Tag: Dangote

  • Dangote Cement assures shareholders of better returns

    Dangote Cement assures shareholders of better returns

    Chairman, Dangote Cement Plc, Alhaji Aliko Dangote, has assured shareholders that the company would continue to deploy strategies to increase profitability in spite of the prevailing harsh operating climate. Dangote spoke at the company’s annual general meeting in Lagos yesterday.

    He said with the measures put in place, the foreign exchange volatility would not affect the operations of the company significantly, noting that other African plants of the group are operating maximally and yielding positive results to cushion the effect of the scarce foreign exchange in Nigeria.

    “We have good strategy in place; the volatility of the foreign exchange will not affect our operations. I am not an advocate of devaluation of our currency, even if that had happened; it would not have affected your company,” Dangote said to the applause of excited shareholders.

    He noted that diversification was key to the group’s strategy and that was why it has intensified its expansion.

    According to him, the way the company has gone about its expansion, it would appear it has over invested in capacity expansion in Nigeria given that it has 29 million metric tonnes per annum (mtpa) and another 12 million mtpa capacity plants under construction, but the fact remains that investments can never be enough in Nigeria.

    “The World Bank estimates that Africa needs to invest $337 billion a year on new infrastructure in power, roads, transport, and water and then spend a further $35 billion a year on operations and maintenance. This indicates the size of opportunity for a cement manufacturer operating in Africa,” Dangote said.

    Shareholders approved distribution of N136.3 billion as cash dividends for the year ended December 31, 2015. Breakdown of the dividend recommendation indicated that shareholders would receive a dividend per share of N8 for the 2015 business year, 33.3 per cent increase on N6 distributed for the 2014 business year. The dividend will become payable tomorrow.

    Key extracts of the audited report and accounts of Dangote Cement for the year ended December 31, 2015 showed that turnover rose by 25.56 per cent from N391.6 billion in 2014 to N491.72 billion in 2015. Gross profit increased by 16.63 per cent to N289.92 billion in 2015 as against N248.58 billion in 2014. Profit before tax inched up to N188.29 billion compared with N184.69 billion in the previous year. After taxes, net profit rose by 13.68 per cent from N159.50 billion in 2014 to N181.32 billion. Earnings per share thus increased by 15.2 per cent from N9.42 in 2014 to N10.86 in 2015.

    Dangote Cement grew its total assets to N1.11 trillion in 2015, 12.82 per cent above N984.72 billion recorded in 2014. Total liabilities however rose by 18.68 per cent from N392.84 billion to N466.22 billion. Shareholders’ funds also grew by 8.9 per cent from N591.9 billion to N644.7 billion.

  • Kebbi, Dangote, farmers parley on sugar factory

    Kebbi, Dangote, farmers parley on sugar factory

    the Kebbi State government has set up a 12-member committee to dialogue with communities in Koko-Besse and Shanga local government areas of Kebbi State on the establishment of a sugar factory by Dangote Group of Companies.

    The committee accompanied by representatives of Dangote Group visited Koko Besse and Shanga councils, meeting with community leaders, farmers and residents.

    The meeting was to discuss and exchange ideas on the factory site, and determine how farmlands will be acquired by the group.

    The committee was headed by Alhaji Umar Abubakar Babuga, a former State Director of the National Orientation Agency (NOA), who explained to the communities the importance and benefits of the project. He also negotiated how the lands would be acquired for the project.

    “We are here to hear your views, and to tell you the importance of the project and negotiate how the company will acquire your lands,” he said..

    In his remarks to the occasion, Engr. Hamid Alsharif , who is the North West Sugar Project Coordinator of Dangote Group said the Sugar factory will be the biggest in Africa and will employ over 40,000 skilled and unskilled labour.

    He added that apart from employment benefit, the communities will also benefit from the corporate social responsibility of the company like schools, roads, electricity, and other human development.

    The District Head of Shanga, Alhaji Nasiru Abdullahi, Kwakwaten Shanga prayed for the success of the project, while a community leader in the area, who is also a farmer, Alhaji Umaru Dutsin Mari called on the company to adhere strictly to the terms of     land compensation to farmers.

