Tag: NGX Group

  • Reforms, inclusion, technology reshaping capital market, says NGX Group

    Reforms, inclusion, technology reshaping capital market, says NGX Group

    Group Chief Executive Officer, Nigerian Exchange Group (NGX Group) Plc, Mr. Temi Popoola has said Nigerian capital market has been consolidating its position as a structured gateway to the African market.

    According to him, macroeconomic reforms, digital platforms, and expanding investor participation have seen the market scaling from milestones to milestones.

    Popoola highlighted how Nigeria’s ongoing reforms are translating into tangible investment opportunities, particularly for women and diaspora investors.

    Reflecting on Nigeria’s 2025 adjustment phase, he noted that difficult but necessary reforms, alongside improved price discovery, have laid the foundation for more sustainable growth in 2026.

    He pointed to the NGX All-Share Index’s 51.19 per cent gain in 2025, attributing the performance to improvements in corporate earnings, dividend consistency, and economic reforms, rather than speculative activity.

    He said: “Capital is becoming increasingly selective globally. What we are seeing in Nigeria is a market that has embraced reforms, strengthened transparency, and invested in resilient infrastructure. The focus is on building an investable platform that supports long-term economic growth”.

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    He underscored the role of inclusive participation in deepening market resilience, noting a growing proportion of women investors among new retail accounts.

    Referencing a recent telecommunications public offer in which women accounted for 76 per cent of more than 110,000 new investor accounts, Popoola said broader participation contributes to healthier markets through longer investment horizons, disciplined accumulation, and more risk-aware decision-making.

    “Women don’t just participate in markets; they help stabilize them,” Popoola said.

    Popoola spoke at Pan-African Investment Lounge hosted by Radiant Collective Capital (RCC). With the theme: “Global Economic Outlook 2026 & Overview of the Nigerian Stock Exchange: Opportunities and Market Structure,” the virtual session brought together women professionals, founders, and business leaders from across Africa and the diaspora.

    Looking ahead to 2026, Popoola identified five interconnected pillars shaping Nigeria’s investment landscape: global geopolitical shifts creating alternative supply-chain opportunities; strengthening macroeconomic stability with projected GDP growth of 4.4 per cent; renewed foreign portfolio investment driven by improved transparency and attractive yields; closer coordination between fiscal and monetary policy; and greater asset utilisation through new listings and infrastructure-linked instruments.

    He also emphasised that future market growth will increasingly be driven by technology, sustainability, and strategic partnerships. Digital platforms such as NGX Invest are expanding access and transparency across the primary market, while ESG-linked initiatives, including the NGX Net-Zero project, support long-term market resilience and risk management. Partnerships with regulators and key market stakeholders, he noted, remain central to sustaining investor confidence.

    Popoola said NGX Group plans to build on this engagement with targeted investor education initiatives in 2026, focusing on digital market access, sector-specific opportunities, and structured pathways for diaspora investment.

    The session set the stage for deeper collaboration between NGX Group and women-led investment networks across the continent.

  • NGX Group, others expand social impact project

    NGX Group, others expand social impact project

    Nigerian Exchange Group Plc (NGX Group), in partnership with the Lagos State Government and the Health Emergency Initiative (HEI), has extended its social impact project to Alimosho Local Government Area, continuing efforts to address child malnutrition in underserved communities across Lagos State.

    The latest outreach was the third under the initiave, known as Bringing Life to Our Overlooked Minors or Project BLOOM. The outreach was held in Alimosho within Lagos State Health District I and reached over 120 malnourished children, providing nutritional support, medical screening, and caregiver education.

    This followed earlier interventions in Yaba and Ajegunle, which have collectively supported over 320 children and 300 caregivers, with monitoring data showing that more than 50 per cent of beneficiaries in the first two phases entered recovery.

    NGX Group staff volunteers worked alongside Lagos State health workers and HEI facilitators during the outreach, assisting with screenings and data recording. Structured follow-up visits are scheduled after four weeks to monitor recovery and provide extended care where necessary.

    Group Managing Director, Nigerian Exchange Group (NGX Group) Plc, Temi Popoola, said the initiative has broad implications for national economic resilience.

