of Crude oil monthly at full scale of operation.

    Currently, hydrocarbon production from OML 29, which was hitherto constrained due to evacuation challenges owing to the security issues around the Nembe Creek Trunk Line (NCTL) corridor, has now been debottlenecked through a collaborative and creative approach that led to the innovation of the Alternative Crude Oil Evacuation Solution. 

    The Argus European Crude Conference 2023 in London is a gathering of energy majors, refiners, NOCs, traders, financial institutions, and other representatives from across the global oil markets. The event also provides a critical opportunity for business leaders to connect, discuss, share and learn from one another.

  • NNPCL Working With NEITI, Others To Reconcile NEITI’s 2021 Report

    NNPCL Working With NEITI, Others To Reconcile NEITI’s 2021 Report

    The Nigerian National Petroleum Company Limited (NNPCL) will continue to collaborate with the Nigeria Extractive Industries Transparency Initiative (NEITI) and all relevant stakeholders in the Reconciliation Committee set up by President Bola Tinubu to investigate, review and reconcile the financial records on alleged indebtedness to the Federation by both NNPC Limited and Federation Accounts Allocation Committee, FAAC.

    A statement signed by Chief Corporate Communications Officer NNPC Limited, Olufemi O. Soneye, on Monday night in Abuja, said, this comes on the heels of calls by a non-governmental organisation for a probe of several monies allegedly owed to the Federation by the national oil company.

    NNPC Ltd states that the claims by the NGO were baseless, considering the fact that NEITI itself had dismissed many of the allegations in the said 2021 report, following a series of engagements with NNPC Ltd.

    NNPC Ltd had severally explained that at the outset of President Bola Ahmed Tinubu’s administration, it was made to sell Premium Motor Spirit (PMS) imported into the country at one third of its value, a development that gave rise to an average of N400bn monthly subsidy bill, which subsequently put a strain on its revenues and finances.

    NNPC Ltd further stated “that subsidy bill accumulated to N3.736 trillion as of May 31st 2023.”

    The oil company said that the non-payment of NNPCL’s share of upstream joint venture gas supplied to the government-owned plants had led to the accumulation of indebtedness of N174.07 billion by the Federation.

    “Similarly, the receivables due from the federation to NNPC Exploration & Production Limited (NEPL) as of 31st May 2023 amount to $712million (equivalent to N309.07 billion at N434.08/US$1) for revenues not remitted to NEPL but paid into the Federation account.

    “While the Federation owed NNPCL the sum of N 4.207 trillion as net indebtedness, the Company was only indebted to the Federation in the sum of N2.852 trillion, made up mainly of outstanding Good and Valuable Consideration (GVC) in respect of government upstream divestments, royalties and Petroleum Profit taxes (PPT).

    “We would like to also use this opportunity to clarify that over the years, our relationship with NEITI has been very cordial, as seen in August 2020 when we became an EITI supporting company in 2020, joining a group of over 65 extractives companies, state-owned enterprises (SOEs), commodity traders, financial institutions and industry partners committed to observing the EITI’s supporting company expectations.

    “Indeed, aside being a signatory to several EITI’s global ethics and standards, NNPC Ltd had on the sidelines of the United Nation’s General Assembly (UNGA) in Washington DC, in September this year, signed up to the United Nations Global Compact on human rights, labour, environment, and anti-corruption, thereby becoming the first state-owned oil company to join the global initiative,” it said. 

    The state oil company averred that it’s book remains open as it remain committed to delivering value to Nigerians with integrity and as espoused in our principles of Transparency, Accountability and Performance Excellence (TAPE), the bulwark of the Mele Kyari leadership of the company.

  • Majority Rural Women Can’t Access Financial Services – Centre

    Majority Rural Women Can’t Access Financial Services – Centre

    The Executive Director of the Policy Innovation Centre, Dr Osasuyi Dirisu has said that 80 per cent of poor rural women have difficulty accessing financial services.

