Friday, January 16, 2026

Beyond Politics and Election Cycles: Rethinking Investment Timing and the Long-Term Promise of Nigeria’s Stock Market

Introduction 

The concern about investing during an election cycle is understandable, especially in a country where politics often influences economic outcomes. However, while political uncertainty can affect short-term market sentiment, long-term investment performance is driven more by economic fundamentals, policy reforms, and structural improvements. This rebuttal explains why Nigeria’s current economic indicators still present promising opportunities for patient and informed investors, even as the 2027 elections approach.


Original comment from Dr. Usman Isyaku:

"These are thoughtful details, Prof. My concern is still valid. You can't enter a market at the beginning of an election cycle. Politics and economics work together. Let's see how much profit people will declare in 2028."


I completely understand your concern — entering a market at the beginning of an election cycle can feel risky, and it is true that politics and economics interact. But saying that one cannot enter the market because of elections oversimplifies how markets behave and ignores key macroeconomic strengths and structural reforms already underway.

Let’s unpack this with economic realities rather than fear-based assumptions.


Disclaimer:

On a lighter note, Dr., I am well aware of your political leanings and your support for Atiku ahead of the 2027 elections, just as I know you are not a supporter of the current APC administration under President Bola Ahmed Tinubu. I genuinely respect your political convictions and your right to express them freely. Out of the same respect, I have always chosen not to engage with your political posts, as I am neither a politician nor aligned with any political party.

Therefore, my advocacy for stock market investment should not be misconstrued as an endorsement of the Tinubu administration. It is purely an expression of my personal journey as a beginner investor who has come to appreciate the stock market as a legitimate tool for building financial independence, regardless of the prevailing political climate.


1.⁠ ⁠Political Cycles Don’t Dictate Market Returns Alone


While elections introduce uncertainty, history shows that elections do not automatically derail markets — especially when the economy is supported by strong fundamentals.

For example:

•⁠  ⁠After the 2015 elections, the NGX continued to attract investors and delivered positive returns in subsequent years.

•⁠  ⁠In 2019, despite a tightly contested election, companies with strong earnings still delivered dividends and price gains.

Elections may add noise, but markets react more consistently to economic performance than headlines.


2.⁠ ⁠Stable FX Rate = Better Business Planning


Exchange rate stability is critical for corporate performance and investor confidence. Recently, Nigeria has seen:

•⁠  ⁠More stable FX rates relative to recent volatility, reducing uncertainty for importers and exporters.

•⁠  ⁠Less erratic naira depreciation in official windows, helping companies plan earnings, costs, and dividend distributions.

A stable FX helps:

✔ Multinationals operating in Nigeria

✔ Export-oriented businesses

✔ Consumer goods companies with imported inputs

This supports earnings predictability, which investors value highly.


3.⁠ ⁠Decreasing Inflation Rate Supports Real Growth


Inflation is one of the biggest enemies of investment returns. When inflation begins to fall:

•⁠  ⁠Real wages improve

•⁠  ⁠Consumer demand stabilizes

•⁠  ⁠Cost pressures on companies ease

A sustained downward trend in inflation helps improve:

✔ Consumer confidence

✔ Corporate profitability

✔ Long-term capital formation

Investors are more willing to put money to work when inflation pressure eases — even during election cycles.


4.⁠ ⁠Removal of Fuel Subsidy = Market Discipline


The removal of the fuel subsidy may be politically sensitive, but economically it:

✔ Reduces fiscal drain on government budgets

✔ Encourages private sector participation in energy markets

✔ Improves government revenue allocation to infrastructure, security, and social services

This may cause short-term price pain, but it forces market efficiency and reduces long-term fiscal imbalance.

Fiscal discipline strengthens macro stability, which is good for markets.


5.⁠ ⁠Dangote Oil Refinery = Domestic Energy Security


With the Dangote oil refinery coming online:

•⁠  ⁠Nigeria no longer needs to import refined petroleum products

•⁠  ⁠Fuel scarcity could become a thing of the past

•⁠  ⁠Cost of energy for industries could drop over time


This is a game-changing structural development with far-reaching economic implications:

✔ Lower production costs

✔ Better profitability for energy-intensive sectors

✔ Potential foreign-currency savings on import bills

Investors reward economies that reduce dependency and improve internal value chains.


6.⁠ ⁠Stronger Capital Market Regulation = Healthier Market


Post-2008 and post-2020 reforms reflect a more mature regulatory environment:

•⁠  ⁠Banks face recapitalization and stress tests

•⁠  ⁠Capital market reforms tighten governance

•⁠  ⁠Broker-dealer oversight is stronger

•⁠  ⁠Corporate disclosures are more transparent

Stronger regulation reduces systemic risk — which is exactly what long-term investors want.

A regulated and disciplined market attracts:

✔ Institutional investors

✔ Foreign portfolio flows

✔ Pension funds and insurance capital

These are the engines of sustainable capital market growth.


7.⁠ ⁠Elections Don’t Cancel Economic Momentum


Economic growth drivers often outlast the election cycle:

📌 GDP recovery & broadening

📌 Increased private investment

📌 Infrastructure expansion

📌 Corporate earnings growth

📌 Consumer demand resilience

Yes, elections matter — but markets are forward-looking. They price future expectations, not just present uncertainty.

In many countries, markets have:

•⁠  ⁠Rallied before elections

•⁠  ⁠Recovered quickly after

•⁠  ⁠Rewarded companies with strong earnings continuity

The Nigerian market is no different in principle.


8.⁠ ⁠Looking to 2028: A Promising Outlook


Despite political noise, there are several structural forces supporting market growth into 2028 and beyond:

🚀 Stable FX — supports corporate predictability

🚀 Lower inflation — boosts real returns

🚀 Fiscal reform — strengthens macro stability

🚀 Dangote refinery — enhances energy security

🚀 Tighter regulation — healthier market

🚀 Rising local and institutional participation

🚀 Strong dividend culture in many companies

🚀 Growth prospects in consumer, industrials, banking, and energy sectors

These are economic drivers, not just political sentiment.


Final Thought


No investment environment is risk-free — especially in emerging markets. But risk is not the same as uninvestable.

The smart investor does not wait for certainty — they manage risk through:

•⁠  ⁠fundamental analysis

•⁠  ⁠diversification

•⁠  ⁠strategic entry and exit

•⁠  ⁠long-term perspective

Elections may add uncertainty, but they don’t erase economic fundamentals. And markets always look ahead — not backwards.

