Wednesday, March 4, 2026
32.9 C
Lagos

Business

Chowdeck Partners MyCoverGenius to Set New Standard for Rider Protection in Nigeria

Chowdeck, Africa’s leading on-demand delivery platform, has partnered with...

Tinubu Hails Nigeria-UAE Partnership as BUA Signs MoU with Abu Dhabi Ports, Mair Group

President Bola Ahmed Tinubu has commended the signing of...

Tinubu Hails BOI on N636bn Loan Disbursement to Businesses in 2025

President Bola Ahmed Tinubu has commended the Bank of...

Reputation Economy: How Nigerian Brands Won, Lost Public Trust in 2025

P + Measurement Services, Nigeria’s leading independent media intelligence...

UAC Records Revenue Surge, Profit Impacted by One-Off Acquisition-Related Costs

UAC of Nigeria Plc has announced its unaudited financial...

ICT

Konga Partners Verve to Delight Customers with Free Shopping Vouchers

  Konga, Nigeria’s leading composite e-commerce platform has partnered with...

NCC Spotlights Renewable Energy on World Consumer Rights Day

  The Nigerian Communications Commission (NCC) has concluded arrangements to...

Governors, NCC Set for Broadband Awareness Forum Oct 20

All Nigeria State Governors are set to discuss how...

VerveLife 5.0 Gears Up for Nairobi, Lagos Events

Following a successful series of Verve Life 5.0 satellite...

Telecom Infrastructure Critical to Successful 2023 Elections – Danbatta

The Executive Vice Chairman of the Nigerian Communications Commission,...

Capital Market

NGX RegCo Issues Advisory on Recent Price Movements, Urges Informed Trading

NGX Regulation Limited (NGX RegCo), the independent regulatory arm...

Stanbic IBTC Nominees Celebrates 30 Years of Trust with Landmark Gala Event

Stanbic IBTC Nominees Limited marked a significant milestone on...

NGX GMD, Temi Popoola, Seeks Collaborative Alignment to Drive Sustainable Capital at IFC Confab

Temi Popoola, Group Managing Director and Chief Executive Officer...

AI: Powerful Tool for Economic Growth in Africa-NGX Chair, Umaru Kwairanga

 KEYNOTE SPEECH BY THE CHAIRMAN OF THE NIGERIA EXCHANGE...

Transcorp, DMO, MTN, Dangote Cement, CardinalStone, among Winners at NGX Made of Africa Awards

Transnational Corporation Plc, the Debt Management Office, CardinalStone, Chapel...

Insurance

SanlamAllianz Nigeria Pays over ₦77bn in 2025 Claims, Reinforces Financial Strength, Customer Trust

SanlamAllianz Nigeria, comprising SanlamAllianz Life Insurance and its subsidiary,...

AIICO 2026 Agency Retreat Honours Outstanding Sales Champions

Mrs. Ego Uzochukwu (Award Winner, centre); flanked on her...

Sovereign Trust Insurance Spreads Love with Fire Safety Drive

On Valentine's Day, Sovereign Trust Insurance Plc showed its...

Mutual Benefits Begins 2026 with ₦5.9bn January Claims Settlement

Mutual Benefits Assurance Plc, a leading Nigerian insurance company,...

Love That Protects: AIICO Takes Valentine’s Message to the Streets

In a vibrant twist to this year’s Valentine’s Day...

Business

Chowdeck Partners MyCoverGenius to Set New Standard for Rider Protection in Nigeria

Chowdeck, Africa’s leading on-demand delivery platform, has partnered with...

Tinubu Hails Nigeria-UAE Partnership as BUA Signs MoU with Abu Dhabi Ports, Mair Group

President Bola Ahmed Tinubu has commended the signing of...

Tinubu Hails BOI on N636bn Loan Disbursement to Businesses in 2025

President Bola Ahmed Tinubu has commended the Bank of...

Reputation Economy: How Nigerian Brands Won, Lost Public Trust in 2025

P + Measurement Services, Nigeria’s leading independent media intelligence...

UAC Records Revenue Surge, Profit Impacted by One-Off Acquisition-Related Costs

UAC of Nigeria Plc has announced its unaudited financial...

ICT

Konga Partners Verve to Delight Customers with Free Shopping Vouchers

  Konga, Nigeria’s leading composite e-commerce platform has partnered with...

NCC Spotlights Renewable Energy on World Consumer Rights Day

  The Nigerian Communications Commission (NCC) has concluded arrangements to...

Governors, NCC Set for Broadband Awareness Forum Oct 20

All Nigeria State Governors are set to discuss how...

VerveLife 5.0 Gears Up for Nairobi, Lagos Events

Following a successful series of Verve Life 5.0 satellite...

Telecom Infrastructure Critical to Successful 2023 Elections – Danbatta

The Executive Vice Chairman of the Nigerian Communications Commission,...