    He said: “Sustainable capital markets are built on strong social foundations. The recovery rates we see with Project BLOOM prove that targeted, collaborative action between the public sector, civil society, and the private sector can deliver tangible impact”.

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    Executive Director of HEI, Achunine Pascal, said child malnutrition remains a major contributor to under-five mortality in Nigeria, adding that Project BLOOM is designed to go beyond immediate food support through structured follow-up and continued care.

    Chairman, Alimosho Local Government Area, Honourable Akinpelu Ibrahim Johnson, said the initiative supports the council’s long-term strategy for improving child nutrition through early detection, prevention, and effective management of malnutrition. Representing the Permanent Secretary, Lagos State Health District I, Dr. Solomon Adeyanju commended NGX Group for its commitment to child health, describing Project BLOOM as a valuable complement to the state’s primary healthcare efforts.

    With additional outreaches planned, the partners reaffirmed their commitment to reducing preventable child mortality while strengthening the social foundations required for sustainable economic growth.

  • NGX Group, DEG, others seek to unlock climate capital

    NGX Group, DEG, others seek to unlock climate capital

    Nigerian Exchange Group (NGX Group) is leading a multi-stakeholder partnership to accelerate corporate climate commitments and position Nigerian corporates for access to climate-linked capital estimated at about $3 billion.

    Speaking at a roundtable organised by NGX Group in collaboration with Germany’s development finance institution, DEG, and Africa Foresight Group, Group Chairman, Nigerian Exchange Group (NGX Group), Alhaji  Umaru Kwairanga said capital markets must lead Africa’s climate response.

    He said: “Capital markets must be at the centre of climate leadership in Africa. The NGX Net-Zero Programme enables companies to move from climate ambition to measurable action”.

    He explained that NGX–DEG CEO Roundtable brought together corporate leaders, development finance institutions, and market stakeholders to advance the NGX Net-Zero Programme (N-Zero), a market-led initiative aimed at strengthening the long-term investability and competitiveness of listed companies.

    Group Managing Director, Nigerian Exchange Group (NGX Group), Mr. Temi Popoola, said climate risk has become a material consideration in valuation and capital allocation.

    “Global capital is increasingly becoming conditional, with climate risk directly impacting cost of capital and valuation. Companies that embed sustainability into strategy and governance are better positioned to attract long-term capital,” Popoola said.

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    Member of the Management Board of DEG, Ms. Monika Beck, said DEG’s corporate strategy was centred on mobilising private capital to accelerate climate action while delivering measurable development impact and sustainable returns.

    According to her, partnerships such as one with the NGX Group would enable the organisation to scale solutions that are both impactful and commercially viable.

    During the interactive session, Chief Executive Officer, Chapel Hill Denham, Mr. Bolaji Balogun, said execution remains a key challenge.

    He said: “Access to capital, technical expertise and credible frameworks are essential if climate reporting is to translate into real investor value”.

    President and Group Chief Executive Officer, Transcorp Plc, Dr. Owen Omogiafo, emphasised the need for practical solutions.

    “Africa’s climate transition must be practical and inclusive, balancing sustainability objectives with economic growth and social impact,” Omogiafo said.

    The event which culminated in a closing gong ceremony, follows a multi-million-naira co-funding partnership between NGX Group and DEG Impulse gGmbH under Germany’s develoPPP programme, providing subsidised net-zero transition planning, technical capacity building and globally recognised frameworks for listed companies.

  • NGX Group declares interim dividend

    NGX Group declares interim dividend

    Nigerian Exchange Group Plc (NGX Group or the Group) has declared an interim dividend of N1 per share.

    This was part of the highlights of the group’s board meeting where unaudited financial statements for the third quarter ended September 30, 2025 was approved.

    The interim dividend will be paid to shareholders whose names appear in the register of members as at the close of business on Friday, November 07, 2025, while payment will be remitted electronically to qualified shareholders on Tuesday, November 18, 2025.

