Introduction
The opening quarter of 2026 has transformed the Nigerian Exchange (NGX) into a theater of staggering numbers. With some low-cap stocks printing 1st-quarter (Q1: January - March) returns of 500% or more, the siren song of "easy wealth" has never been louder. This historic surge propelled the first-quarter All-Share Index (ASI) to an unprecedented all-time high of approximately 30%—a milestone of market growth previously unseen in the history of the Nigerian Exchange (NGX). For many, these soaring green candles represent a golden opportunity; for the seasoned investor, however, they could signal a sophisticated liquidity trap that warrants cross-examination.

While the market’s focus is often captured by the jaw-dropping 136% to 515% surges of the top 10 performers, this analysis does not overlook the impressive rallies of 30% to 120% seen in the market’s fundamental heavyweights. Established names like Aradel (88%), Seplat (57%), Dangote Cement (33%), MTN (49%), Zenith Bank (55%), and NestlΓ© (73%), alongside industrial and healthcare leaders like BUA Cement (83%), Lafarge (63%), Okomu (61%), Presco (37%), May & Baker (100%), and Fidson (100%), as well as construction, consumer, insurance, and logistics giants like Julius Berger (88%), Unilever (31%), Custodian (74%), PZ (85%), NAHCO (79%), and Jaiz Bank (120%), all demonstrated robust growth during this period. This represents substantial value addition and sustainable wealth creation, underpinned by the robust performance of fundamentally sound and highly profitable companies. However, the intent here is to provide a rigorous critical evaluation of those outliers whose astronomical gains may be detached from their underlying financial health.
When a stock rallies on a "Full Bid" with no available offers, it creates an illusion of infinite growth—yet this very lack of liquidity is the "exit door" that slams shut the moment the trend reverses. In this environment, the line between a strategic position and a speculative gamble becomes dangerously thin.
This analysis strips away the hype to examine the cold fundamental data—EPS and P/E ratios—that separate sustainable growth from hollow "pump-and-dump" cycles. Earnings Per Share (EPS) measures a company's profitability by dividing its net income by outstanding shares, while the Price-to-Earnings (P/E) ratio compares the stock price to those earnings to determine if a stock is overvalued (expensive) or undervalued (cheap) relative to its earnings. It shows how much investors are willing to pay for ₦1 of a company’s profit.
By exploring the mechanics of the "Dumping Session" and the necessity to allocate a maximum of 20% of your portfolio to such volatile speculative stocks, we provide a roadmap for navigating these volatile waters safely.
In a market where today’s top gainer can become tomorrow’s frozen asset or even a top loser, understanding the "Speed of Gravity" isn't just an advantage—it is a survival requirement. Let us dive into why your most attractive returns may only be a mirage if you lack disciplined entry and exit strategies.
Beyond the Green: Analyzing the Fundamentals of the NGX’s Top Q1 Performers
Table 1 presents the top 10 Q1 gainers with their associated % gains, EPS, P/E ratios, and market capitalizations.
Fortis Global Insurance
FTGINSURE is the market's most extreme speculative outlier, recording a staggering 515% Q1 rally following its return to active trading in February 2026 after a six-year suspension. This astronomical surge is a "technical recovery" rather than a fundamental one, as the company remains structurally fragile with urgent recapitalization requirements from NAICOM. While it dominated the Q1 gainer's list, its lack of consistent profitability and thin liquidity make it a high-risk "liquidity trap" where paper gains are largely detached from the company's actual solvency. Most of its "gains" are speculative bets that a larger firm will acquire it for its insurance license. A negative EPS serves as a major warning sign, indicating that the company is currently unprofitable and eroding shareholder value.
Fundamentally sound stocks in the insurance sector include: Custodian, NEM, and MBenefit.
Premier Paints PLC
PREMPAINTS is currently a high-risk speculative momentum play, with its 275% Q1 2026 rally triggered almost entirely by the lifting of a four-year trading suspension in mid-January. Despite the massive price surge, the company’s industrial fundamentals remain exceptionally weak, characterized by a negligible EPS of ₦0.02 and an unsustainable P/E ratio exceeding 1,600x. Given its low liquidity and extreme valuation mismatch, the stock serves as a textbook example of a "resumption rally" that is highly vulnerable to a sudden and violent "dumping session." Not fundamentally attractive, trades on a full offer now with no bids.