  • Dangote Sugar Refinery to pay N7.2b dividend

    Dangote Sugar Refinery to pay N7.2b dividend

    Shareholders of Dangote Sugar Refinery (DSR) Plc will receive N7.2 billion cash dividends for the 2015 business year, according to the sugar-refining company’s earnings report, which has shown a modest growth in sales.

    The board of directors of DSR indicated that shareholders will receive a dividend per share of 60 kobo, about 62.5 per cent of the net earnings per share for the year.

    Key extracts of the audited report and accounts of DRS for the year ended December 31, 2015 showed that total turnover rose from N94.86 billion in 2014 to N101.06 billion. Gross profit also improved from N18.63 billion to N20.73 billion. Operating Profit increased to N15.85 billion in 2015 as against N13.59 billion in 2014.

    Also, the company recorded a profit before tax of N16.55 billion in 2015, representing an increase of eight per cent on N15.27 billion recorded in 2014. After taxes, net profit however dropped marginally from N11.64 billion to N11.54 billion. Earnings per share followed the trend, dropping slightly from 97 kobo in 2014 to 96 kobo. Total assets rose to N102.62 billion in 2015 as against N92.80 billion in 2014.

    The highlights of the company’s operations in 2015 showed that season sugar production at Savannah was 6,610 tonnes, up from 6,333 tonnes in 2014. The full year refinery production at Apapa stood at 740,350 tonnes, down from 832,660 tonnes the previous year. Group sugar sales improved from 781,319 tonnes in 2014 to 782,120 in 2015. The company added 100 trucks to the fleet under its management.

    Acting Group Managing Director, Dangote Sugar Refinery (DRS) Plc, Mr. Abdullahi Sule, said it was gladdening that the company was able to grow its revenue by 11 per cent and improve sales volumes compared to 2014 despite the current macro-economic challenges which Nigeria is facing.

    According to him, the 2015 business year ended with remarkable increase in volume in the fourth quarter as its corporate strategy to reduce margins in September by 28 per cent and the addition of 100 trucks to its fleet improved delivery to customers and resulted in increased market share.

    He outlined that the company has redeveloped its sequencing strategy to self-sufficiency through the production of refined sugar from cane and remain steadfast in its efforts to execute the “Sugar for Nigeria” project.

    “We have already had a strong start to 2016 as we pick up market share from competitors and smugglers. We have increased our fleet and are now able to meet our customer orders timely. We expect raw sugar prices to remain volatile for the rest of the year as weather conditions continue to threaten production in 2015/2016 season but do not expect to exceed the average achieved in 2015,” Sule said.

    He noted that refined sugar from cane remains the priority for the company adding that this path to self-sufficiency will eliminate reliance on foreign exchange as well as the volatility of raw sugar prices known with the currently import.

     

  • Community threatens showdown with Dangote over cement factory

    Community threatens showdown with Dangote over cement factory

    The people of Oteku community in Okpella clan Estako East Local Government have warned Dangote Group to negotiate with the real owners of the land before establishing a cement factory in the area.

    Dangote Industries Limited recently announced plans to commence a three million tonnes per annum production capacity cement plant in Okpella after it obtained license from the Mining Cadastre office for the Obu limestone deposit.

    Residents of Oteku who protested over the acquisition said they were not opposed to the presence of Dangote or any other investors but fighting against forces trading off their land without their consent.

    The protesters who carried placards with inscriptions as “Okuokpellagbe romancing with Dangote on illegal lease”, “Obu deposit in Okpella not Kogi”, “Obu is for BUA not Dangote” and “Okuokpellagbe has sold our birthright” went through major Streets in Iddo, Okugbe and Afokpella.

    Spokesman for the protesters, Mr. Uduafemeh Otaru Gospel, said they were prepared to resist any illegal acquisition of mining deposits in the area without the knowledge and consent of the land owners.

    He said the protest was to avoid communal clash in Okpella.

    President of Iddo Youth Forum, Mr. Mohammed Mohammed, said they would resist any attempt by Dangote Industries to frustrate investment of BUA Cement which has commenced cement production in the locality.

    According to him, “We cannot condone its back door activities in Okpella. We are a peace loving people and don’t want crisis under the guise of investments.”