    Chairman, Nigerian Exchange (NGX Group), Alhaji Umaru Kwairanga said the declaration marked another milestone in NGX Group’s history of consistent dividend payments, underscoring the board’s confidence in the Group’s resilience, profitability, and value-creation strategy.

    He said: “The declaration of this interim dividend reaffirms the board’s confidence in NGX Group’s solid fundamentals and long-term growth outlook.

    We have maintained a consistent dividend track record that reflects our unwavering commitment to shareholder value.

    “This payment recognises our investors’ trust and remains focused on reciprocating that trust through consistent value addition to its shareholders. Our focus remains on delivering sustainable returns through disciplined execution and strategic growth”.

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    Group Managing Director, Nigerian Exchange (NGX Group) Plc, Temi Popoola, said the group’s commitment to shareholders was at the heart of every strategic decision being made.

    He said: “This dividend reflects the group’s strong financial discipline, consistent profitability, and prudent capital allocation. As we advance our growth agenda, we will continue to unlock opportunities across our ecosystem, creating measurable value for our investors and reinforcing NGX Group’s position as a trusted driver of capital market prosperity in Africa”.

    He assured that NGX Group will continue to demonstrate its commitment to transparent governance, financial discipline, and sustainable value creation.

  • NGX Group engages women on investment

    NGX Group engages women on investment

    Nigerian Exchange Group (NGX Group), through its regulatory subsidiary, Nigerian Exchange Regulation Limited (NGX RegCo), has reaffirmed its commitment to expanding financial inclusion and deepening retail investor participation following the successful FinTribe Finance Fair 2025, which convened over 9,000 women focused on wealth creation and capital market opportunities.

     The event, organized by FinTribe, one of Nigeria’s fastest-growing women’s finance communities, has become a leading platform for promoting financial literacy and building investment confidence among women. NGX RegCo’s participation, through its flagship EquipHER initiative, featured interactive sessions that demystified capital market concepts and empowered women to make informed investment decisions.

    “You have what it takes to step into greater capability and control over your financial agenda,” said Olufemi Shobanjo, Chief Executive Officer, NGX RegCo. “The same mindset that drives you to start a business, buy a home, or save for your child’s education, to plan, commit, and follow through, is exactly what makes women exceptional investors.”

    Commending FinTribe for its sustained commitment to financial education, Shobanjo emphasized that the Nigerian capital market offers practical frameworks for translating financial discipline into purposeful wealth-building strategies. “Financial inclusion begins with awareness,” he affirmed. “When women understand how the market works, they can own their financial futures and build sustainable wealth.”

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    In alignment with these educational efforts, NGX Group’s technology-driven innovations are lowering barriers to market entry. The Group’s digital investment platform, NGX Invest, enables investors to participate in public offers and rights issues directly from their smart devices, bridging awareness with active market participation.

    Jennifer Awirigwe, founder of FinTribe and popularly known as Financial Jennifer, commended the collaboration for driving meaningful impact. “Our partnership with NGX RegCo through EquipHER has created a bridge between knowledge and action,” she stated. “Women are not just learning about finance, they are taking ownership of their financial journeys and inspiring others to do the same. It’s equipping her, not in words, but in action.”

    During an interactive Q&A session, Shobanjo addressed questions on share ownership transfers, portfolio management, and investment process navigation, encouraging participants to engage licensed stockbrokers and financial advisers for transparency and efficiency. “It can seem overwhelming at first,” he acknowledged. “But with the right professional guidance, investors can easily navigate the process and take control of their holdings.”

    Throughout the fair, the EquipHER booth became a hub of engagement, attracting participants eager to learn how to initiate or expand their investment portfolios.

    This initiative complements NGX Group’s broader retail engagement strategy, aimed at deepening participation in Nigeria’s capital market. Recently, the Exchange participated in a public lecture at Godfrey Okoye University, Enugu, themed “Harnessing the Capital Market for Catalyzing Infrastructure Development and Economic Transformation in Nigeria,” reinforcing NGX’s conviction that an informed and engaged public is essential to sustainable economic growth and inclusion.

    Through initiatives such as EquipHER and regional retail engagements across Nigeria, NGX Group continues to build a more inclusive, informed, and empowered investor base, reflecting its vision to deepen market participation across gender, geography, and generation.