Capital Market

NGX RegCo Issues Advisory on Recent Price Movements, Urges Informed Trading

NGX Regulation Limited (NGX RegCo), the independent regulatory arm...

Stanbic IBTC Nominees Celebrates 30 Years of Trust with Landmark Gala Event

Stanbic IBTC Nominees Limited marked a significant milestone on...

NGX GMD, Temi Popoola, Seeks Collaborative Alignment to Drive Sustainable Capital at IFC Confab

Temi Popoola, Group Managing Director and Chief Executive Officer...

AI: Powerful Tool for Economic Growth in Africa-NGX Chair, Umaru Kwairanga

 KEYNOTE SPEECH BY THE CHAIRMAN OF THE NIGERIA EXCHANGE...

Transcorp, DMO, MTN, Dangote Cement, CardinalStone, among Winners at NGX Made of Africa Awards

Transnational Corporation Plc, the Debt Management Office, CardinalStone, Chapel...

Insurance

SanlamAllianz Nigeria Pays over ₦77bn in 2025 Claims, Reinforces Financial Strength, Customer Trust

SanlamAllianz Nigeria, comprising SanlamAllianz Life Insurance and its subsidiary,...

AIICO 2026 Agency Retreat Honours Outstanding Sales Champions

Mrs. Ego Uzochukwu (Award Winner, centre); flanked on her...

Sovereign Trust Insurance Spreads Love with Fire Safety Drive

On Valentine's Day, Sovereign Trust Insurance Plc showed its...

Mutual Benefits Begins 2026 with ₦5.9bn January Claims Settlement

Mutual Benefits Assurance Plc, a leading Nigerian insurance company,...

Love That Protects: AIICO Takes Valentine’s Message to the Streets

In a vibrant twist to this year’s Valentine’s Day...

Banks Sabotaging e-Dividend Policy?

When in 2015 the Securities and Exchange Commission launched its e-dividend platform, the Electronic Dividend Mandate Management System (E-DMMS), many Nigerians, particularly shareholders, were euphoric and commended the initiative.

Their reaction stemmed from the belief that sooner rather than later, the process of dividend payment will become streamlined and robust, allowing for speedy and easy access to declared cash and bonus dividends. With the new process in place, they hoped, the incidence of unclaimed dividends is expected to be solved permanently.

Shareholders were right to be euphoric. The SEC Director-General, Mounir Gwarzo, while unveiling the e-dividend platform in Lagos, had assured that “the era of stale dividends and huge unclaimed dividends in the market will be a thing of the past with the launch of e-dividend payment platform,” even as he expressed the determination to see to the “full implementation of the system to facilitate effective payment of dividends to investors.”

Indeed, the platform, among other benefits, was expected to help shareholders have direct access to their dividends devoid of the time-consuming and often costly process that characterises payments and receipt of dividends; it was also expected to reduce the incidence of unclaimed dividends, which, according to SEC, was in excess of N80 billion at the time of the launch; reduce the financial burden of dividend payments on registrars and the companies that incur costs in printing of warrants, postage, etc.; and allow investors to enjoy the Direct Cash Settlement module, whereby proceeds of share sales are paid directly into an investor’s account as against the old practice of routing payment via stockbrokers.

To underscore the importance and urgency of the switch to e-dividend, SEC had made registration free and Gwarzo had placed a 90-day timeline on free registration.

“We have agreed with all stakeholders that for the first 90 days, the registration on the platform would be free, subsequent to which registration would attract a fee of N100,” Gwarzo had said. The reasoning behind the 90-day free registration was the expectation that shareholders will take advantage of the window and register en masse.

No doubt, SEC deserves all the commendations for addressing the unclaimed dividend issue through the introduction of e-dividend.

Simplifying the dividend payment and collection process is truly a huge step in reducing the challenge of unclaimed dividend. The joy of equity investment is the ability to partake in a company’s profit via cash dividend.

Unfortunately, for far too long that has remained a problem for investors at the Nigerian stock market. The cumbersome dividend payment and receipt process has ensured a pile up of unclaimed dividends.

Considering the old costly system, one would expect that investors would rush to take advantage of the free registration period to get their dividend issues sorted out. That did not happen.

To ensure uptake, SEC began an e-dividend registration sensitisation campaign in January 2016, starting from Abuja to Lagos and Kaduna, and to move to other locations across the country. The campaign consists of road shows and town hall meetings.
The campaign has also not had the expected impact.

At the Q1 Post Capital Market Committee Meeting briefing in Lagos recently, Gwarzo revealed that only about 4,000 plus investors had so far registered in the five months since the sensitisation campaign broke.

It is no doubt a poor response considering that there are over four million investors in the market. SEC recently announced an extension of the free registration period by 150 days and promised to bear the cost of registration on behalf of investors who take advantage within that period.