    In a pre-conference press briefing, Monday in Abuja, Dr. Osasuyi also said the situation has further made it difficult for them to drive trade and inclusiveness.

    The Gender and Inclusion Summit, with the theme “Building Bridges: Advancing Gender and Inclusion through the Intersection of Trade and Health”, will hold on November 28 and 29, in Abuja, Nigeria.

    Analysts say the event would be a catalyst for positive change, uniting voices, inspiring commitments, and mobilizing stakeholders to advance gender equality.

    She said, “About 80 per cent of the 133 million people who are multi-dimensionally poor live in rural settings, who are talking about access to financial services to drive trade and inclusion. Who is talking about the gaps in infrastructure to drive productivity?

    The PIC Executive Director noted that it is becoming increasingly difficult for women and vulnerable groups to access healthcare making Nigeria one of the countries with the worst indices for maternal mortality, new-born to child birth.

    “There needs to be real conversation around gender inclusion centred around trade for that is the powerhouse that drives productivity and drives conversation around GDP that we are able to address issues around inflationary pressures and ensure that we have a productive society.

    “The summit is special because we are not just talking about health, we are talking about trade. We are talking about an intersection where vulnerability is likely to occur,” Dr. Osasuyi said.  

    Speaking about the upcoming event, the Chief Executive Officer Designate of the Nigerian Economic Summit Group, Dr Tayo Aduloju stated that ‘’To facilitate the advancement of a gender-inclusive society, it is necessary to consider how trade, investment, and health policies/interventions affect women, men, and vulnerable populations differently. Despite their significant contributions to informal trade, women continue to have limited access to resources and markets. There are also significant gaps in access to health services and Nigeria’s maternal mortality remains among the highest in the world.”

    He further stated that “Considering these realities, the high-level forum on the SDGs has partnered with the Policy Innovation Centre (PIC) to ensure seamless delivery of the Gender and Inclusion Summit 2023”.

    PIC, an initiative of the Nigeria Economic Summit Group (NESG), is the first national institutionalized behavioural initiative in Africa supporting governments and stakeholders to make behaviourally informed decisions and generate contextually relevant evidence for high-impact interventions in critical thematic areas.

  • Equity Market Gains N156bn On First Trading Day

    Equity Market Gains N156bn On First Trading Day

    Domestic equity market opened transactions on the floor of Nigerian Exchange (NGX) on a positive note, gaining N156 billion.


    The NGX trading result showed that gain recorded in the shares of BuaCement, Oando, Seplat, Glaxosmith, Fidelity Bank and others boasted activities in the market.


    Market capitalisation of listed equities increased by 0.40 per cent to N38.712 trillion from N38.556 trillion reported the previous day.


    The NGX All Share Index also appreciated by 282.85 basis points to 70479.62 points from 70196.77 points it closed on Friday.


    A review of the investment showed that Thomas Way led gainers table in percentage terms, gaining 10 per cent to close at N4.07 per share, Chams Plc followed with a gain of 9.90 per cent to close at N2.22 per unit, Gloxasmith gained 9.68 per cent to close at N13.60 per share, Oando Plc up by 9.66 per cent to close at N9.65 per share, Japaul Gold gained 9.45 per cent to close at N1.39 per unit.


    On the contrary, ABC Transport recorded the highest loss during the day, dropping by 9.30 per cent to close at N0.78 per unit, Cornerstone Insurance trailed with a drop of 9.27 per cent to N1.37 per share. Champion Breweries gained 9.19 per cent to N3.36 per share, International Breweries down by 8.79 per cent to close at N0.21 per unit.


    Volume of trades declined by 19.348 million, representing 4.72 per cent as investors traded 391.013 million shares valued at N7.705 billion in 6837 deals against 410.361 million shares cost N9.163 billion exchanged hands the previous day in 6436 deals.