    “Okpella people cannot watch helplessly as Ado Ibrahim and Dangote have redrawn the map of Okpella in Edo State.”

    Executive Chairman Etsako East Local Government Council, Hon. Abdulmalik Suleiman Afegbua, who addressed the protesters, said Governor Adams Oshiomhole was already handling the matter.

    He however promised to contact the Edo State Governor and relevant agencies, stressing that an inch of Okpella land will not be ceded to Kogi State.

    He however maintained that Dangote and other investors were welcome to other minerals deposits which abound in Okpella.

  • Dangote hailed for road repair

    Dangote hailed for road repair

    Dangote Construction Company, a subsidiary of Dangote Group, has been praised for its decision to fix the collapsed section of the road leading to Apapa Lagos Ports.

    Mr. Mufutau Egberongbe, Special Assistant to Lagos State House of Assembly Speaker Mudashiru Obasa on Political and Legislative Matters said he was elated like every other resident of the area by Dangote’s gesture.

    He pleaded with residents and stakeholders in the transport sector to support the firm to ensure speedy completion of the work.

    “I want to thank Dangote for this gesture. I also plead with other companies in Apapa to take a cue from him. No contribution to the development of Apapa is too small.

    “In whatever way we can help, let us do that for the overall peace and stability of businesses and living in the area,” Egberongbe said.

  • Dangote boosts rice production with outgrowers’ scheme

    Dangote boosts rice production with outgrowers’ scheme

    Commodities giant Dangote Group has unveiled a massive rice production scheme. The Dangote Rice Outgrowers’ Scheme has been unveiled  in Hadejia, Kafin-Hausa Local Government Area of Jigawa State.

    About 5, 000 farmers are expected to participate in the scheme, which kicked off with the distribution of treated rice seedlings for planting.

    Dangote Group President Aliko Dangote said the programme, which began with 20, 000 hectares of rice cultivation, would be expanded to cover 800,000 hectares over the next three years. He said there was no better time than now to turn to agriculture to save the economy.

    Oil prices have crashed, throwning Nigeria’s earnings off balance.

    “We are committed to the development of outgrower scheme by providing local, value added products and services that meet the basic needs of the populace,” Dangote said.

    The Dangote Rice Farm Ltd, will run an initial pilot in Hago-Fadama, Kafin Hausa and Auyo areas, which will see Dangote Rice developing small holder farmers by providing quality inputs (certified seeds, fertilisers, agro-chemicals and petrol), improved agricultural practices and technology to increase yield and produce quality rice paddy, which will  be bought  from them by the company.

    The Nation learnt that the outgrowers’ programme in Jigawa State would create over 10, 000 direct and indirect jobs for the host communities. Over the period, aside the outgrowers aspect of the investment, Dangote Rice plans to plant 150,000 hectares of long grain white rice and produce nearly one million tonnes of high quality par boiled white rice for sale into the Nigerian market.

    It was also learnt that Dangote Rice Farm Ltd has a deliberate policy in place to procure 30 per cent of its rice production from local farmers who will be developed into outgrower groups. According to Dangote, these outgrowers will be simultaneously developed alongside the company’s commercial farming operations.

    On why he forayed into rice farming, Dangote said: “Before the discovery of oil, our economy was built around potentials from our palm oil, groundnut, cotton, and rubber plantations. Now the price of oil has plummeted from a peak of $116 per barrel in June 2014 to as low as $29 per barrel in January 2016, this means there is huge loss of revenue to the government.”

    He expressed regrets that the nation’s agricultural commodities and food imports bills averaged over N1 trillion in the past two years of 2013 and 2014, with foods like sugar, wheat, rice, fish accounting for 93 per cent of the total cost of imports. He described the situation as unacceptable.

    While further justifying his investment in rice cultivation, Dangote pointed out that the situation the country has found itself needs a reversal. According to him, Nigeria spends nearly $1.8b per annum importing approximately 3.2 million MT of rice to feed its population. These, he said, are foreign exchange that could be used on more impactful social development interventions if they were not needed for food imports.