  • Bridging markets and meaning: NGX Group and social impact

    Bridging markets and meaning: NGX Group and social impact

    In an era where conversations around corporate responsibility often struggle to translate into meaningful action, Nigerian Exchange Group (NGX Group) stands out as a beacon of how market innovation can coexist with human impact. At the center of this evolution is Temi Popoola, Group Managing Director of NGX Group, who is redefining what it means to lead a market institution in Africa. Under his leadership, NGX Group has emerged not only as a driver of capital formation but also as a force for community transformation.

    Over the past year, NGX Group has demonstrated that a capital market institution can be both profit-oriented and profoundly people-centered. The group’s flagship social impact initiative, Project BLOOM-Bringing Life to Our Overlooked Minors, recently held its second outreach in Ajegunle, one of Lagos’ most underserved communities.

    In partnership with the Lagos State Government and the Health Emergency Initiative (HEI), NGX Group has reached over 200 children and 180 caregivers, providing life-saving ready-to-use therapeutic foods (RUTFs), medical checkups, and nutrition education. The impact from the first outreach in Yaba, held in August, is already visible: among children aged 0–5 identified as malnourished or at risk, nearly 50 per cent have entered the recovery stage within seven weeks of sustained intervention and monitoring.

    What might appear to be a modest community programme is, in fact, a reflection of a larger philosophy, one that links social health to market health. Popoola has repeatedly emphasized that the strength of Nigeria’s capital markets cannot be separated from the strength of the society they serve.

    “For us at NGX Group, building strong capital markets goes hand in hand with building strong communities, because inclusive growth and social well-being are the true foundations of a resilient economy,” he remarked. “Market development and human capital development are inseparable.”

    Under Popoola’s leadership, NGX Group’s approach to sustainability and social responsibility continues to evolve from transactional giving to transformational investment. Through the Group’s Employee Volunteer Scheme, over 50 NGX Group staff have participated across both outreaches, working alongside health workers to assist with screenings, data collection, and caregiver training. This collaboration underscores NGX Group’s belief in shared responsibility for social progress.

    Even so, the journey is not without challenges, from sustaining interventions in low-income communities to maintaining long-term tracking and support. Yet, by embedding data measurement and monitoring mechanisms into each outreach, NGX Group applies the same discipline it brings to the capital market to its social programmes. This alignment, evidence-based, measurable, and accountable, marks a quiet shift in how the private sector can operationalize empathy.

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    NGX Group’s social impact agenda is matched by an equally ambitious digital modernization journey that is redefining market access and inclusion. Central to this transformation is NGX Invest, the Group’s e-offering platform designed to democratize access to the primary market. Since its launch, the platform has supported corporates in raising over N2 trillion in capital, providing a more efficient and transparent subscription process for investors and issuers alike.

    By simplifying participation and improving transparency, NGX Invest is expanding accessibility for retail investors, enabling them to participate seamlessly in public offers and rights issues. “Technology allows us to scale opportunity,” Popoola emphasized. “But more importantly, it allows us to scale trust.”

    From the heart of Kano to offices in Victoria Island, digitalization is narrowing the geographic and socioeconomic divide in market participation. Retail investors continue to increase, creating a deeper and more resilient pool of capital.

    This data-driven ethos extends beyond the trading floor. Project BLOOM also leverages technology to collate health data, measure outcomes, and track progress, reflecting the Group’s belief that digitalization can serve both market and human development.

    Beyond community and digital transformation, NGX Group’s commitment to environmental sustainability continues to gain momentum. The NGX NetZero programme, Nzero, launched under Popoola’s leadership, underscores the Group’s resolve to lead by example in driving climate action across Nigeria’s private sector.

    Through Nzero, NGX is supporting listed companies in measuring, reporting, and reducing their carbon emissions, aligning corporate behaviour with global sustainability standards. The initiative not only promotes accountability but also positions Nigeria’s capital market as a platform for financing the transition to a low-carbon economy.

