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ICAN, NGX honour Dangote Cement for excellence in corporate reporting

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Dangote Cement has been honoured with the top prize at the inaugural Corporate Reporting Award, jointly organized by the Institute of Chartered Accountants of Nigeria (ICAN) and NGX Regulation Limited.

The leading cement manufacturer received the Platinum award for excelling across all three reporting categories, showcasing exemplary reporting practices that comprehensively address all relevant aspects of corporate reporting. According to the organisers, the scoring criteria involved a combination of average scoring and assessments from individual judges.

In addition to the Platinum award, Dangote Cement also clinched the Best in Class Award for Excellence in Corporate Governance, surpassing other nominees such as Access Holdings, Airtel Africa, ETI, MTN Nigeria, SEPLAT Energy, and Stanbic IBTC Holdings Plc. Airtel Africa and Seplat Energy were recognized for Financial Reporting and Sustainability Reporting, earning Gold and Silver awards respectively in the overall category.

Edward Imoedemhe, the Company Secretary/General Counsel of Dangote Cement Plc, expressed gratitude for the recognition, emphasizing the company’s dedication to corporate reporting standards. He said that the awards will serve as motivation to continually elevate performance in this area.

“We are grateful to the organisers for this honour which is a testament to our commitment to corporate reporting and best practice. We will continue to raise the bar,” he assured.

Olufemi Shobanjo, CEO of NGX Regulation Limited, highlighted the significance of the award in promoting transparency and accountability among listed companies, anticipating a positive ripple effect on both listed and private companies in Nigeria.

ICAN’s 59th President, Innocent Okwuosa, underscored the importance of corporate reporting excellence in attracting capital flows to the market. He emphasized the role of transparency in fostering investor confidence and reiterated ICAN’s commitment to promoting accountability and transparency in the private sector.

“It is generally agreed that capitals will flow to markets that foster greater transparency and this effort is aimed at this. It also re-enforces the public interest mandate of ICAN in extending accountability and transparency to the private sector,” he said.

The maiden Corporate Reporting Award recognized the top 30 most capitalized companies listed on the Nigerian Exchange Limited for the 2022 financial reporting year.

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Total Nigeria Plc shareholders laud consistent dividend payment, urge govt support

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By Ifeoluwakitan Afolabi

Shareholders of Total Nigeria Plc have praised the company for its consistent dividend payment despite the challenging operating environment.

At the company’s Pre-Annual General Meeting (AGM) held in Lagos, stakeholders commended Total’s entrenched safety culture, innovation, and good corporate governance for its impressive performance.

Mrs. Ifeyinwa Chinwe, a stakeholder, attributed the company’s success to its commitment to excellence and urged the government to create a more business-friendly environment to encourage companies like Total to thrive.

She also emphasised the importance of individual actions in promoting sustainability, encouraging everyone to adopt eco-friendly practices like recycling, conserving energy, and reducing plastic use.

The shareholders’ appreciation and Mrs. Chinwe’s call to action highlight the importance of collaboration between businesses and individuals in driving growth and sustainability in Nigeria.

Addressing the shareholders, the chairman Mr Jean-Phillipe Torres said he was glad to meet everyone once again, especially the fact that he’s back to Nigeria and that Nigeria has become a place where he could call home.

He encouraged everyone to please do better and ensure they are doing the right thing at the right time.

“In 2023, TotalEnergies reported a turnover of $281.7 billion. For 2024, their Q1 2024 results indicate a slight increase in turnover compared to Q1 2023, reflecting higher energy prices and increased production,” he said.

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Investors return from Sallah break with N47bn loss

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The equities market resumed from the Eid-El-Kabir holiday with investors losing N47 billion at the end of trading session on Wednesday.

This followed a dip in the share price of stocks like Caverton, ABC Transport, and NB amongst others on the trading floor today.

After five hours of trading at the capital market, the equity capitalisation crashed to N56.4 trillion from N56.5 trillion posted by the bourse on Friday.

Similarly, the All-Share Index (ASI) decreased to 99,840.95 from 99,925.29 recorded the previous trading day.

The market breadth was positive as 40 stocks advanced, 15 declined, while 70 others remained unchanged in 9, 899 deals.

UPL, Guinness, and Champion led other gainers with 10 percent, 9.96 percent, and 9.83 percent growth in share price to close at N2.75, N66.25, and N3.24 from the previous N2.50, N60.25, and N2.95 per share.

On the flip side, Caverton, ABC Transport, and NB led other price decliners as they shed 9.62 percent, 9.52 percent, and 8.37 percent each to close at N1.41, N0.57, and N29.00 from the initial N1.56, N0.63, and N31.65 per share.

Veritaskap traded 55.731 million shares valued at N443 million in 103 deals.

On the value index, Fidelity Bank recorded the highest value for the day trading stocks worth N11.3 billion in 466 deals followed by Geregu which traded equities worth N1.09 billion in 61 deals.

MTN Nigeria traded stocks worth N596 million in 454 deals.

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Naira trades flat on black market as dollar liquidity improves

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The naira, Nigeria’s currency on Wednesday traded flat at N1,490 on the parallel market, popularly called the black market, following improved dollar liquidity in the foreign exchange (FX) market.

When compared to last week’s rate of N1,495, the naira recorded a marginal gain of 0.33 percent per dollar on the black market.

A total of $5.95 billion from the World Bank and Afreximbank entered into the Nigerian economy, helping to strengthen Nigeria’s external reserves and the naira.

At the Nigerian Autonomous Foreign Exchange Market (NAFEM), the naira closed flat on Friday, gaining marginally by 0.06 percent as the dollar was quoted at N1,482.72 on Friday as against N1,483.62 closed on June 10, 2024, according to the data obtained from the FMDQ Securities Exchange Limited.

The dollar supply by willing buyers and willing sellers increased by 13.47 percent to $183.47 million on Friday, June 15, 2024 from $161.69 million as of June 10, 2024, according to data from the FMDQ Securities Exchange Limited.

Nigeria‘s foreign currency reserves have risen by 2.19 percent month-on-month, following streams of dollar inflows from international financial institutions.

Data from the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) revealed that external reserves grew to $33.159 billion as of June 11, 2024 from $32.447 billion in May 10, 2024.

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