    Currently, average rice yield in the country is between 1.8 and 2.5 metric tonnes per hectare (MT/ha), depending on the region and the crop (wet or dry) and with or without irrigation. The 1.8 MT/ha is significantly lower than the best practice yields in Africa of 9.2 MT/ha generated in Egypt.

    Locally produced rice is more expensive than imported rice due to the high cost of production relative to the low yields in the country because of poor agronomic practices. In addition, the government of Nigeria has implemented policy incentives that encourage investment in domestic rice production and milling.

    Dangote, however, regretted that huge amounts were expended on food items that the country has potential to produce locally with attendant losses of employment and wealth creation opportunities. “Yet the allocation of foreign exchange to import these items continually deplete the foreign reserves,” he stated, adding that the outgrowers’ scheme has been designed as a one stop solution for the rice value chain.

    During the rice seedling distribution, Minister of State for Agriculture, Senator Heneiken Lokpobiri, lauded the initiative of Alhaji Dangote, saying his intervention in the government’s efforts at providing food security for the citizenry, creating jobs and reducing dependency on food importation is appreciated.

    According to him, a whooping sum of $20 billion is spent on importation of food items that could be produced locally, a situation he said Dangote rice investments would help reduce

    While expressing the government readiness to provide all the needed support to make the scheme a success, the minister said government is putting in place a strategy that will make farmers have greater access to farm implements to help them produce with ease.

    The Special Adviser to Alhaji Dangote on Rice and Coordinator of the outgrowers’ scheme, Mr. Lulu Carlos, explained that 6.1million metric tonnes (mmt) of rice is consumed annually, but not more than 2.6 million metric tonnes are produced locally, leaving the rest to importation.

    Lulu said: “We are happy to start today the partnership with the first outgrowers’ bloc of 200 hectares, shared among eight communities. I have seen the same project grow in my country, Brazil, whereby from 2.5 Mt tons in the beginning to today we reached 9 tons of paddy rice per hectare in productivity’’.

    Jigawa State Governor Alhaji Badaru Muhammed Abubakar thanked the Dangote Rice Limited for choosing Jigawa as the pilot state for the project. He pledged the readiness of his administration to provide all necessary support to the project. He said the project was in line with his government’s commitment to improve agriculture and industrialise the state for job creation and poverty eradication.

    The governor assured Dangote Group of the state government’s support in making any policy and intervention that will make the investment profitable and generate jobs for the teeming population of the state.

  • Osinbajo, Dangote, Tinubu for The Economist’s summit

    All is set for this year’s edition of The Economist Event’s Nigeria Summit.

    Philip Walker, Regional Manager of The Economist Intelligence Unit, will on Monday join eminent Nigerian businessmen and top government officials—from around the world—to review Nigeria’s current economic situation and provide an overview of the global macro-economic picture, talking through the growth prospects for Nigeria and the region.

    The guest and speaker list include Vice-President Yemi Osinbajo; President and President, Dangote Group, Alhaji Aliko Dangote; Danladi Verheijen, Chief Executive Officer and Managing Director, Verod; Herbert Wigwe, Chief Executive Officer, Access Bank, Nigeria; Okechukwu Enelamah, Minister of Industry, Trade and Investment; Jonathan Rosenthal, Africa Editor, The Economist.

    Other speakers and panelists are Alhaji Kashim Shettina, Governor, Borno State; Franklin Cudjoe, Founding President/Chief Executive Officer, IMANI; Philip Lindop, Head of Africa Investment Banking, Barclays Africa Group, Fola Laoye, Chairman, Hygeia Group.

    The list also includes: Alhaji Umaru Tanko Al Makura, Governor, Nasarawa State; Chief Willie Obiano, Governor, Anambra State; Issam Darwish, Executive Vice Chairman/Chief Executive Officer, IHS Towers; Adebola Williams, Co-Founder, RED, among others are also billed to speak at the event.

  • Driver charged with stealing N7.2m sugar from Dangote

    Driver charged with stealing N7.2m sugar from Dangote

    The police have accused a 50-year-old truck driver, Kolawole Odetunde, of stealing 900 bags of sugar valued at N7.2 million belonging to Dangote Sugar Refinery.