    As Popoola has often stated, “Our vision is to create markets that thrive in harmony with society and the environment.” Nzero represents that vision in motion, linking market transparency, data innovation, and climate responsibility into one cohesive framework.

    While some may view market performance and social investment as separate pursuits, NGX Group’s strategy presents them as two sides of the same coin. The underlying conviction is that in an emerging market like Nigeria’s, long-term profitability is inextricably linked to societal health and the expansion of the investing class.

    This philosophy is reflected not only in NGX Group’s social initiatives but also in its market performance. As of September 2025, total market capitalization on NGX stood at N141.75 trillion, up from N102.94 trillion a year earlier, representing a 37.7 per cent  growth. The sustained rise in market value underscores investor confidence, driven by greater transparency, innovation, and a growing alignment between economic and social progress.

    “We track not just financial outcomes, but the breadth of impact,” Popoola noted. “It’s about how far the benefits of growth extend from the boardroom to the community.”

    Through this lens, NGX Group stands as a case study in how social investment can reinforce financial stability and deepen trust in the marketplace, turning empathy into an enduring economic advantage.

    A hallmark of Popoola’s strategy is partnership. Project BLOOM’s success reflects a deliberate multi-sectoral model that unites government, civil society, and the private sector toward measurable social outcomes. The Lagos State Ministry of Health ensures interventions align with state priorities, while HEI contributes the technical expertise needed for efficient delivery.

    “No single institution can solve systemic challenges alone,” Popoola said. “Our role is to convene, coordinate, and contribute our resources and expertise. The real impact happens when government drives policy alignment, NGOs bring implementation capacity, and the private sector ensures accountability and sustainability.”

    This partnership model extends beyond community engagement to NGX Group’s broader ecosystem collaboration. From regulators and market operators to issuers, investors, and fintech innovators, Popoola’s approach is consistent: identify shared value, align incentives, and scale impact through collective action.

    At the second outreach, The Permanent Secretary of Lagos State Health District V, Dr. Oladapo Ashiyanbi, lauded NGX Group and HEI for their “unwavering commitment to restoring hope to vulnerable families,” noting that the project aligns perfectly with the government’s ongoing nutrition and child health programmes.

    Reflecting on the initiative’s growth, Mr. Pascal Achunine, Executive Director of HEI, noted; “The first outreach revealed both the depth of the malnutrition crisis and the power of swift, coordinated intervention. The results prove that when the public and private sectors act with urgency and compassion, we can save lives and restore hope”.

    Looking ahead, NGX Group’s roadmap under Popoola points toward deeper integration between technology, markets, and sustainability. Initiatives like NGX Invest continue to break down barriers for retail investors and boost market depth, while Project BLOOM ensures that as markets rise, communities rise with them. The initiative targets reaching thousands of children by 2026, driving measurable improvements in nutrition indicators that correlate with better long-term health and learning outcomes.

    At a time when trust in institutions is fragile and inequality is widening, NGX Group offers a model of leadership that connects profit with purpose. By fusing digital innovation with social investment, Temi Popoola is positioning NGX Group not only as a leader in market development but also as a catalyst for human development.

    The story of NGX Group today is, in many ways, the story of Nigeria’s evolving future, one where technology, capital, and compassion converge to build a more inclusive economy. Under Popoola’s leadership, the Group is proving that when a market grows with empathy and data-driven precision, it becomes not just an exchange of capital but a platform where growth serves people as much as profit.

    “As an institution,” Popoola reflects, “we are judged not just by the wealth we help create, but by how widely that wealth is shared and how sustainably it’s generated. That is the standard we are setting for ourselves.”

  • NGX Group scales up community intervention outreach

    NGX Group scales up community intervention outreach

    Nigerian Exchange Group (NGX Group) Plc has expanded its flagship community nutrition intervention, “Bringing Life to Our Overlooked Minors” to Ajegunle under Lagos State Health District V, reaching over 120 children with their mothers and caregivers.

    The programme is being implemented in partnership with the Lagos State Ministry of Health and Health Emergency Initiative (HEI).

    The outreach, held at Ajeromi Ifelodun Local Government Secretariat in partnership with the Lagos State Health District V, built on the success and measurable impact of the pilot held at Yaba’s Aiyetoro Primary Health Centre, where hundreds of children were screened and over 61 per cent were found to need urgent medical intervention.