So the real question isn’t:

Can we invest during an election cycle?

It’s:

Do we understand the underlying drivers of growth?

And today, the evidence suggests there are real structural opportunities for growth through 2028 and beyond, despite the political calendar.

Fear vs Facts: Lessons from 2008, Opportunities in 2026, and the Real Truth About Buying Shares Today

In every market cycle, there are voices of caution — some rooted in wisdom, others shaped by past losses and fear. While history offers valuable lessons, it should guide us, not paralyze us. A recent comment circulating on Nigerian investment discussions reflects this sentiment and deserves a thoughtful, data-informed response.

Here is the original Facebook post by my friend, Dr. Usman Isyaku:

“I read so many people encouraging others to buy Nigerian stocks now. You don't buy anything when people are talking about it. It signals the market top. Buy now and lose your money. We are back in 2007–2008 era once again. I was smart enough to resist buying booming banks and telecoms shares that collapsed with my colleagues' money. 2–3x isn't worth the risk. Be careful!”

While caution is healthy in investing, broad conclusions based solely on past market crashes can be misleading. The Nigerian stock market of today is not the same market of 2007–2008, and history itself shows that popular markets do not always signal a top.

Let’s examine this claim through multiple real-world scenarios and today’s market realities to separate fear from facts using concrete NGX (Nigerian Exchange Group, formerly Nigerian Stock Exchange – NSE) examples. 

1.⁠ ⁠When “Everyone Was Talking” — Yet Prices Still Rose

In 2020 and 2021, after the COVID-19 crash, Nigerian stocks became widely discussed again. Many investors were skeptical, claiming the rebound was just hype.

Yet, companies like:

•⁠  ⁠BUA Foods (1,700%+ gains, 2022-2026)

•⁠  ⁠Jaiz Bank (1,000%+ gains, 2021-2026)

•⁠  ⁠Geregu Power (1,000%+ gains, 2022-2026)

•⁠  ⁠Presco (2,100%+ gains, 2021-2026)

•⁠  ⁠Okomu Oil (1,100%+ gains, 2021-2026)

•⁠  ⁠Seplat Energy (1,100%+ gains, 2021-2026)

went on to record massive multi-year gains, in some cases exceeding 2,000% in just 5 years. These were not speculative bubbles — they were driven by:

•⁠  ⁠Strong earnings

•⁠  ⁠FX revaluation benefits

•⁠  ⁠Real business expansion

•⁠  ⁠Rising consumer demand

Popularity did not mean the market was at its peak.

Fundamentals did.


2.⁠ ⁠2–3x Returns Are Not “Small” in Real Life

Calling a 2–3x return “not worth the risk” ignores the reality of wealth building.

For example:

•⁠  ⁠Dangote Cement (pays final dividends only per year)

•⁠  ⁠Seplat Energy (pays quarterly dividends, 4 times per year)

•⁠  ⁠GTCO - GTBank (pays interim and final dividends, i.e., twice per year)

•⁠  ⁠Zenith Bank (pays interim and final dividends, i.e., twice per year)

have delivered solid capital appreciation (at least 100% returns in the last 5 years) plus consistent dividend payouts over the years. For long-term investors, this means:

•⁠  ⁠Compounding growth

•⁠  ⁠Regular income

•⁠  ⁠Lower volatility than crypto

•⁠  ⁠Better inflation protection

Wealth is not built only by chasing “10x”.

It is built on repeatable, sustainable gains.


3.⁠ ⁠2007–2008 Was a Different Market Structure

The 2007–2008 crash was fueled by:

•⁠  ⁠Heavy margin lending

•⁠  ⁠Weak regulation

•⁠  ⁠Excessive speculation

•⁠  ⁠Poor corporate governance

Today’s NGX has:

•⁠  ⁠Stronger regulation

•⁠  ⁠Better disclosure standards

•⁠  ⁠Less leverage

•⁠  ⁠More institutional participation

Companies like MTN Nigeria, Airtel Africa, Seplat Energy, and BUA Cement operate under stricter financial reporting and governance frameworks.

The risks still exist —

But the structure is not the same.


4.⁠ ⁠The 2007 Stock Market Bubble

From 2005 - 2007, Nigeria experienced:

•⁠  ⁠Banking sector consolidation

•⁠  ⁠Easy access to credit

•⁠  ⁠Massive public interest in stocks

•⁠  ⁠Aggressive margin lending by banks

Stock prices rose far beyond the real value of companies.


People were:

•⁠  ⁠Borrowing money to buy shares

•⁠  ⁠Using shares as collateral to borrow more

•⁠  ⁠Chasing quick profits without understanding fundamentals

This created a speculative bubble.


Weak Regulation and Poor Risk Management

At the time:

•⁠  ⁠Risk controls were weak

•⁠  ⁠Corporate governance was poor

•⁠  ⁠Financial disclosures were limited

•⁠  ⁠Insider trading was common


Many investors didn’t know:

•⁠  ⁠The true financial health of companies

•⁠  ⁠How risky the market had become

The system lacked transparency.


The Global Financial Crisis (2008)

The U.S. financial crash spread worldwide.

Foreign investors:

•⁠  ⁠Pulled money out of emerging markets

•⁠  ⁠Sold Nigerian stocks

•⁠  ⁠Reduced liquidity

This added external pressure to an already fragile market.


Banking Sector Crisis (2009)

In 2009, the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) discovered:

•⁠  ⁠Massive non-performing loans

•⁠  ⁠Poor corporate governance

•⁠  ⁠Excessive exposure to stock market loans

Several bank CEOs were removed.

Some banks collapsed or were rescued.

Confidence in the financial system dropped sharply.


Why Many Investors Lost Money

People lost money because:

•⁠  ⁠They bought at extremely inflated prices

•⁠  ⁠They leveraged, i.e., used borrowed money 

•⁠  ⁠They panicked and sold at the bottom

•⁠  ⁠They didn’t diversify

•⁠  ⁠They chased hype, not fundamentals


Many never recovered because they:

•⁠  ⁠Exited the market completely

•⁠  ⁠Never benefited from later recoveries


Key Lesson from 2007–2009

The crash was not caused by:

❌ Investing in stocks

❌ The NGX itself


It was caused by:

✔ Excessive borrowing

✔ Weak regulation

✔ Herd mentality

✔ Poor risk control

✔ Speculation without fundamentals


The lesson is not:

“Never invest again.”