    It was alleged that on January 23, Odetunde, from Osun State, was directed to take a truck, marked LSR 37 YC, laden with the sugar from the company’s Apapa office to a customer, one Alhaji Salisu Sambo, in Jigawa en route Kano.

    Eight days later, the truck was found empty and parked outside the company’s workshop, with Odetunde at large.

    He was arrested later by the police.

    Yesterday, Odetunde was arraigned along with five other men before Mrs. S. K. Matepo at an Igbosere Magistrates’ Court in Lagos.

    The others are: Mogaji Huseini (37), Sefianu Musa (25), Alhassan Mohammad (52), Usman Idris (35) and Mohammad Lawal (65).

    They are standing trial on a four-count charge of conspiracy, stealing and receiving stolen goods.

    Prosecuting Sergeant Nicholas Akpene said Odetunde and the other defendants conspired to commit the alleged offence on January 29.

    He alleged that the five other men and others at large on the same date, time and place, received the sugar from Odetunde “with reasonable belief that same goods were stolen or unlawfully obtained.”

    The prosecutor also claimed that Odetunde “did steal one spare tyre and a rim of a truck marked LSR 37 YC valued at N66,000 property of Dangote Sugar Refinery.”

    The defendants denied the charges.

    Magistrate Matepo granted them N500,000 bail each with two sureties in the like sum and adjourned till March 23.

  • Dangote to launch take-over bid for minority shares in Tiger Branded Consumer Goods

    Dangote to launch take-over bid for minority shares in Tiger Branded Consumer Goods

    Alhaji Aliko Dangote’s Dangote Industries Limited (DIL) may soon launch a mandatory takeover bid for minority shares in Tiger Branded Consumer Goods Company (TBCG) Plc.

    DIL last week concluded the acquisition of the majority equity stake in TBCG, formerly known as Dangote Flour Mills. DIL acquired 65.6 per cent majority equity stake in the former Dangote Flour Mills Plc, now rebranded TBCG from Tiger Brands Limited, the South African core investors.

    A cross deal for the transfer of more than 3.28 billion ordinary shares of 50 kobo each of TBCG from Tiger Brands Limited to DIL was struck last Monday at the NSE. The cross deal was struck through the negotiated cross deal window of the NSE at N1.24 per share. TBCG’s issued share capital currently stands at 5.0 billion shares, indicating that the transferred 3.28 billion shares represents 65.6 per cent of the current issued share capital.

    The latest acquisition increased DIL’s shareholding in DIL to more than 75 per cent. With this, DIL might be required to make a mandatory take-over bid to the remaining shareholders of TBCG in line with section 131 of the Investment and Securities Act (ISA) and Rule 445 of SEC’s Rules and Regulations.

    In the same circumstance, FBN Assurance, which had acquired 71.2 per cent equity stake in Oasis Insurance, had made a mandatory takeover bid for shares held by minority shareholders.

    According to SEC’s Rule 445, any investor that acquire more than 30 per cent of the shares of a quoted company through non-primary transactions would have to make a take-over bid to other shareholders.

    The rule states that “no person shall acquire, through a series of transactions or otherwise, more than 30 per cent of the shares of a public quoted company without making a bid.”

    Also, where an existing shareholder, together with other persons acting in concert, hold not less than 30 per cent but more than 50 per cent shares of a company acquires additional shares, such person or persons shall make a takeover bid to the other shareholders of the company.

    The rule however indicated exemptions to primary market transactions including private placement, rights issue and initial public offerings. Takeover bid will not apply where an ailing company undertakes a private placement which results in the strategic investor acquiring more than 30 per cent of the voting rights of the company.

    Also, exemption was granted in the case of an acquisition or holding of or entitlement to exercise or control the exercise of more than 30 per cent voting shares of a company by an allotment made in accordance with a proposal particulars of which were set out in a prospectus where the prospectus was the first prospectus for the initial public offer of voting shares issued by the company or the person who acquired the voting shares was a promoter in respect of the prospectus and the effect of the acquisition on the person’s voting power in the company has been disclosed in the prospectus and the prospectus has been registered with the Commission.

    Takeover bid will also not be required in an acquisition of shares or rights over shares which would not increase the percentage of the voting rights held by that person, such as an investor that takes up his entitlement under a fully underwritten rights issue. The rules also excluded convertible securities from the mandatory takeover bid provision.

