Nigerian Stock Exchange Market Pick Alerts - Investment (9979) - Nairaland
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| Re: Nigerian Stock Exchange Market Pick Alerts by jonnysessy(m): 8:40pm On Jan 13 |
We all will witness it soon[/quote]. |
| Re: Nigerian Stock Exchange Market Pick Alerts by Harddiskng(m): 9:52pm On Jan 13*. Modified: 10:09pm On Jan 13 |
If i want to write about my displeasure with Stanbic brokers ehn, the volumes of pages would be more than that of the Harry Potter series. "People rise to their level of incompetence", it seems same applies to organizations. Like someone rightfully said, Stanbic is victim of its own success. The market would regularize; evaluate it’s level of incompetence and trim the business down to the appropriate size ![]() |
| Re: Nigerian Stock Exchange Market Pick Alerts by emmaodet: 10:06pm On Jan 13 |
"Most people get interested in stocks when everyone else is. The time to get interested is when no one else is. You can’t buy what is popular and do well.” - Warren Buffett |
| Re: Nigerian Stock Exchange Market Pick Alerts by nosa2(m): 10:11pm On Jan 13 |
emmaodet:Are you interested in the banking sector now? |
| Re: Nigerian Stock Exchange Market Pick Alerts by emmaodet: 10:22pm On Jan 13 |
nosa2:Tbh, I am not a fan of banking sector for now |
| Re: Nigerian Stock Exchange Market Pick Alerts by nosa2(m): 10:59pm On Jan 13 |
emmaodet:"Most people get interested in stocks when everyone else is. The time to get interested is when no one else is. You can’t buy what is popular and do well.” - Warren Buffett I refer you back to your quote |
| Re: Nigerian Stock Exchange Market Pick Alerts by HesInMe: 3:25am On Jan 14 |
Lol. Or price manipulation in advance of a large, follow-on private placement or debt raise. Who knows which? No disrespect, but you are too optimistic about this stock. A little cynicism is a good trait for an investor. SonofElElyonRet: |
| Re: Nigerian Stock Exchange Market Pick Alerts by essentialone(m): 6:34am On Jan 14 |
Which banks will likely acquire FCMB and Sterling Bank? |
| Re: Nigerian Stock Exchange Market Pick Alerts by awesomeJ(m): 6:53am On Jan 14*. Modified: 7:21am On Jan 14 |
essentialone:Acquire kwa?? Haba na. In a worst case scenario, they would do a license downgrade. I think we're reading too much into this capitalization. Most of the banks are already over 5x above the threshold, if not for CBN's gymanstics of discounting retained earnings. Highest Bolaji will do PP via Chapel Hill Denham instead of allowing FCMB to be taken over. |
| Re: Nigerian Stock Exchange Market Pick Alerts by Agbalowomeri: 7:50am On Jan 14 |
nosa2:Oga Nosa you really rate these banks o ![]() |
| Re: Nigerian Stock Exchange Market Pick Alerts by Hamachi(f): 7:55am On Jan 14*. Modified: 11:36am On Jan 14 |
Tax Compliance in Nigeria: A Structural Incentive Problem One of the most significant challenges facing taxation in Nigeria—particularly voluntary compliance—is the absence of meaningful incentives for taxpayers. In functional tax systems, compliance is reinforced by visible public benefits. In Nigeria, however, most citizens and businesses privately provide what taxes are ordinarily meant to fund: Electricity: Businesses and households generate power independently through generators or solar solutions. Water: Most Nigerians drill boreholes or purchase water privately. Infrastructure: Roads, drainage, and waste management are largely inadequate or privately funded. Healthcare: Over 95% of citizens lack effective health insurance, and public hospitals are poorly equipped to handle anything beyond basic ailments. Security: Individuals and businesses increasingly rely on private security arrangements. Governance: Persistent corruption and mismanagement undermine confidence that tax revenues are used for public good. While a 30% corporate tax rate may appear competitive when benchmarked against developed economies, Nigeria itself