The lesson is:

Invest wisely. Avoid leverage. Focus on fundamentals. Diversify.

Markets recover.

Good companies grow.

Informed investors win over time.


5.⁠ ⁠Market Timing Often Costs More Than It Saves

Many investors waited for another “big crash” after 2020. While they waited, stocks like:

•⁠  ⁠Geregu Power (IPO at ₦100, later over ₦1,000)

•⁠  ⁠BUA Foods

•⁠  ⁠Presco

•⁠  ⁠Okomu Oil

multiplied in value.

Waiting for the “perfect moment” often leads to missed opportunities. One should understand that whenever the overall market performance is appreciating or bullish, i.e, NGX all-share-index (NGXASI) increasing, you would still find out that some company stocks are depreciating. Conversely, whenever the NGXASI is negative or bearish, some stocks would still be surging or remain completely unaffected by the overall market downward performance. 

What this means is that the market rewards:

•⁠  ⁠Patience

•⁠  ⁠Staying well-informed

•⁠  ⁠Fundamentals

•⁠  ⁠Consistency

Not fear-based decisions.


6.⁠ ⁠Popularity vs Fundamentals

Yes, blind hype can be dangerous.

But informed participation is not the same as speculation.

When people talk about:

•⁠  ⁠Strong earnings

•⁠  ⁠Dividend growth

•⁠  ⁠FX-driven revenue gains

•⁠  ⁠Expansion projects

•⁠  ⁠Consistent historical capital gains

That is not hype —

That is fundamental investing.


7.⁠ ⁠Strong Market Growth Projections in 2026

Economists, like Birmarch Rewane, forecast significant expansion in the NGX market capitalization, with estimates suggesting it could grow from the current ₦106 trillion to about ₦262 trillion by the end of 2026, driven by:

•⁠  ⁠new major listings (Dangote Oil Refinery, NNPCL, Dangote Fertilizer Refinery, etc.)

•⁠  ⁠improved corporate earnings

•⁠  ⁠structural reforms

•⁠  ⁠broader institutional participation 

This implies potential broad-market gains if fundamentals continue to improve.

Anyone who trades in stocks - traders and long-term investors – would confirm that market growth has already started in just 15 market days in 2026, given the year-to-date (YtD) % returns of some stocks. Can you imagine the capital gains to be accrued for someone who invests, say, ₦100,000 in each of these stocks from the beginning of this year alone?

•⁠  ⁠JAIZ BANK – 80% (Gains = ₦80,000)

•⁠  ⁠DEAPCAP – 135% (Gains = ₦135,000)

•⁠  ⁠MAY & BAKER – 74% (Gains = ₦74,000)

•⁠  ⁠MULTIVERSE MINING & EXPLORATION – 112% (Gains = ₦112,000)

•⁠  ⁠NCR – 77% (1,300%+, in 2025) (Gains = ₦77,000)

•⁠  ⁠NEIMETH INTERNATIONAL PHARMACEUTICALS – 74% (Gains = ₦74,000)

•⁠  ⁠SCOA – 110% (Gains = ₦110,000)

•⁠  ⁠RED STAR EXPRESS – 52% (Gains = ₦52,000)

•⁠  ⁠OMATEK VENTURES – 57%, (Gains = ₦57,000)

•⁠  ⁠MECURE INDUSTRIES – 50%, (Gains = ₦50,000)

•⁠  ⁠EUNISELL INTERLINKED– 36% (Gains = ₦36,000)

•⁠  ⁠FIDSON HEALTHCARE – 40% (Gains = ₦40,000)

•⁠  ⁠ETRANZACT INTERNATIONAL – 62% (Gains = ₦62,000)

•⁠  ⁠LOTUS HALAL EQUITY ETF – 26% (Gains = ₦26,000)

•⁠  ⁠MCNICHOLS – 84% (Gains = ₦84,000)


You cannot realize such gains without patience, staying well-informed, being consistent, and investing fundamentally. I first bought 

•⁠  ⁠Jaiz Bank shares in 2024 at ₦2.14, closed today at ₦8.19 (283%)

•⁠  ⁠FIDSON in November last year at ₦36, closed today at ₦70 (94%), with right issue going for ₦35, i.e., 100% instant return

•⁠  ⁠NCR in October 2025 at ₦18, closed today at ₦129 (614%)

•⁠  ⁠BUAFOODS in 2024 at ₦347, closed today at ₦799 (130%)

•⁠  ⁠MTN in 2024 at ₦200, closed today at ₦580 (190%)

•⁠  ⁠EUNISELL in November, 2025, at ₦60, closed today at ₦157 (161%)

•⁠  ⁠SEPLAT in 2024, at ₦3416, closed today at ₦6,700 (96%)

•⁠  ⁠SCOA in December last year at ₦7.33, closed today at ₦14.9 (103%)


With the right diversification, positioning, and patience, the stock market – especially NGX - is one of the best passive wealth-creating machines. 

Study it. Embrace it.  


Final Thought

Every market cycle has:

•⁠  ⁠Winners

•⁠  ⁠Losers

•⁠  ⁠Skeptics

•⁠  ⁠Opportunists

Those who succeed are not the ones who avoid the market forever,

but those who understand it, respect risk, and act with discipline.

History should educate, not intimidate.

The lesson from 2008 is not “never invest again.”

The lesson is:

Invest smarter. Diversify. Focus on fundamentals.

The Nigerian stock market is not perfect. Two mortgage banks went under last year - Asosavings & Loans and Union Homes - NDIC has started the process of liquidating their assets to pay depositors and shareholders.

But it remains a powerful tool for long-term wealth creation for those who approach it with knowledge, patience, and discipline.

Fear protects you from losses —

But knowledge positions you for gains.

Monday, January 12, 2026

Stocks, Bitcoin, or Gold? Debunking the Myth and Revealing the Data-Driven Truth About Wealth Creation vs Wealth Preservation

Introduction

In recent times, many investors have become skeptical about the Nigerian stock market, especially in the face of inflation, currency depreciation, and the global popularity of Bitcoin and gold. While such concerns are understandable, sweeping conclusions based on sentiment rather than data can lead to costly investment decisions.

Below is a comment that sparked this response after I shared that some stocks performed up to 85% in just 7 trading days:

“I don’t believe the stock market is a wealth generation engine anymore, more like wealth preservation now and in the end you’ll end up at loss when we calculate real value.