    Follow-up monitoring revealed that more than 48 per cent of these children have shown remarkable nutritional recovery within weeks, regaining healthy weight and vitality. This progress has further strengthened the project’s mission to expand its reach across underserved communities.

    At the Ajegunle outreach, children received Ready-to-Use Therapeutic Foods (RUTFs) and comprehensive health checks, while mothers and caregivers participated in practical nutrition education sessions focused on preparing low-cost, nutritious meals and maintaining proper hygiene. Initial screening results revealed that 69 children were moderately malnourished, 29 were severely malnourished, and another 24 were at risk of becoming malnourished. The outreach also emphasized early detection of malnutrition and sustained follow-up care through local Primary Health Centres.

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    Notably, over 20 NGX Group employees volunteered alongside District health workers during the engagement, assisting with screenings, data collection, and caregiver training. Their participation reflects the Exchange’s commitment to fostering a culture of service and social responsibility among its workforce. Through initiatives like Project BLOOM, NGX Group continues to encourage employees to actively contribute to community development efforts, demonstrating that true sustainability is achieved through collective action and shared purpose. This approach reinforces the organisation’s broader commitment to building the long-term resilience of society and the economy.

    Group Managing Director, Nigerian Exchange Group (NGX Group) Plc, Temi Popoola, said seeing 48.8 per cent of the children identified with malnutrition now in recovery, and others who were once at risk steadily improving, has been truly inspiring.

    “It affirms that our partnership with Health Emergency Initiative and Lagos State Government, is driving real, measurable change in our communities. For us at NGX Group, building strong capital markets goes hand in hand with building strong communities, because inclusive growth and social well-being are the true foundations of a resilient economy. This recovery rate motivates us to do even more, to scale up, to reach further, and to continue investing in the wellbeing of underserved communities,” Popoola said.

    Executive Director of HEI, Dr. Pascal Achunine, described the expansion as a vital response to the realities revealed by the pilot: “The first outreach showed us the depth of the malnutrition crisis and the power of swift, coordinated intervention. The results prove that when public and private sectors work together with urgency and compassion, we can save lives and restore hope.”

    Dr Oladeinde Ebenezer Oluwaseun, Director Planning Research and Statistics, representing the Permanent Secretary of Lagos State Health District V, Dr. Oladapo Ashiyanbi, commended NGX Group and HEI for their “unwavering commitment to restoring hope to vulnerable families,” noting that the initiative aligns perfectly with the Lagos State Government’s ongoing nutrition and child health programmes.

    Project BLOOM continues to advance Sustainable Development Goals (SDG) 2 (Zero Hunger), 3 (Good Health and Well-being), and 17 (Partnerships for the Goals) through measurable community impact, employee-driven engagement, and multi-sector collaboration.

    With two successful outreaches completed, NGX Group is set to scale Project BLOOM across other underserved Lagos communities, with a long-term vision to reach thousands of children and across the state.

  • NGX Group, HEI, Lagos partner on childcare

    NGX Group, HEI, Lagos partner on childcare

    Nigerian Exchange Group (NGX Group), Health Emergency Initiative (HEI) and Lagos State Government have launched a joint initiative aimed at improving childcare and healthy living in the state.

    The first community outreach under the initiative known as Project BLOOM or Bringing Life to Our Overlooked Minors, was held at Aiyetoro Primary Health Centre in Yaba under Lagos State Health District IV.

    The project represented a bold show of support for the Lagos State Government’s fight against child malnutrition.

    The multi-stakeholder initiative targets severely malnourished children and their caregivers in underserved communities across Lagos, combining nutritional aid, health support and practical caregiver education to create long-term impact.

    The project aimed at supporting the state’s efforts to reduce preventable infant and under-five deaths.

    Beneficiaries received Ready-to-Use Therapeutic Foods (RUTFs), health screenings, and hands-on training for mothers and caregivers on preparing nutritious, low-cost meals using locally available ingredients.