is not competitive in terms of public service delivery. Tax rates cannot be evaluated in isolation; they must be assessed relative to the value of citizenship and the quality of state-provided services. In practice, there is little tangible benefit to citizenship that justifies such a tax burden. The Compliance Dilemma for Professionals As accountants and tax practitioners, we are positioned as agents of compliance. This role becomes ethically and professionally uncomfortable when compliance cannot be defended on substantive grounds. In my experience as an accountant in the private sector, even business owners who were financially capable—and who paid taxes in jurisdictions like the United States—often asked a simple question: “Why should I comply in Nigeria?” The honest answer was usually limited to: - Avoidance of penalties - Avoidance of audits and enforcement actions - Beyond that, there were few credible arguments. Convincing a business owner who funds 24/7 power, water, security, and healthcare out-of-pocket, or an employee paying PAYE in an environment of high inflation, limited healthcare access, and declining living standards that taxation is “beneficial” is increasingly difficult to justify. Comparative Framing Is Misleading Comparisons between Nigeria and countries like the UK are fundamentally flawed. In the UK: - Healthcare is universal - Electricity is stable - Waste disposal is handled by local councils - Security and infrastructure are reliable - Inflation is relatively controlled A 30% tax rate in such an environment funds services that citizens tangibly experience. Applying similar rates in Nigeria without equivalent service delivery ignores critical economic and institutional realities. Reform, Resistance, and Reality Opposition to recent tax reforms by firms like KPMG and other professionals should not be dismissed as ignorance or resistance to change. Many critics understand the reforms fully but question their practical legitimacy in the Nigerian context. There is also a growing acknowledgment—rightly or wrongly—that: The cost of full compliance often exceeds the cost of non-compliance, and Enforcement remains inconsistent, while public trust remains low. This creates a system where moral persuasion fails, and compliance becomes purely coercive. In conclusion, taxation is ultimately a social contract. Where the state persistently fails to deliver basic services, that contract weakens. Until Nigeria significantly improves governance, transparency, and service delivery, tax reforms alone—no matter how well designed—will continue to face deep resistance. Professionals cannot sustainably “sell” compliance without believing in the value proposition behind it. Bottom line Most tax practitioners only interested in avoiding taxes for their clients in every legal way possible. If it means exploiting loopholes, fine by me. Akinwande Deborah Omowunmi Bsc Msc ACA ACTI CMC |
| Re: Nigerian Stock Exchange Market Pick Alerts by nosa2(m): 8:10am On Jan 14 |
Agbalowomeri:Unless the auditors and regulator are complicit/useless, then the numbers for the banks reach for person to rate them |
| Re: Nigerian Stock Exchange Market Pick Alerts by Raider76: 8:24am On Jan 14 |
I recall when he was pushing GTCO and many were not interested. He must have cashed out big when it hit N100. Agbalowomeri: |
| Re: Nigerian Stock Exchange Market Pick Alerts by awesomeJ(m): 8:29am On Jan 14 |
Almost 3 months now, and CSCS hasn't sent trade alerts even though they've been charging for it. Over 15k per month for me. Maybe they should allow us opt out. |
| Re: Nigerian Stock Exchange Market Pick Alerts by Beeron: 8:33am On Jan 14 |
| Re: Nigerian Stock Exchange Market Pick Alerts by Stockhunter: 8:39am On Jan 14 |
Naija and its anyhowness... awesomeJ: |
| Re: Nigerian Stock Exchange Market Pick Alerts by nosa2(m): 8:50am On Jan 14 |