You’re better off selling everything and buying either Bitcoin if aiming for portfolio growth or just physical gold to preserve wealth.

But if you’re doing it for the dividends then it may make sense, still you’re in a massive disadvantage!”

This rebuttal is not based on opinions, emotions, or hype. Instead, it relies on verifiable data, real market performance, and practical investment realities from the Nigerian Stock Exchange (NGX), Bitcoin, and Gold. The goal is simple: to separate perception from performance and show where real, sustainable wealth creation actually happens.

Let’s examine the above 3 claims vis-à-vis the facts. 📊

Claim 1:

“The stock market is no longer a wealth generation engine, only wealth preservation, and real value is lost over time.”

🔍 Reality in the Nigerian Market

The NGX has clearly generated massive real wealth for informed investors — even after accounting for inflation.

Concrete Examples:

📈 Geregu Power (2022–2025)

•⁠  ⁠IPO price (2022): ₦100

•⁠  ⁠2025 price: ~₦1,140

•⁠  ⁠Over 1,000% gain in 3 years

Even after Nigeria’s high inflation that reached 34 %, this is huge real wealth creation, not just preservation.

📈 BUA Foods (2021–2025)

•⁠  ⁠Listed around ₦40

•⁠  ⁠Now trades around ₦798+

That’s over 1,700% growth in 5 years.

Conclusion

The Nigerian stock market has clearly generated real wealth for:

•⁠  ⁠Early IPO, PO, RI investors

•⁠  ⁠Long-term holders

•⁠  ⁠Smart dip buyers

Losses happen mostly to:

•⁠  ⁠Emotional traders

•⁠  ⁠People who buy at peaks and then panic-sell 

Wealth generation hasn’t disappeared — strategy matters.


Claim 2:

“You’re better off selling everything and buying Bitcoin or physical gold.”

🔍 Reality Check

Bitcoin in Nigeria

•⁠  ⁠Crypto volatility is extreme

•⁠  ⁠Regulation risk remains high

Some argue that Bitcoin is speculative, not a guaranteed growth engine.


Gold

Gold is primarily a wealth preservation asset:

•⁠  ⁠Low long-term growth

•⁠  ⁠Doesn’t generate income

•⁠  ⁠Prices often stagnate for years

Gold protects value — it does not aggressively grow wealth like stocks.


Nigerian Stock Market Comparison

Some Nigerian stocks have outperformed both gold and Bitcoin over certain periods:

Asset 3–5 Year Performance

Geregu Power ~1,000%+

BUA Foods ~1,700%+

Bitcoin (2021–2022) ~185%+

Gold (typical) ~140%+

Conclusion

Bitcoin = high risk, high volatility

Gold = low growth, defensive

Stocks = balanced growth + income + compounding

A diversified portfolio beats an all-in approach.


Claim 3:

“Only dividends make sense, and even then you’re at a disadvantage.”


🔍 Nigerian Dividend Reality

Dividends in Nigeria can be very powerful, especially when combined with capital appreciation.

Examples:

Zenith Bank

•⁠  ⁠Strong annual dividends

•⁠  ⁠Share price also appreciates over time

•⁠  ⁠Offers income + growth

GTCO

•⁠  ⁠Consistent dividend history

•⁠  ⁠Strong capital base

•⁠  ⁠Rewards long-term investors

Seplat Energy

•⁠  ⁠Dollar-linked earnings

•⁠  ⁠Solid dividends

•⁠  ⁠Strong stock performance

When dividends are reinvested, investors benefit from:

•⁠  ⁠Compounding

•⁠  ⁠Higher share ownership

•⁠  ⁠Long-term wealth growth

This is not a disadvantage — it’s a proven wealth strategy. For you to get any reasonable dividend from a stock, you have to hold a very large amount of shares of that company; otherwise, you only get a peanut dividend. Imagine a company whose stock price is N10 announces to pay N1 per share, i.e., a 10 % yield, which is good for the multi-million or billion investor. 

•⁠  ⁠N1 Million gives 100,000 shares: Dividend = N10,000

•⁠  ⁠N10 Million gives 1000,000 shares: Dividend = N100,000

•⁠  ⁠N1 Billion gives 100,000,000 shares: Dividend = N10 Million

Sometimes dividend is not just about the yield, but an indication of a strong, profit-making company. 


The Real Issue: Not the Market — the Strategy

Most losses in the Nigerian stock market come from:

❌ Buying hype

❌ Chasing spikes

❌ Panic selling

❌ No diversification

❌ No understanding of fundamentals


Meanwhile, informed investors:

✔ Buy quality

✔ Buy dips

✔ Hold patiently

✔ Diversify

✔ Reinvest dividends

They win consistently.


Final Verdict


Claim                                            Reality

Stocks no longer create wealth    ❌ False

Bitcoin is better                            ❌ High risk, unstable

Gold is better                                   ❌ Preserves, doesn’t grow as much as stocks

Dividends are weak                  ❌ Powerful indication and when reinvested

Investors always lose                  ❌ Only uninformed ones


Bottom Line

The Nigerian stock market is still:

✅ A wealth creation engine

✅ A hedge against inflation

✅ A source of income

✅ A compounding machine

— for informed, disciplined investors.


The market doesn’t punish investors.

It punishes impatience and ignorance.


Concluding Remarks

The idea that the Nigerian stock market is no longer a wealth-creation engine is not supported by data. In recent years, the NGX has delivered impressive capital appreciation – 51% in 2025 alone - consistent dividend income, and inflation-beating returns for informed and patient investors. While Bitcoin has produced extraordinary gains over its lifetime, it remains highly volatile and unpredictable in the short to medium term. Gold, on the other hand, has proven to be a reliable store of value, but cannot match the growth potential of quality equities.

Each asset class serves a different purpose:

•⁠  ⁠Stocks build wealth through business growth and dividends.

•⁠  ⁠Bitcoin offers high-risk, high-reward speculative growth.

•⁠  ⁠Gold preserves value during uncertainty.

The smartest investors do not choose one and reject the others entirely. They diversify, align investments with their risk tolerance, and focus on long-term fundamentals rather than short-term noise. Wealth is not created by hype, fear, or extreme positions — it is created through knowledge, discipline, and data-driven decisions.

In the end, the Nigerian stock market is not the problem.