Many wonder at the lukewarm response to an initiative that is clearly laudable and would be of benefit to investors.

A recent report by a national daily seemed to suggest sabotage.

According to the report, “SEC has evidence that some banks were charging as high as N1,050 to stamp and sign the e-dividend forms…” If the report is true, then the banks’ motives must be called to question. Gwarzo had talked about an agreement on free registration.

“We have agreed with all stakeholders,” including banks, no doubt, for registration to be free to ensure mass uptake.” The report equally indicted registrars, who are said to have been feeding fat from the old arrangement and are reluctant to let go.

In truth, such double-faced practice could easily derail the exercise and should not be condoned. If one has committed to doing something, integrity demands that it be carried through until a new arrangement is arrived at.

Banking demands the highest level of integrity and bankers have a moral duty to live by that standard. If they “agreed” to make registration free, then it has to be so.

However, that is half the story. It does appear that much as the SEC has done, it would need to do more or tweak its strategy a little to achieve better uptake.

Perhaps, Sir Sunny Nwosu, National Co-ordinator, Independent Shareholders Association of Nigeria (ISAN), was right when he said the e-dividend policy is “still elitist to some shareholders” as they view “certificate as the only official evidence of having shares” much the same way they view paper warrant as evidence of payment.

A way around that is investor education and more education. It surely would help if SEC could identify some well known local investors, not shareholder group leaders like Nwosu, Boniface Okezie or Alhaji Gbadebo Olatokunbo, but ordinary shareholders that they could use as advocates or ambassadors.

What that does is that many skeptical investors may become convinced if a peer is the one giving his/her testimony of what e-dividend has done for him and not some leader or officious looking figure telling them what e-dividend can do for them.

The SEC can also work more closely with shareholders groups to boost e-dividend sign-on rate. Surely, the groups have a comprehensive register of members that SEC could exploit to ensure all members are e-dividend compliant. What SEC needs to do is to ensure, working with the groups’ leadership, that all members who have not registered are identified, provided with the forms and encouraged to complete and submit.

Stockbrokers are another portent group to exploit, since all equity investors must pass through a broker. Like shareholder groups, stockbrokers have a database of clients that could be exploited. The brokers can be encouraged to analyse their databases and identify clients that are not e-dividend compliant. These individuals could then be specifically targeted by the brokers to ensure they register.

Annual general meetings are another avenue for mass registration. Companies and their registrars could be encouraged to dedicate a table or section of the hall where the AGM is held for a fast tracked e-dividend registration. The AGM season is here and if this is planned right, a great number of investors could be registered in no time.

The e-dividend initiative may be stuttering, but there is no doubt that once it gathers steam, investors will enjoy an easy ride in terms of instant access to declared dividends, market transparency, confidence and invariably, better participation in equity trading.

– Blessing Ikeme

Hot this week

Chowdeck Partners MyCoverGenius to Set New Standard for Rider Protection in Nigeria

Chowdeck, Africa’s leading on-demand delivery platform, has partnered with...

ABoICT Lecture/Awards 2026 to Focus on Impact of AI, IoT on Business Operational Efficiency

The Board and Management of Communication Week Media Limited,...

SanlamAllianz Nigeria Pays over ₦77bn in 2025 Claims, Reinforces Financial Strength, Customer Trust

SanlamAllianz Nigeria, comprising SanlamAllianz Life Insurance and its subsidiary,...

Stanbic IBTC Economic Summit Delivers Strategic Framework for Navigating Nigeria’s 2026 Investment Landscape

Institutional investors, corporate leaders and economic experts gained practical...

Topics

‘Nigeria’s Hospitality Industry Must Increase Payment Options to Maximise Growth’

    ·         The World Travel & Tourism Council’s Economic Impact...

NSE Celebrates Global Money Week to Promote Financial Literacy

L – R shows  Chinelo Okafor, Children Banking, Access...

Nigeria’s Hotel Sector to Witness Highest Growth Rate in 5 Years – PwC

Africa’s hotel sector has the potential for further growth...

ALARM! Nigeria is Running Out of Cash

Another day, another oil producer in trouble! Nigeria is considering...

1bn Women Worldwide Lack Access to Financial System

$300bn Financing Gap Between Men & Women. Financial exclusion remains a major constraint for women, particularly in developing countries. More than one billion women still do not use or have access to the financial system, according to the World Bank Group’s latest Global Findex Report. IFC has estimated that worldwide, a $300 billion gap in financing exists for formal, women-owned small businesses, and more than 70 percent of women-owned small and medium enterprises have inadequate or no access to financial services.

Truecaller Launches Vastly Improved iPhone App

Truecaller, the world’s leading global communications platform, today launched...

Ecobank Empowers Businesses with Omni Lite Solution

The Managing Director of Ecobank Nigeria, Mr. Patrick Akinwuntan,...
Exit mobile version