CAP, Berger, and Meyer are fundamentally stronger in the painting sub-sector.
John Holt PLC
JOHNHOLT is currently another case of a speculative "liquidity trap," having recorded a massive 250% in Q1 rally that has almost entirely decoupled from its business reality. The surge was driven by extremely low-float volatility and momentum chasing rather than sustainable core earnings growth, which remains stagnant despite occasional one-off gains from asset sales. After hitting a peak of ₦18.95, the stock entered a violent "dumping session" in late March, characterized by consecutive -10% daily drops and a total absence of buy orders, leaving speculative investors unable to exit their positions. John Holt started the year as a relatively obscure, low-priced stock (around ₦5 –₦7). By late March, it hit a 52-week high of ₦18.95, representing a staggering speculative rally of over 250%. Throughout much of March, the stock was consistently on "Full Bid" with zero offers owing to low liquidity. On March 27, the "Full Offer" session began, signaling the onset of the crash period. Trapped Gains: Investors who "got in mid-way" (around ₦13.00) and were celebrating 40% paper gains are now watching those gains evaporate daily because they literally cannot sell their shares.
A negative EPS serves as a major warning sign, indicating that the company is currently unprofitable and eroding shareholder value.
Red Star Express PLC
Unlike some of the purely speculative names we've discussed, REDSTAREX presents a much stronger case for being "fundamentally driven," though it still carries the risks inherent in high-momentum stocks. As of early April 2026, its +224% Q1 rally is backed by specific corporate actions and improved earnings visibility rather than just "market noise." Its P/E ratio indicates that investors are paying a premium for future growth. It appears fundamentally reasonable.
SCOA Nigeria PLC
SCOA presents a fascinating case of a "hybrid" rally, which is fundamentally supported, but speculatively overextended. While it has seen a staggering +219% Q1 gain, the driver is a mix of genuine fundamental recovery, with higher earnings rebound and revenue growth, and a release of long-standing regulatory pressure. Unlike some purely speculative "penny stocks," SCOA’s movement is backed by a notable improvement in its business operations and a massive "housecleaning" effort by the board. It carries the risks inherent in high-momentum stocks given its low liquidity. It has been on Full Offer ever since it reached its 52-week high at ₦38, three weeks ago.
Deap Capital Management [DWL]
DEAPCAP is currently a high-stakes speculative turnaround play, with its 200% Q1 rally 2026 driven almost entirely by investor anticipation of a "structural rebirth" and a potential recapitalization. Despite the massive price surge, the company remains on the NGX Delisting Watch List (DWL), signaling a high level of regulatory risk and a continued failure to meet basic listing standards. With no consistent earnings and a depleted balance sheet, the stock represents a classic "bet on hope" that is highly vulnerable to a total liquidity freeze if the proposed restructuring fails to materialize.
A negative EPS serves as a major warning sign, indicating that the company is currently unprofitable and eroding shareholder value.
R T Briscoe PLC
RTBriscoe is currently undergoing a significant fundamental turnaround, evidenced by its 2nd consecutive year of profitability and a massive 257% surge in earnings (EPS of ₦2.45) for FY 2025. While its stock price skyrocketed by over 175% in Q1 2026—partly fueled by speculative "buzz" surrounding its electric vehicle partnership with BYD—the company remains structurally fragile due to negative equity. Has remarkably low P/E ratio (4.2x) for such a high rally. This suggests that despite the 175% price jump, the stock is still "cheap" relative to its ₦2.45 earnings.
NCR (Nigeria) PLC
While its +174% Q1 rally is technically supported by a return to profitability, the magnitude of the price surge has far outpaced its actual earnings, creating what analysts are calling a "valuation-fundamentals mismatch." This recovery is overshadowed by a P/E ratio of over 109x, indicating the price is heavily overextended relative to actual earnings. Most critically, despite the operational turnaround, the company remains technically insolvent with a negative equity position, making its high-flying stock price a high-risk "valuation mismatch" for investors. It has been on a full bid for some time now and has low liquidity. In 2025, NCR truly lived up to the "top gainer" title, finishing the year as the best-performing stock on the entire Nigerian Exchange (NGX) after delivering a staggering 1,354%.
ICT sector heavyweights with sound fundamentals are MTN and CWG.