Poor strategy, lack of patience, and emotional investing are.

Stock market update

Within just 7 market days, i.e., 2 - 12 January 2026, the year-to-date (YtD) returns of some stocks - especially pharmaceutical companies - have surged up to 85 %. I've attached some of the share price charts.





















The highest ascent ever of the NGX is given below.

















 

Thursday, January 1, 2026

New Year, New Money Moves: Stock Market Takeaways for 2026

 

📈 New Year, New Money Moves: Stock Market Takeaways for 2026 💰
By: Dr. Salihu Lukman

As we step into a new year, one truth keeps getting louder: money that sleeps loses value; money that works grows.
Here are some powerful stock-market lessons worth carrying into 2026 👇

1️⃣ Stocks are not just risky — they are powerful wealth builders.
Despite volatility, stocks remain one of the best vehicles for capital preservation and massive appreciation. The wealthy understand this deeply.
Take Femi Otedola, a dollar billionaire: he bought GEREGU Power at its IPO in 2022 for ₦100 per share and exited recently at about ₦1,141.50 — earning billions of naira. Another heavyweight, former Zamfara governor Abdulaziz Yari, stepped in afterward.


Now pause and study this carefully: some of the top 10 performing stocks in 2025 delivered between 272% and 1,354% returns in just one year. This is not luck — it’s strategy.



2️⃣ How you place your trade matters more than you think.
From 4 months of close, real trading experience, here’s a golden rule:
🔹 Avoid buying or selling at market price. It often kills instant profit opportunities.
🔹 Always check the order book before trading.
The order book shows you what buyers are bidding and what sellers are offering — real market intentions, not averages.
Platforms like Cowrywise make this very clear. With the order book, you can place limit orders, choose how long your order stays active, and squeeze more value from every trade. Truly, experience is the best teacher.


3️⃣ Fundamentals + price history = smarter profits.
Always aim for fundamentally sound companies (strong financials, leadership, and prospects) with a track record of price performance.
From my observations, solid stocks fall into three broad patterns:
📈 Progressive growers with minor dips (e.g. BUAFOODS, EUNISELL, FIDSON).








📉 Strong companies with long price stagnation or decline — better for patient, long-term investors (e.g. Transcorp, Accesscorp, Oando).







🔄 Fluctuating but appreciating stocks, common with banks (GTCO, Zenith, NAHCO), great for both trading and long-term strategies depending on your goal.







Before buying any stock, check at least its 1-year or 5-year price chart. You’re in the market to make money — so plan to maximize it.

4️⃣ Never forget: risk is real.
Stock investing rewards knowledge, not assumptions. Just recently, Aso Savings & Loans and Union Homes lost their operating licenses. Shareholders must now wait for NDIC liquidation — if funds remain.
👉 Due diligence is not optional.

5️⃣ Eyes on 2026: potential golden IPOs 👀
Start positioning your mind (and capital) for these expected listings:
Dangote Oil Refinery
Dangote Fertilizer Company
NNPCL
Dangote plans to float only about 10% of the refinery, with dividends promised in U.S. dollars — a strong hedge against inflation. Many analysts believe this could become the golden stock of the Nigerian market.
📊 For context:
The stock market gained about 37% in 2024
It surged to about 51% in 2025, despite volatility


2026 holds even stronger promise.


6️⃣ Diversification is not optional — it is protection.
With over 140 companies listed on the Nigerian Stock Exchange (NGX) and dozens of them being fundamentally sound, do not limit yourself to just a few familiar names. The more (quality stocks), the merrier.
Spread your investments across different categories — NGX 30 Index, Lotus Islamic Index, Consumer Goods, Growth Index, Premium Index, etc. — based on your conviction and investment goals. This strategy helps consolidate gains and reduce risk over time. If one or two stocks underperform or even go under, strong performers in other sectors will neutralize the impact, keeping your portfolio healthy. The attached pie chart illustrates a simple example of smart diversification.



7️⃣ Master your entry and exit: buy the dip, don’t sell the red.
Your entry point into any stock is critical. Buying quality stocks after a price dip allows you to enter at a discount. Remember, the market naturally moves between bullish (up) and bearish (down) cycles, driven by changing market dynamics. Not all stocks experience prolonged bearish trends, and the only reliable way to identify a genuine dip is by reviewing the stock’s historical price performance chart.
Also, watch closely for Public Offers (POs), Rights Issues (RIs), and Initial Public Offers (IPOs) of fundamentally sound companies. These often provide excellent entry points at discounted prices. For instance, TIP currently has an ongoing PO and RI that ends tomorrow, while FIDSON has just announced a RI. IPOs, in particular, often see price appreciation shortly after listing.
As much as possible, avoid selling stocks in red (at a loss)—provided the company remains fundamentally sound and is not going under, as was the case with Aso Savings and Loans, which was recently shut down. You are in the market to make profits, not to lock in losses. Be patient, allow time for recovery, and sell when the stock turns green (profitable), if you choose to exit.
Do not panic during price drops. Volatility is a permanent feature of the stock market. The market rewards the patient and informed, not the impulsive. If checking your portfolio daily gives you negative vibes, step back—long-term investing does not require daily emotional monitoring.
That said, selling at a loss can sometimes be strategic. If careful analysis shows that exiting a losing position will free capital for a stronger opportunity whose gains can offset the loss, then selling in red may be justified. Remember: a loss remains theoretical until you sell.


🌅 CONCLUSION:

The stock market rewards knowledge, patience, and discipline — not emotions or shortcuts. Wealth is rarely built overnight, but it is consistently built by those who learn the rules, study the patterns, manage risks, and position early.
2026 is not a year to sit on the sidelines. It is a year to plan intentionally, diversify wisely, trade intelligently, and invest with conviction. Let your money stop resting and start working for you.
📈 The market does not move money from the rich to the poor — it moves money from the impatient to the informed.
Be informed. Be prepared. Be positioned.
Let your money start working for you — not against you.

If you found this valuable, like, share, and save this post — and tag someone who needs to start 2026 on a smarter financial path.




Wednesday, December 24, 2025

More Than a Game: How Ludo Sharpens the Mind, Counters Cognitive Decline, and Restores Human Bonding in the Age of Screens

Ludo, a game invented in India, modified and commercialized in England, has always fascinated me—not merely as a pastime, but as a living classroom for probability, risk-taking, strategy, and the intelligent deployment of the mind. Anyone who has played Ludo seriously, especially when it is a two-player game occupying opposite houses, knows that winning goes far beyond luck. It is about thinking ahead, reading probabilities, managing risk, and timing moves with mathematical intuition.