    According to UNICEF, Nigeria ranks second globally in the percentage of children affected by stunting, with 32 per cent of children under five stunted and more than two million suffering from severe acute malnutrition, many without access to treatment.

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    Project BLOOM seeks to restore the health and dignity of hundreds of children across seven underserved Lagos communities: Ifako Ijaiye, Agege, Iwaya, Makoko, Bariga, Ilaje, and Ajegunle.

    Group Managing Director, Nigerian Exchange Group (NGX Group) Plc, Mr. Temi Popoola, said NGX Group believes the growth of the financial markets must be matched by the growth of the communities.

    According to him, Project BLOOM is a clear demonstration of how the Exchange can leverage its platform, partnerships, and people to address urgent social challenges like child malnutrition.

    “By empowering our employees to lead from the front, we are reinforcing our belief that sustainable impact is achieved when the private sector, government, and civil society work together with urgency and purpose. This is not charity, it is an investment in the future resilience of our society and economy,” Popoola, who was represented by NGX Group’s Group Chief Finance, Investment & Strategy Officer, Mr. Adebayo Opatade, said.

    Executive Director, Health Emergency Initiative (HEI), Dr. Pascal Achunine, underscored the urgency of the intervention.

    He said: “We are taking the bull by the horn. We cannot sit on the sidelines while our children suffer from preventable malnutrition. Project BLOOM is about immediate action, meeting needs now while creating a sustainable path forward for caregivers and their children”.

    Representing the Chairman of Yaba Local Council Development Area, Dr. Adebayo Adefuye, Honourable Oladimeji Saheed commended the “bold vision and compassion” of the programme and pledged community support. Dr. Oludolapo Shotunde, speaking on behalf of the Permanent Secretary of Lagos State Health District IV, Dr. Abimbola Bolawale, described the outreach as “a timely and commendable intervention” aligned with state health priorities.

    Project BLOOM advances Sustainable Development Goals (SDG) 2 (Zero Hunger) and SDG 3 (Good Health and Well-being) by improving child nutrition and health outcomes, while also embodying SDG 17 (Partnerships for the Goals) through its public-private-civil society collaboration.

    This first outreach sets the stage for a series of interventions across Lagos, underpinned by a monitoring and evaluation framework to track beneficiaries’ nutritional recovery over a three-month period in partnership with local health authorities. Insights from this process will inform future community health interventions by NGX Group and its partners.

  • NGX Group secures German funding for climate initiative

    NGX Group secures German funding for climate initiative

    Nigerian Exchange Group (NGX Group) has signed a funding agreement with DEG Impulse gGmbH to commence the implementation of its flagship NGX Net-Zero Programme (N-Zero).

    DEG Impulse gGmbH is a subsidiary of the German Development Finance Institution, DEG – Deutsche Investitions-und Entwicklungsgesellschaft mbH, part of KfW Bankengruppe.

    Group Managing Director, Nigerian Exchange Group (NGX Group), Mr Temi Popoola, said the agreement signed in Cologne, Germany, marked a major step forward in NGX Group’s efforts to strengthen climate resilience and promote low-carbon development across Nigeria’s private sector.

    He said the multi-billion-naira funding was secured under DEG Impulse’s develoPPP programme, which supports innovative private sector initiatives with high development impact.

    According to him, N-Zero is designed to support businesses with the tools, frameworks, and technical guidance required to set, validate, and achieve science-based emission reduction targets. It aligns with Nigeria’s commitment to the Paris Agreement and the global goal of limiting temperature rise to 1.5°C.

    He noted that by bringing together global climate partners, including implementing partner Africa Foresight Group (AFG), NGX Group, through N-Zero, will assist companies in developing credible transition plans and carbon projects that generate verifiable carbon credits, thereby supporting economic resilience, promoting green investments, and contributing to a decarbonized future.

    “The signing of this agreement with DEG Impulse marks a significant milestone in our sustainability journey. This partnership demonstrates strong confidence in our vision to drive sustainable finance, build a climate-conscious private sector in Nigeria and champion climate action across Africa. Through N-Zero, we aim to translate ambition into measurable impact by reducing emissions and positioning Nigerian corporates to benefit from emerging opportunities in the global carbon market,” Popoola said.