Infinity Trust Mortgage Bank [BLS]
INFINITY is a rare example of a "triple-threat" performer in Q1 2026. Its rally is one of the most fundamentally robust on NGX, as it is simultaneously driven by record earnings, a credit rating upgrade, and a consistent dividend culture. The BLS tag indicates the company is Below Listing Standard. This is a regulatory warning often issued when a company is late with financial filings or fails to meet specific corporate governance codes. This isn't a "recovery from suspension" rally. This is a functional bank that is growing. Its P/E ratio indicates that investors are paying a premium for future growth.
Nigerian Exchange Group
NGXGROUP is currently the fundamental anchor of the market, with its 136% Q1 rally directly reflecting the record-breaking trading volumes and 30% ASI growth seen in Q1 2026. As the "landlord" of the exchange, the company has successfully converted high market activity into a robust EPS of ₦5.18 and an impressive profit. Unlike more speculative outliers, NGXGROUP offers higher liquidity and tangible shareholder rewards, including a proposed ₦2.00 cash dividend and a 1-for-3 bonus issue, signaling strong corporate governance and sustainable wealth creation. This stock does not suffer from the "Full Offer, No Bid" trap for long periods. It was on Full Bid during its recent rally for a short time. Its P/E ratio indicates that investors are paying a premium for future growth.
The Anatomy of the Momentum Trap: Liquidity & Volatility
1. The "Full Bid" Barrier: The Illusion of Entry
In low-cap, volatile, low-liquid stocks, a rally often begins with a "Full Bid, No Offer" scenario. Because the market float (the number of shares available for public trading) is so small, a minor increase in demand causes the stock to hit its 10% daily upper circuit limit almost instantly.
• The Entry Struggle: For a retail investor, getting in at the "ground floor" is nearly impossible. The order book is stacked with buy orders (bids) but zero sell orders (offers).
• The Price Chase: As the stock surges 10% daily, momentum traders become desperate, placing orders. By the time an order is finally filled, the stock is often at its 52-week high, i.e., its peak, leaving the buyer with high-priced shares and zero margin of safety.
2. The "Dumping Session": The Liquidity Mirage
The moment the rally loses steam, the transition from "Full Bid" to "Full Offer" is often instantaneous and violent.
• The Exit Trap: Profit-takers (often institutional players or early "lucky" entrants or holders) begin to offload large volumes. This triggers a "Full Offer, No Bid" scenario.
• The Downward Spiral: Because there are no buyers at the current high price, the stock hits its 10% lower circuit limit daily. Unlike high-cap fundamentally sound stocks, where "dip buyers" step in to provide liquidity, fundamentally unsound low-cap stocks often have a far lower floor.
• Paper Gains vs. Realized Cash: This creates a "mirage of wealth." Your portfolio may show a 200% gain, but if there is no one to buy your shares, that gain is mathematically meaningless. You are effectively trapped in a falling elevator with no exit door.
3. Critical Analysis of "Top-Performer" Lists
Lists showing daily, weekly, or monthly top gainers are often lagging indicators—they tell you what has happened, not what will happen.
• Survivorship Bias: These lists only show the winners. They don't show the tens of similar low-cap stocks that remained stagnant owing to low liquidity.
• The Magnet Effect: These lists act as "bait" for speculative traders. By the time a stock appears on the "Monthly/Quarterly Top Gainer" list, the smart money is usually already looking for the exit.
• Always remember that past performance does not always guarantee future returns.
4. High-Cap vs. Low-Cap: The "Speed of Gravity"
The fundamental difference between a rally in a Blue Chip or high-cap stock and a Penny or low-cap stock lies in depth and velocity (Table 2).
Strategic Takeaways for the Disciplined Investor
• Avoid the "FOMO" (Fear Of Missing Out) Buy: If a stock has been on "Full Bid" for three consecutive days and you haven't secured a position, the risk-to-reward ratio has likely shifted against you.
• Check the Volume, Not Just the Price: A 10% price increase on a volume of only 100,000 shares is far more dangerous than a 2% increase on 10 million shares. Low volume indicates a lack of institutional conviction.
• The 20% Rule: Keeping these "lottery ticket" stocks to a small fraction of your portfolio, say 20%, ensures that when the "mirage" disappears, your core wealth remains intact.
Final Note: In the world of volatile equities, Liquidity is King. A profit is not a profit until the cash is back in your brokerage account. Beware of "paper wealth" built on the back of low-liquid, fundamentally hollow companies.