In Ludo, every roll of the dice is a probability experiment. With two dice, the numbers you hope for are not equally likely. Low numbers like 1 or 2 are actually rare, while numbers like 6, 7, or 8 are more probable because they can be formed in multiple ways. For example, 7 can be obtained as (1+6, 2+5, 3+4, 4+3, 5+2, 6+1) — six different combinations — whereas 2 can only come from (1+1). This simple mathematical truth changes how a smart player plans: when to release a seed, when to block an opponent, when to take calculated risks, and when to wait patiently.


This same thinking once helped me in real life. I previously wrote about how I unlocked my suitcase whose 4-digit combination was accidentally changed during air travel. I didn’t try numbers randomly. I applied probability and permutation, narrowing down the most likely combinations first, based on how humans tend to set numbers and how permutations work. Mathematics, once again, moved from abstraction to practical problem-solving.


That is the beauty of probability: it trains the mind to estimate outcomes, manage uncertainty, and make better decisions—whether on a Ludo board, in science and engineering problems, or in everyday life. Games like Ludo quietly teach us that success is not about hoping for luck, but about understanding the odds, respecting risk, and playing intelligently.


Mathematics is not distant. It is alive. Sometimes, it even sits quietly on a Ludo board, waiting for those who can see it.



Ludo enhances intelligence and helps reduce cognitive decline, especially in older adults, by constantly engaging the brain in counting, probability assessment, memory, and decision-making. Each move requires players to evaluate risk (whether to advance, block, or capture), anticipate opponents’ responses, and recall patterns of dice outcomes, which stimulates executive functions and working memory. The social interaction involved also reduces stress and loneliness—both known risk factors for cognitive decline—while the repetitive yet strategic nature of the game strengthens neural connections, helping to keep the mind sharp, active, and resilient with age.


Ludo enhances physical interaction and social cohesion by bringing people together around a shared physical space, encouraging face-to-face conversation, laughter, eye contact, and healthy competition—things often lost in a world dominated by smartphones and smart TVs. Sitting together to play fosters bonding across ages, strengthens family and community ties, and creates moments of collective joy and cooperation. In an era of digital isolation, Ludo serves as a simple but powerful tool for reconnecting people, rebuilding social warmth, and restoring the human element of play.


Conclusion

In conclusion, Ludo reminds us that intelligence, mental agility, and human connection do not always require complex technology or sophisticated tools. Through simple dice rolls and deliberate moves, the game quietly trains the mind in probability, strategy, patience, and risk assessment, while simultaneously fostering face-to-face interaction, laughter, and shared presence. In an era dominated by screens and digital isolation, Ludo stands as a powerful counterbalance—preserving cognitive health, strengthening social bonds, and reaffirming that some of life’s most profound lessons are learned not from devices, but from thoughtful play around a table. Try playing it with your family or friends and thank me later.



Sunday, November 2, 2025

Halal Investment Options In Nigeria — Grow Your Wealth The Halal Way

In today’s Nigeria, you can grow your money without compromising your faith.

From the Nigerian Exchange (NGX) to apps like Afrinvest and Cowrywise, there are now multiple Shariah-compliant (Halal) investment options available for Muslims and ethically conscious investors.

Here’s a breakdown 👇


⿡ Halal Stocks on NGX

Invest directly in companies that meet Islamic finance criteria — free from interest-based banking, gambling, alcohol, and other non-halal activities.

You can find these through the NGX-Lotus Islamic Index (NGX-LII) — a dedicated index tracking Shariah-compliant stocks listed on the Nigerian Exchange screened by a Shari’ah board.

💡 Examples of top-performing Shariah-compliant equities are included in this index and can be accessed via brokers that trade NGX stocks. Currently, there are 11 companies in this index: Dangote Cement, Jaiz Bank, Bua Foods, MTN, NAHCO, NASCON, Lafarge, Aradel, Okomu Oil Palm, etc. There’s no minimum investment amount for these stocks. 


⿢ Halal Exchange Traded Fund (ETF)

An Exchange-Traded Fund (ETF) is a basket of securities—like stocks or bonds—pooled into a single investment that trades on an exchange like a stock, allowing investors to buy and sell shares throughout the day while enjoying diversification and low fees.


🔹 Lotus Halal Equity ETF (LOTUSHAL15)

Managed by Lotus Capital Limited

Tracks the NSE Lotus Islamic Index (NSE-LII)

Invests in screened Nigerian companies following Islamic principles

Accessible via any broker or app connected to NGX, like Meristem/Cowrywise, United Capital, etc.

United Capital, a stockbroker, has a Non-Interest market segment which consists of LOTUSHAL15, Jaiz Bank and Tajsuks1 (another Islamic bank, Taj Bank)

There’s no minimum investment amount. Current market price per share is around ₦75.

✅ Perfect for those who want diversified exposure to halal stocks in one click.


⿣ Halal Mutual Funds (Professionally Managed Portfolios)

A Mutual Fund is a professionally managed pool of money from many investors that’s collectively invested in diversified assets such as stocks, bonds, or Sukuk. 


🟢 Afrinvest Halal Fund

Managed by Afrinvest Asset Management

Open-ended mutual fund investing in Sukuk, Shariah-compliant equities, and non-interest bank deposits

Minimum investment: ₦1,000

Benchmark returns: ~19% per annum (varies with market)

📱 Available on: Afrinvest and Cowrywise apps

🟢 FSDH Halal Fund

Managed by FSDH Asset Management

Invests primarily in Sukuk and other fixed-income halal instruments

Minimum investment: ₦5,000

Returns: ~15–17% p.a. (fixed-income style)

Focus: Beat inflation with stable, ethical returns

📱 Available on: FSDH platform

🟢 Stanbic IBTC Shari’ah Fixed Income Fund

Invests 70%+ in Sukuk and 30% in other halal instruments

Offers relatively low-risk exposure

Ideal for investors seeking steady halal income

Minimum investment: ₦5,000

Returns: ~15% p.a.

📱 Available on: StanbicIBTC app

🟢 Lotus Halal Fixed Income/Investment Fund

Managed by Lotus Capital Ltd

Flexible minimums (retail-friendly)

Typical returns: 11–20% depending on the market

Return is paid quarterly for the fixed income and yearly for the investment fund  

Suitable for those who want halal steady growth without volatility.