    Dangote Group’s DIL had in 2012 sold 63.35 of its equity stake in DFM to Tiger Brands in a $181.9 million deal. The deal saw transfer of 3.17 billion ordinary shares out of Dangote Group’s 3.67 billion ordinary shares of 50 kobo each in DFM to the Tigers Brand. The deal then was approximately valued at more than N28 billion, according to prevailing exchange rate.

    After nearly four years of successive losses and impairing of assets, Tiger Brands reached agreement with DIL on December 11, 2015 to resell the troubled flour-milling company to DIL.

    The Nation had exclusively reported approval of the acquisition by Nigerian and South Africa authorities. Sources had confirmed to The Nation that the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC), Nigeria’s apex capital market regulator; Nigerian Stock Exchange (NSE), where TBCG is listed and all necessary South African regulatory agencies had approved the acquisition deal.

    The Nation had reported that the transfer of the shares of TBCG from Tiger Brands to DIL would soon be done through the negotiated cross over window of the Nigerian Stock Exchange (NSE). The transfer of shares would subsequently be followed by the return of the company to its former name, which many stakeholders consider to be a stronger brand than the current name. The Dangote Group is the most capitalised quoted business group in Nigeria with four major companies including Dangote Cement, cement; Nascon Allied Industry, salt; Dangote Sugar Refinery, sugar; and TBCG, flour. It has several unquoted subsidiaries that are involved oil and gas, telecommunications, fruit drinks and transportation among others.

    The Nation had in late December 2015 also exclusively reported the details of the acquisition deal. Under the deal, Tiger Brands Limited, South Africa’s largest food company, would divest its shareholding to Dangote Industries Limited (DIL), the holding company of Africa’s richest man, Alhaji Aliko Dangote.

    A report obtained by The Nation, which outlined the key details of the Share Sale Purchase Agreement (SSPA), indicated that Tiger Brands will transfer and sell its 65.66 per cent majority equity stake in TBCG to DIL for a nominal consideration of $1. The South African majority core investor will also absorb N15.76 billion in debts.

    It was the first report to outline the key financial considerations of the acquisition. TBCG has 5.0 billion ordinary shares of 50 kobo each with market capitalisation of about N5.9 billion.

    In consideration for the transfer of the 65.66 per cent equity stake to DIL, DIL will inject N10 billion in form of a convertible shareholder’s loan into TBCG in January 2016. The convertible loan implies that DIL, at its option, will automatically have higher majority equity stake whenever it decides to exercise its convertible option.

    “Tiger Brands Limited will transfer/sell its shares (3,283,277,052) to Dangote Industries Limited for a nominal amount ($1) in consideration for Dangote Industries Limited injecting N10 billion in January in the form of a convertible (at lender’s option) shareholders’ loan,” according to the report.

    Besides, “Tiger Brands Limited’s loan to TBCG of N10.25 billion will be extinguished by way of debt forgiveness to the company” and “Tiger Brands Limited will assume the Stanbic IBTC debt of N5.51 billion and pay up the outstanding amount due to the bank”.

    DIL has already given a guarantee of its continued financial support to TBCG for at least 12 months to stave off threats of liquidation facing the company.

    External auditors to TBCG- Akintola Williams Deloitte, had expressed worries that accumulated losses and continuing decline in operational performance that had wiped out shareholders’ funds could threaten the survival of the ailing flour-milling company.

    In the latest audit of the group, the external auditors noted that the group had accumulated losses of N23.1 billion and a negative equity of N3.1 billion by the year ended September 30, 2015. “These conditions indicate the existence of a material uncertainty which may cast doubt on the Group’s ability to continue as a going concern,” the audit report stated.

    Key extracts of the audited report and accounts of TBCG for the year ended September 30, 2015 showed that the group recorded a net loss after tax of N12.68 billion in 2015, a double on a net loss of N6.28 billion recorded in comparable period of 2014. Turnover had increased from N41.27 billion in 2014 to N48.03 billion. Gross profit also rose from N3.21 billion to N4.47 billion. But a combination of interest expenses, related party expenses and administrative costs continued to undermine the company’s performance.