Raider76:Hehe. If it is obvious then its probably not as juicy. Shifted from GTCO to Zenith and Ecobank. Got out of GTCO at about 70+ sha and shifted focus to Zenith. The disparity in price for the two banks is illogical. Either GTCO is over-priced or Zenith is under-priced. I expect GTCO to hover while Zenith catches up. We should eventually see Zenith trade at about N5 below GTCO Obviously my opinion changes once full year and or Q1 results come out |
| Re: Nigerian Stock Exchange Market Pick Alerts by awesomeJ(m): 8:50am On Jan 14 |
Stockhunter:I tried calling them, it just kept on saying "all our agents are currently busy" for nearly 5 minutes. Since I have code to push, I had to drop off. I wonder if CSCS customer service is now as busy as banks' |
| Re: Nigerian Stock Exchange Market Pick Alerts by Pennystockwarri(m): 9:06am On Jan 14 |
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=e_LWCu3mIow A few stocks I'd be watching closely in today's trading session on the NGX. Abridged version in pidgin English below. https://open.spotify.com/episode/0Z0VwJb3Yl50OOXDcHiBm7 |
| Re: Nigerian Stock Exchange Market Pick Alerts by Raider76: 9:14am On Jan 14 |
Another thing for me with the banks is liquidity. I could sell or buy N50m worth of shares in 2 minutes. nosa2: |
| Re: Nigerian Stock Exchange Market Pick Alerts by faoogoke(m): 9:42am On Jan 14 |
Better for the two banks to merge. essentialone: |
| Re: Nigerian Stock Exchange Market Pick Alerts by faoogoke(m): 9:43am On Jan 14 |
Reminds me of Stanbic stockbrokers customer care line. And when you are lucky to have your call picked, you dont get the help you need. awesomeJ: |
| Re: Nigerian Stock Exchange Market Pick Alerts by yok: 9:49am On Jan 14 |
TARGET TECHNICAL ANALYSIS COMMENTS What is the likely direction/ movement for the all share index today?
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| Re: Nigerian Stock Exchange Market Pick Alerts by PETERiCHY(m): 9:53am On Jan 14 |
Blistering Metals Rally Sends Gold, Silver and Copper to Records https://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2026-01-14/records-tumble-as-silver-and-tin-lead-blistering-metals-rally BARGAIN HUNTERS TAKE NOTE!!!!
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| Re: Nigerian Stock Exchange Market Pick Alerts by Agbalowomeri: 9:55am On Jan 14 |
essentialone:Are they not on track to meet the recapitalisation? |
| Re: Nigerian Stock Exchange Market Pick Alerts by awesomeJ(m): 9:59am On Jan 14 |
faoogoke: ![]() |
| Re: Nigerian Stock Exchange Market Pick Alerts by Agbalowomeri: 9:59am On Jan 14 |
Raider76:You no talk 1B sef Na so most bidders go queue up at the upper bound price unlike the less liquid stocks. People will only buy now for dividend. What do you think they will pay as final dividend? I think most will just repeat the same thing they paid for last year |
| Re: Nigerian Stock Exchange Market Pick Alerts by KarlTom: 10:00am On Jan 14 |
Ding ![]() |
| Re: Nigerian Stock Exchange Market Pick Alerts by dapix: 10:00am On Jan 14 |
Ding!! |
| Re: Nigerian Stock Exchange Market Pick Alerts by zendi: 10:07am On Jan 14 |
HesInMe:Good bitl, just show me the next likely candidate for manipulation, and show me that early. Then leave me to suffer the indignity of being 'manipulated' into the wealthy place. We are not all here with exact same motivations. Some of use are here to amass the loot in the first place, before playing to puritanism and preservation. For good measure, and by way of introduction, I am a Senior Fellow in the Gambling Division, which is not saying that the NGX floor where I play is a Baba Ijebu tent. ![]() |
| Re: Nigerian Stock Exchange Market Pick Alerts by Mpeace(m): 10:10am On Jan 14 |
Aradel didn't waste any time in appreciating officially |
| Re: Nigerian Stock Exchange Market Pick Alerts by leo1234(m): 10:12am On Jan 14 |
If you have patient funds buy TANTALIZER before it begins to fly. A double digit stock. |
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