📱 Available on: Cowrywise app


⿤ Sukuk (Islamic Bonds)

A bond is a certificate representing a debt where an investor lends money to a borrower (like a government or company) in exchange for periodic interest payments and the repayment of the principal on a maturity date.

A Sukuk is an Islamic financial certificate that represents fractional ownership in a tangible asset or business venture, providing the holder with a share of the profits or rental income generated by that asset instead of interest.


If you prefer fixed, predictable returns, these halal bonds are great:

🇳🇬 FGN Sukuk (Government Islamic Bond)

Offered by Debt Management Office (DMO)

Minimum: ₦10,000 (in multiples of ₦1,000)

Return: ~19.75% per annum, paid twice yearly

Available through banks, brokers, or SEC-approved agents

🏦 TAJBank Mudarabah Sukuk Bond

Offered by TAJBank

Minimum: ₦100,000

Return: ~20.5% per annum

Available during offer periods directly from TAJBank


How to Start Investing (Step-by-Step)

⿡ Choose your halal option (Stocks, ETF, Sukuk, or Mutual Fund)

⿢ Confirm it’s Shariah-certified (all listed above are screened)

⿣ Open an account via the fund manager, Afrinvest, Cowrywise, Meristem, United Capital, etc.

⿤ Provide your ID & BVN for KYC. You may choose to wait until your brokerage account is created within about 48 hours with CSCS (account number with the broker) number and CHN (brokerage BVN). You can open many brokerage accounts with different brokers and CSCS (Central Securities Clearing System) numbers, but your CHN (Clearing House Number) should remain the same.

⿥ Fund your account and start earning ethical, halal returns


The Takeaway

(1) Halal investing in Nigeria is no longer a dream — it’s real, regulated, and accessible.

Whether you want the flexibility of ETFs, the safety of Sukuk, or the steady growth of mutual funds and stocks, you now have purely halal choices. The quoted returns could vary based on the market. A grand summary is presented in the table below/attached.

(2) Target a diversified portfolio consisting of stocks, Sukuk, mutual funds, and ETFs. 

(3) See the top gainers and losers for the month of October 2025 alone on NGX from INVESTDATA. The list includes at least 3 of the NGX-Lotus Islamic Index companies (Dangote Cement, MTN, Aradel) among the top gainers. You can imagine increasing your wealth by 27% in just one month. 


✨ Invest consciously. Grow peacefully. Earn halal.







Saturday, November 1, 2025

AFIT, NDA & ABU-DLC: Exploring Nigeria’s Silent Academic Giants Beyond ASUU Strikes

Yesterday, after sharing my reflections on my son Muhammad’s matriculation into 100 Level, B.Eng. Aerospace Engineering at the Air Force Institute of Technology (AFIT), Kaduna, many readers reached out to know more about this unique and not-so-popular institution. Their curiosity prompted me to write this post, not just about AFIT, but also about two other equally outstanding institutions — the Nigerian Defence Academy (NDA) and Ahmadu Bello University Distance Learning Centre (ABU-DLC) — that are redefining higher education in Nigeria in quiet but remarkable ways.


1️⃣ Air Force Institute of Technology (AFIT), Kaduna

AFIT’s story is both inspiring and instructive. It began in 1977 as the NAF Technical Service School (TSS), was upgraded in 2004 to award OND (Ordinary National Diploma), and was renamed AFIT in 2008. For years, it awarded OND and HND qualifications until 2017, when it transitioned into a degree-awarding institution, now offering undergraduate, postgraduate diploma (PGD), and master’s programs in engineering, computing, and sciences.

Both civilian students and military officers are admitted, though the officers mostly pursue OND and HND programs.


Pros

✅ No ASUU strikes! Although it’s a public institution, AFIT is not affected by ASUU actions. Some graduates claim that AFIT covers nearly three semesters in a single year, allowing students to graduate faster than their peers elsewhere. Whether or not this is fully accurate, one thing is certain — steady academic progress and timely graduation are guaranteed.

I recall my undergraduate years at Ahmadu Bello University (ABU) between 1999 and 2004 — a period that witnessed a cumulative 16 months of ASUU strikes, delaying our graduation by over a year. Imagine the relief of knowing that your child’s education won’t be interrupted!

✅ Affordable tuition: AFIT’s fees are comparable to those of other public universities. For instance, I paid ₦116,000 for Muhammad’s registration and ₦20,000 for the acceptance fee.


Cons

❌ Highly competitive: This year, only candidates who scored 200 and above in JAMB were invited for the post-UTME. For Aerospace Engineering, the cutoff was around 240 (60%), derived from the combined average of UTME and post-UTME scores. It’s arguably AFIT’s most competitive course.

❌ Name confusion: Some hesitate because it’s called an institute, not a university. But remember, the world’s top-ranked university — Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) — also doesn’t carry “university” in its name. The name does not define the quality.


AFIT currently has four faculties — Air Engineering, Ground Engineering, Computing, and Sciences.

Courses like Aerospace Engineering, which combines both Aeronautical and Astronautical Engineering, are offered — a program even the great ABU does not have yet.


When Muhammad told me he wanted to study Aeronautical Engineering, and we couldn’t find it anywhere close by, I advised him to choose Aerospace Engineering instead. It’s broader, more versatile, and aligns perfectly with his passion.


💡 A word to parents: please don’t force your children into fields they are not interested in. Instead, expose them to multiple disciplines — medicine, law, engineering, computing, sciences, business, etc. — and let them choose their own paths. Guide, don’t dictate. Many bright minds lose their passion because they were compelled to chase their parents’ dreams, especially medicine, not their own.

👉 For more details on AFIT, visit: https://afit.edu.ng/home/


2️⃣ The Nigerian Defence Academy (NDA), Kaduna

Many people think NDA is exclusively a military training ground — but that’s an outdated assumption. Today, NDA is a full-fledged university with five faculties, offering undergraduate and postgraduate (Master’s and PhD) programs to both military officers and civilians.


Its faculties include Engineering, Sciences, Military Science, Arts & Social Sciences, and Management Sciences.

Like AFIT, NDA does not experience ASUU strikes, making it a dependable institution for uninterrupted learning.


Interestingly, NDA offers some unique programs not available in other public universities — for instance, Psychology, which even ABU does not offer at the undergraduate level.