  • Dangote takes over Tiger Branded Consumer Goods

    •To revert to Dangote Flour Mills

    Alhaji Aliko Dangote’s Dangote Industries Limited (DIL) has acquired 65.6 per cent majority equity stake in the former Dangote Flour Mills Plc, now rebranded Tiger Branded Consumer Goods (TBCG) Plc, from Tiger Brands Limited, the South African core investors.

    A cross deal for the transfer of more than 3.28 billion ordinary shares of 50 kobo each of TBCG from Tiger Brands Limited to DIL was struck on Monday at the Nigerian Stock Exchange (NSE). The cross deal was struck through the negotiated cross deal window of the NSE at N1.24 per share.

    The negotiated cross deal implies that the buyer and the seller had agreed on the transaction and came to the stock market for formalization of the transaction. Negotiated window at the Exchange is usually used for large-volume and block divestment and it allows the consummated price and charges to be lower than the prevailing market rates.

    TBCG’s issued share capital currently stands at five billion shares, indicating that the transferred 3.28 billion shares represents 65.6 per cent of the current issued share capital.

    The Nation two weeks ago exclusively reported approval of the acquisition by Nigerian and South Africa authorities.

    Dangote Group’s DIL had in 2012 sold 63.35 of its equity stake in DFM to Tiger Brands in a $181.9 million deal. The deal saw transfer of 3.17 billion ordinary shares out of Dangote Group’s 3.67 billion ordinary shares of 50 kobo each in DFM to the Tigers Brand. The deal then was approximately valued at more than N28 billion, according to prevailing exchange rate.

    After nearly four years of successive losses and impairing of assets, Tiger Brands reached agreement with DIL on December 11, 2015 to resell the troubled flour-milling company to DIL.

    Sources had confirmed to The Nation that the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC), Nigeria’s apex capital market regulator; Nigerian Stock Exchange (NSE), where TBCG is listed and all necessary South African regulatory agencies have approved the deal.

    The Nation had reported that the transfer of the shares of TBCG from Tiger Brands to DIL would soon be done through the negotiated cross over window of the Nigerian Stock Exchange (NSE). The transfer of shares would subsequently be followed by the return of the company to its former name, which many stakeholders consider to be a stronger brand than the current name. The Dangote Group is the most capitalised quoted business group in Nigeria with four major companies, including Dangote Cement, cement; Nascon Allied Industry, salt; Dangote Sugar Refinery, sugar; and TBCG, flour. It has several unquoted subsidiaries that are involved oil and gas, telecommunications, fruit drinks and transportation among others.

    The Nation in late December 2015 also exclusively reported the details of the acquisition deal. Under the deal, Tiger Brands Limited, South Africa’s largest food company, would divest its shareholding to Dangote Industries Limited (DIL), the holding company of Africa’s richest man, Alhaji Aliko Dangote.

    A report obtained by The Nation, which outlined the key details of the Share Sale Purchase Agreement (SSPA), indicated that Tiger Brands will transfer and sell its 65.66 per cent majority equity stake in TBCG to DIL for a nominal consideration of $1. The South African majority core investor will also absorb N15.76 billion in debts.

    It was the first report to outline the key financial considerations of the acquisition. TBCG has five billion ordinary shares of 50 kobo each with market capitalisation of about N5.9 billion.

    In consideration for the transfer of the 65.66 per cent equity stake to DIL, DIL will inject N10 billion in form of a convertible shareholder’s loan into TBCG in January 2016. The convertible loan implies that DIL, at its option, will automatically have higher majority equity stake whenever it decides to exercise its convertible option.

    “Tiger Brands Limited will transfer/sell its shares (3,283,277,052) to Dangote Industries Limited for a nominal amount ($1) in consideration for Dangote Industries Limited injecting N10 billion in January in the form of a convertible (at lender’s option) shareholders’ loan,” according to the report.

    Besides, “Tiger Brands Limited’s loan to TBCG of N10.25 billion will be extinguished by way of debt forgiveness to the company” and “Tiger Brands Limited will assume the Stanbic IBTC debt of N5.51 billion and pay up the outstanding amount due to the bank”.