    Trading  in the shares of United Bank for Africa led market activities with 105.627 million shares valued at N2.137 billion, FBNHoldings followed with account of 33.267 million shares cost N602.498 million, Japaul Gold traded 21.348 million shares valued at N29.607 million, Fidelity Bank exchanged 20.438 million shares worth N175.964 million, AccessCorp exchanged 19.502 million shares valued at N33.657 million.

  • Opera News, Vanguard, Punch, Linda Ikeji, Others Generate N250m In Q3

    Opera News, Vanguard, Punch, Linda Ikeji, Others Generate N250m In Q3

    Nigeria’s most visited online news platforms under the news and current affairs category received a cumulative traffic volume of 250.6 million between August and September 2023, according to the latest Digital News Ranking report by Squirrel Media Technologies for Q3, 2023.

    The news platforms include Opera News App, Vanguard Online, Punch Online, Legit, Daily Post, The Guardian Online, Premium Times, The Nation Online, Sahara Reporters, and Tribune Online.

    Launched in March this year, the Quarterly Report is intended to provide media relations professionals with resources that offer deeper insights into the performance of Nigeria’s digital news platforms.

    The latest ranking rated hundreds of digital news publishers based on their total quarterly traffic volume, and covered publications in the most popular news categories, including News and Current Affairs, Business and Finance, Technology and Startups, and Entertainment and Lifestyle.

    The latest reports show that Opera News App, Vanguard Online, Punch Online, Legit, and Daily Post emerged as the most visited platforms in Q3.

    Opera News tops the chart with 45.2 million cumulative views. Vanguard online traffic volume recorded a 5 per cent increase in Q3 to 40.2 million, up from 38.2 million in Q2, making it the second most visited platform in Nigeria within the period under review.

    New Telegraph joined the millionaire’s club – a group of online news platforms with a traffic volume of at least a million per quarter. The platform’s traffic grew by 28% to 1.2 million from 908,674 in Q2’23.

    All the news platforms with less than 50K traffic per month were also excluded from the Q3 ranking

    In the online Business News Ranking, only 10 platforms with more than 50,000 traffic volume were included in the report with Business Insider Africa, Nairametrics and BusinessDay generating over a million traffic volume per quarter.

    The total impressions generated by all 10 platforms reported in Q3 stood at 25.5 million, up from 14.7 million total impressions from 16 platforms in Q2.

    Business Insider Africa, Nairametrics, and BusinessDay accounted for 88.55% of the total traffic share generated by this segment. Brandspur continues to make an incredible push with more than half a million traffic impressions.

    Other platforms with notable traffic volume include iBrandTV, Business Post and MSME Africa.

    In the Tech News Category, TechCabal sustained its lead of the category with a total traffic volume of 2.5 million, a 13% increase from the 2.1 million traffic volume in Q2.

    Only TechCabal, Technext and GadgetStripe generated more than a million impressions per quarter. Consolidating on its gains in Q2, Technext joined the millionaires club, as its traffic volume surged 82% to 1.8 million in Q3 compared to 977K recorded in Q2 2023.

    In the Entertainment & Lifestyle Category, only 7 platforms that are worth their onions in this category were considered in the ranking.

    Linda Ikeji’s Blog remains the leader in this segment, accounting for more than 65% of the industry’s total traffic volume.

    Commenting on the report, the co-founder of SuirrelPR, James Ezechukwu said the latest reports reveal the growing influence of the dominant players and the tremendous opportunity available to advertisers looking to reach their target market through these digital news platforms.

    “We remain committed to providing performance-based insights that will enable our partners to make informed media placement decisions. From this report, we see how events influence readership and how some platforms leverage their creativity in content marketing to maintain their dominance of each category,” Ezechukwu said.

  • 12.5kg Cooking Gas To Hit N18,000 By December —NALPGM

    12.5kg Cooking Gas To Hit N18,000 By December —NALPGM

    President of the Nigerian Association of Liquefied Petroleum Gas Marketers (NALPGM), Oladapo Olatunbosun has warned that the price of 12.5kg of cooking gas could go as high as N18,000 if the present scarcity persists.