    Group Chairman, Nigerian Exchange Group (NGX Group), Alhaji  Umaru Kwairanga, said the initiative represented a bold step toward positioning NGX Group at the forefront of climate leadership in Africa.

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    He said: “As we activate the N-Zero Programme, we reaffirm our long-standing commitment to innovation, sustainable development, and creating long-term value for the Nigerian economy. It is our firm belief that capital markets must play a central role in delivering climate solutions, and this partnership is a model for what is possible when global institutions collaborate with local expertise”.

    Managing Director, DEG Impulse, Dr. Hubertus Pleister, said with the support of the German Federal Ministry of Economic Cooperation and Development (BMZ), the develoPPP initiative contributes to NGX’ transformation journey by addressing climate risks and advancing sustainability through strategic and innovative collaboration – reinforcing our shared commitment to building resilient capital markets and enabling long-term impact.

    The “NGX’ N-Zero Programme” will run from June 2025 to April 2027 and is expected to reduce or avoid 20,000 tons of greenhouse gas emissions. It will support at least 26 businesses in implementing environmental and social standards and provide access to carbon markets through credit registration and emissions offsetting. This collaboration underscores NGX Group’s commitment to the United Nations Sustainable Development Goal 13 (Climate Action) and its role in advancing Nigeria’s transition to a more sustainable and inclusive economy.

  • NGX Group calls for strategy to unlock $500b Africa’s informal capital

    NGX Group calls for strategy to unlock $500b Africa’s informal capital

    Group Managing Director, Nigerian Exchange Group (NGX Group) Plc, Mr. Temi Popoola has called for a rethink of strategy to unlock $500 billion informal capital as part of efforts to deepen Africa’s capital markets.

    He said the continent’s $500 billion pool of informal capital, coupled with technology could transform liquidity and private equity exits.

    According to him, the vast pool of untapped local capital in Africa, where over $500 billion circulates daily but remains largely inaccessible to capital markets, needs to be mainstreamed into the formal markets to boost economic growth.

    “The real question is, how do we channel this local capital into the formal market? The answer lies in technology. Once local capital enters the market, you create a two-sided equation, supply meets demand, and exits become sustainable,” Popoola said.

    He pointed at NGX Group’s success in leveraging technology during Nigeria’s banking sector recapitalisation exercise in 2024, which streamlined processes and enhanced market participation, mobilising more than N2 trillion.

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    He also highlighted the global trend toward exchanges attracting larger companies, citing Africa Capital Alliance’s (ACA) recent $4 billion asset listing as evidence of progress.

    “Markets are now attracting bigger companies. That’s what we’re trying to do,” Popoola said, underscoring the need for scalable, high-quality listings to deepen market liquidity.

    Popoola, who spoke on a panel titled “The Exit is This Way” at the 21st Annual AVCA Conference, dismissed the notion that weak initial public offering (IPO) markets are the primary barrier, attributing struggles instead to broader economic and structural gaps

    According to him, there is need to distinguish between systemic market challenges and specific exit issues, which is vital for recalibrating expectations and strategies.

    He noted that African exchanges’ struggles over the past five to six years stemmed from market-wide underperformance, not exit mechanisms. 

    He said: “Whether you’re a private equity fund seeking to exit or a family-run business looking for growth, the ecosystem simply didn’t work”.

    He highlighted that as African markets continue to evolve, the future lies in strategic use of technology and a focus on bringing high-quality companies to market in order to unlock greater liquidity and stronger exit pathways for investors across the continent.

    The panel, moderated by Katie Hill, Partner and Associate Director at Boston Consulting Group, also featured Albert Alsina, Founder and Chief Executive Officer, Mediterrania Capital Partners; Steve Iwenjora, Partner, African Capital Alliance; Chumani Kula, Co-Head, Old Mutual Private Equity and Adefolarin Ogunsanya, Partner, Development Partners International. The experts collectively emphasised the need for policy reforms, investor education, and innovative financial instruments to accelerate exits and sustain Africa’s growth trajectory.