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Nigerian Exchange Limited

Foreign Investors Withdrew N433.15 Billion from the Nigerian Stock Exchange

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Nigerian Stock Exchange

Foreign Investors Withdrew N433.15 Billion from the Nigerian Stock Exchange

Between January and November, foreign investors withdrew N433.15 billion from the Nigerian Stock Exchange, according to the latest report from the bourse on Wednesday.

The amount was lower than the N481.96 billion withdrew during the same period of 2019.

A breakdown of the report showed foreign inflows into the market dropped from N397.44 billion achieved in 2019 to N226.13 billion.

Specifically, foreign portfolio investment outflow encompasses sales transactions or liquidation of portfolio investments through the stock market while foreign portfolio investment inflow includes equities purchases on the Nigerian Stock Exchange.

Total transactions carried out on the Exchange in the month of November rose by 29.77 percent from N244.90 billion or $634.55m billion in October 2020 to N317.81 billion or $813.87 million.

The Exchange report showed the total value of transactions carried on by domestic investors in November outperformed transactions executed by foreign investors by around 58 percent.

Domestic transactions rose by 53.51 percent to N250.50 billion in November, up from N163.18 billion in October.

Total foreign transactions, however, decreased by 17.63 percent from N81.72bn (about $211.75m) in October to N67.31bn (about $172.38m) in November,” it said.

The NSE also noted that institutional investors outperformed retail investors by 16 percent in the month of November. While retail transactions grew by 52.10 percent to N106.38 billion in November, up from N69.94 billion in October.

The institutional composition of the domestic market increased by 54.57 percent from N93.24bn in October 2020 to N144.12bn in November 2020.”

Is the CEO/Founder of Investors King Limited. A proven foreign exchange research analyst and a published author on Yahoo Finance, Nasdaq, Entrepreneur.com, Investorplace, and many more. He has over two decades of experience in global financial markets.

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Nigerian Exchange Limited

Nigerian Stock Market Loses N259 Billion Amidst Medium-Cap Company Declines

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Nigerian Exchange Limited - Investors King

In a day marked by losses in the equities of several medium-cap companies, the Nigerian Exchange Limited lost N259 billion in market capitalization.

BUA Cement led the loser’s chart with a 10% decline in share value to close at N93.60 per unit from N104 it settled the previous session.

Other impacted stocks contributing to the market downturn included Dangote Sugar (-0.43%), Lafarge (-0.17%), Oando Plc (-2.12%), Fidson (-3.53%), NGX Group (-0.68%), Zenith Bank (-0.43%), and United Bank for Africa (-0.23%).

The overall market capitalization and All-Share Index saw a 0.66% decrease to N38.823 trillion and 70,946.83, respectively as the year-to-date returns dipped to 38.43%.

Despite the overall decline, positive market sentiments persisted, resulting in 33 gainers and 26 losers.

The top gainer was the paper company, Thomas Wyatt, gaining 10% and closing at N2.75 per unit.

First Bank of Nigeria Holdings and Daar Communications also made significant gains, closing at N24.35 per unit (up 9.93%) and N0.34 (up 9.68%), respectively.

On the losing side, BUA Cement’s 10% decline was followed by McNichols, down 9.33%, and Computer Warehouse Group, which lost 7.50%.

The real estate firm, UPDC, also dipped by 7.14%, closing at N1.17.

Volume drivers for the day included Universal Insurance, Transnational Corporation, Airtel Africa, and GTCO.

Three out of five sectors tracked closed in the red zone, with the Insurance, Oil/Gas, and Industrial Goods indexes recording losses while Banking and Consumer Goods sectors saw slight advances.

Cowry Asset Management Limited researchers anticipate a dynamic week for investors as they navigate potential profit-taking and corrections amid global events, fixed-income yields, and Central Bank of Nigeria policies.

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Nigerian Exchange Limited

Nigerian Stock Exchange Bounces Back, Gains N132 Billion in Market Cap

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Nigerian Exchange Limited - Investors King

The Nigerian Exchange Limited rebounded on Wednesday with the market capitalization surging by N132 billion.

This uptick was propelled by the positive performance of key stocks, including Seplat Energy (+10%), Meyer Plc (+9.79%), Sunu Assurance (+9.56%), Nestle (+9.52%), and Consolidated Hallmark Holdings Plc (+9.24%).

The All-Share Index closed rose by 0.34% to 71,283.34 points, reflecting investors’ optimistic sentiment, particularly in medium and large-cap stocks with solid fundamentals while the market capitalization increased to N39.007 trillion.

Despite a decline in total deals and volume by 19.14% and 32.55% to 6,579 deals and 360.60 million units respectively, the total value for the day increased by 17.64% to N6.61 billion.

Among the gainers, Seplat, Meyer, Sunu Assurance, Nestle Plc, and Consolidated Hallmark Holdings Plc stood out, closing at N2.310, N3.59, N1.49, N1.150, and N1.30 per unit, respectively, after gains ranging from 10% to 9.24%.

The losers’ chart was led by Guinea Insurance, down 10%, followed by Omatek (-9.88%), Abbey Mortgage Bank (-9.68%), Neimeth Pharma (-9.45%), and Tantalizer (-8.62%).

Performance across sectors was predominantly bullish, with the Insurance, Consumer Goods, Oil/Gas, and Industrial Goods indexes recording notable advancements of 1.17%, 0.89%, 6.06%, and 0.01%, respectively.

However, banking stocks emerged as the only laggard for the day, declining by 0.56%.

GT Bank (GTCO) dominated trading activities, emerging as the most traded security in terms of volume and value, with 56.91 million units worth N2.19 billion traded in 261 deals.

This positive momentum signals a renewed fervor in the Nigerian stock market.

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Nigerian Exchange Limited

Market Sheds N132 Billion as Union Bank Bows Out from NGX Official List

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Union bank - Investors King

The official delisting of Union Bank of Nigeria from the Nigerian Exchange Limited (NGX) on Monday triggered a notable N132 billion loss from the market capitalization.

NGX Regulations Limited, the regulatory arm of the Nigerian Exchange Group, confirmed the delisting in a notice to trading license holders.

Union Bank’s shares were suspended on November 14, leading to the delisting, which resulted in a market cap loss.

On its last day on the NGX Daily Official List, Union Bank had a market cap of N193.65 billion, with shares closing at N6.65 per unit.

Titan Trust Bank Limited, Union Bank’s core investor, had earlier announced plans to acquire minority shareholders’ shares, leading to the delisting.

Despite the delisting impact, the All-Share Index closed positively at the end of Monday’s trading, rising by 0.17% or 123.33 points to 71,353.81.

However, the market cap closed at N39.040 trillion, N132 billion lower than the N39.172 trillion recorded on the previous Friday.

Key performers in the market included AccessCorp, United Bank for Africa, Zenith Bank Plc, and Universal Insurance Plc.

Positive investor sentiments resulted in 32 gainers and 20 losers. Notable gainers included First Bank of Nigeria Holding, John Holt, and Tantalizer, each gaining 10%.

ETranZact led the losers’ chart with a 9.09% dip, and Unity Bank, amidst reported business combination talks with Providus Bank, landed on the losers chart with a 9.24% loss.

The volume of transactions on the NGX slightly increased to 746.67 million units from 582.77 million units traded on Friday.

Banking stocks, including AccessCorp, UBA, and Zenith Bank, were the major drivers of the day’s trend, accounting for volume and value in the market.

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