    According to Olatunbosun, scarcity of the product is biting hard in Lagos and some other states in the country, noting that the scarcity has pushed up the price from the previous N900 per kilogram to as high as N1,400 in Lagos.

    He stated further that there is no justification for the current increase in refill prices. He said that stakeholders along the value chain were using the foreign exchange rate somersault as a reason to increase LPG prices, adding that 12.5kg refill prices could reach N18,000 by December 2023.

    “There is a ridiculous hike in gas prices going on right now, and I am afraid that if the federal government does not step in to checkmate the activities of these terminal owners, prices could reach as high as N18 million per metric ton by December. This means that a 12.5kg could go as high as N18,000″.

    The cost of LPG is tied to the exchange rate between the Naira and the Dollar. As the Naira weakens against the Dollar, it directly impacts the price of LPG.

    In just a year, the Naira weakened considerably against the Dollar, escalating from N565 to N1040 in October 2023. These shifts affect the price of LPG.

    Nigeria’s LPG market is supplied by both local production and imports. Local production covers a significant share, and imports bridge the supply gap. Nigeria’s Liquefied Natural Gas (NLNG) contributes about 40 per cent of LPG demand through domestic production. The remaining 60 per cent is imported.

    The price of a 12.5kg cylinder of cooking gas surged by 26 percent in two weeks to N15,000 from N11,850 owing to high global crude oil and gas prices and Nigeria’s forex crises.

    This recent surge will further squeeze cash-strapped consumers, erode their purchasing ability and amplify a cost of living crisis in Africa’s most populous nation. It will also accelerate October inflation when the figures are released.

    The World Bank, in its latest Nigeria Development Update report for June 2023, said the loss of purchasing power from high inflation has increased poverty in the short term, pushing an estimated four million Nigerians into poverty between January – May 2023.

    The global bank estimates based on the NBS data show that 89.8 million Nigerians fell below the poverty line at the start of 2023, with an additional four million making it 93.8 million in May of 2023.

  • BUA Sustains Strong Performance As Profit Rises By 54% To N105.6bn

    BUA Sustains Strong Performance As Profit Rises By 54% To N105.6bn

    Despite the numerous political and economic headwinds impacts experienced in the year, BUA Foods Plc sustained her leadership position in the Foods with a Profit After Tax (PAT) of N105.6 billion for the nine months period ended in September 2023.
    The amount represents a growth of 54 per cent against N68.8 reported the same period of last year.
    The company revenue grew by 81 per cent y-o-y to N524.4 billion at the end of September this year from N289.8 billion reported at the corresponding period of 2022.
    The growth in revenue according to the company was due to a year-on-year increase of 74.2 per cent in Sugar to N315.2 billion from N180.9 billion reported in 2022, a 126 per cent increase in Flour to N149.9 billion against N66.2 billion in the preceding year and 37 per cent growth in Pasta to N58.3 billion from N42.7 billion in the comparative period of last year.
    According to the company result, new division Rice business contributed N995 million to the top line during the same period, adding that across the business divisions there was significant growth in volume sold impacting the overall performance as well.
    The key drivers include slight price adjustments to reflect high input costs, volume growth and gradual commissioning of its expansion projects.
    The increase in cost of sales added 74.1 per cent to N340.6 billion in the third quarter from 195.6 billion in 2022 and was driven by an increase in raw materials cost and energy cost.

    The high input cost environment and further devaluation of the Naira against the US Dollar weighed heavily on prices for raw materials. This resulted in higher cost of production.

    Gross profit increased by 95.1 per cent to N183.8 billion in nine month in year 2023 against N94.2 billion in the same period of last year even as gross profit margin appreciated by 250bps to 35.0 per cent within the reviewed period against 32.5 per cent recorded in the preceding year due to the slight selling price adjustment and new market penetration for sales within the year.