👉 For more details, visit: https://nda.edu.ng/


3️⃣ Ahmadu Bello University Distance Learning Centre (ABU-DLC)

This is another innovative model under the prestigious ABU. The Distance Learning Centre (DLC) allows students to study from home — through video lectures, WhatsApp sessions, and weekend online classes — while writing exams physically at centers across Nigeria, Saudi Arabia, the UK, Dubai, and more.

It offers both undergraduate and master’s degrees, including programs in Economics, Business Administration, Nursing Science, Computer Science, and the popular MBA.

A beautiful feature of the ABU-DLC program is that its certificates are identical to those issued to regular students — there’s no mention of “distance learning” on them.


Pros

✅ No ASUU strikes.

✅ Accelerated study pace: You cover three semesters per year, which means a 4-year program can be completed in less than 3 years.


Cons

❌ Cost structure: It may seem more expensive since students pay per course, but compared to private universities, it’s still very affordable — especially for working professionals who can study flexibly.

👉 For more details, visit: https://abudlc.edu.ng/


Final Thoughts

Nigeria’s higher education system still offers hidden gems for those who seek quality, stability, and flexibility. AFIT, NDA, and ABU-DLC stand out as models of what’s possible — institutions that combine public accountability with private-sector efficiency, all while remaining accessible to ordinary Nigerians.

For me, this journey feels like a full circle — from a young undergraduate who entered ABU with the lowest JAMB score in my class but graduated at the top, to now watching my son walk confidently into AFIT to begin his own engineering dream.

May Allah continue to guide our children, bless their efforts, and grant them success that will surpass ours.

Addendum

I just confirmed that NDA opens its undergraduate courses to cadets only.








Friday, October 31, 2025

From Grass to Grace: A Father’s Reflection on His Son’s Matriculation

Today, my heart is overflowing with emotions. My beloved son, Muhammad, has just been matriculated into 100 Level, B.Eng. Aerospace Engineering at the Air Force Institute of Technology (AFIT), Kaduna. Watching him take this remarkable first step into his future fills me with both pride and nostalgia — it has taken me back more than 26 years, to the day I myself was matriculated into B.Eng. Water Resources and Environmental Engineering at Ahmadu Bello University, Zaria, in 1999.


That moment in 1999 remains one of the most defining experiences of my life — and it was nothing short of a miracle. I can never forget how it all began. Just two days before my JAMB examinations, I fell seriously ill — struck by stomachache and diarrhea that left me weak and helpless. Somehow, I still managed to drag myself to the exam hall at Alhudahuda College. I struggled through English and Chemistry, barely touched Mathematics, and didn’t even open the Physics section. By all human reasoning, I had failed before I began.


But Allah’s mercy is beyond comprehension. When the results came out, I was stunned to see 30 points in Physics, and the other subjects making up an aggregate of 180 — the exact minimum score required for university admission. It remains one of the lowest JAMB scores ever admitted into ABU that year. Yet, with that “impossible” score, I made it into the second admission list of the 1998–1999 session.


And the story didn’t end there — with that humble beginning, I went on to graduate at the top of my class, another miracle that could only have been made possible by Allah’s grace. Indeed, my journey has been a living testimony of the saying, “From grass to grace.”


Looking back today, as I watch my son take his first steps on his own academic journey, I am filled with gratitude. Alhamdulillah for Allah’s unfailing mercy, for the unseen hands that lifted me when I could not stand, and for every stage of grace that has followed since.


I can humbly say that by Allah’s mercy, I have fulfilled all my life ambitions. Yet, my greatest joy today is to see my children beginning their own journeys with hope, faith, and purpose.

So, as I celebrate Muhammad’s matriculation, my heart overflows with dua — that Allah, the Most Merciful, grants him the same divine grace that carried me through, and blesses him to fulfill his ambitions just as I have fulfilled mine. And may this prayer extend to his 10 younger siblings, that each of them may find success, peace, and purpose in all their endeavors.


Indeed, when Allah decrees a thing, He only says to it: “Be,” and it is.

Alhamdulillah for His mercy, guidance, and grace that never ends.




Saturday, October 18, 2025

I’m Not a Stock Market Expert — Just a Curious Engineer on a Journey of Financial Discovery

After my recent article encouraging people to consider investing in stocks, I received several messages from individuals asking me to mentor them in stock investing. That really humbled me — but let me be honest with you: I am not a stock market expert.


By profession, I am an academic and a civil engineer, specializing in environmental and water resources engineering. My journey into the stock market didn’t begin with any formal financial background — it began with curiosity.


In May 2024, I decided to start buying a few shares, not with the intention of becoming an investor overnight, but simply to experiment — to test whether it’s really possible to diversify income through passive means.


Eight months later, when I checked the values of those shares, I was pleasantly surprised. Some had grown between 17% and 84% — without me lifting a finger! After a full year, a few of them had appreciated by more than 400%, with an average gain of about 100%.


That experience completely changed my perception of the stock market. I realized that while it’s not a “get-rich-quick” system, it rewards patience, observation, and informed decision-making.


So, in September 2025, I made a personal decision: to study the stock market seriously — not as a trader, but as a lifelong learner who loves to understand how systems work with the hope of becoming an investor.


Every day, I now take time to monitor stock movements, study charts, and try to understand how numbers rise and fall in response to:

•⁠  ⁠Investor sentiments

•⁠  ⁠Government policies

•⁠  ⁠Company reports and earnings

•⁠  ⁠Market corrections and global trends


I’ve also developed an interest in understanding how professionals use upside and downside potentials to issue BUY, SELL, or HOLD recommendations. I try to identify their strengths and practical limitations, and how these metrics evolve based on market realities.


To enrich my understanding, I regularly:

✅ Attend paid webinars hosted by expert traders and stockbrokers

✅ Watch YouTube channels that simplify investing concepts

✅ Read financial reports, analyses, and commentaries from credible sources


All of this, not because I want to become a professional stock analyst — but because I believe that financial literacy is no longer optional. Whether you’re an engineer, teacher, doctor, or student, you owe it to yourself to understand how money works, how it grows, and how to make it work for you.


The stock market may look intimidating at first, but with consistency, curiosity, and a learning mindset, it becomes one of the most rewarding classrooms you can ever enter.


So, no, I am not an expert — but I am a student of the market, and every day brings a new lesson worth learning.