Wednesday, September 30, 2009

Nigeria could sell stakes in its joint ventures with Western oil firms to China

Minister of State for Petroleum Odein Ajumogobia said China would not be given all the reserves it was seeking but that Nigerian state oil firm NNPC could sell stakes in joint ventures with existing oil partners if Beijing offered the right price.

The Chinese made a proposal which Nigeria is considering. They are asking for 6 billion barrels of oil from our reserves, but according to Ajumogobia, Nigeria is not going to give them all of that.

Western oil firms including Royal Dutch Shell (RDSa.L), Chevron (CVX.N) and ExxonMobil (XOM.N), operate in Nigeria through joint ventures with NNPC.

Asked if the state firm could sell its stakes to China, Ajumogobia said:
"It's an option we are also looking at. Why not? If the offer is very good and very attractive why not? NNPC has the right to do whatever it likes with its own share."

Some analysts say the sale of stakes to China by NNPC would likely be challenged by other partners in the ventures and that the prospect of putting a greater proportion of Nigerian oil reserves in foreign hands would face huge political opposition.

Chinese state energy firm CNOOC has identified 23 licenses in Nigeria in which it would like to buy stakes.

Tuesday, September 22, 2009

Emerging Capital Partners Invests In ananchi Group Holdings, a telecommunications company

The Africa-focused private equity firm, Emerging Capital Partners has committed $25 million to Wananchi Group Holdings, a telecom company specializing in pay-television and Internet services in Kenya and Tanzania

The equity investment will be used to upgrade and expand Wananchi's network infrastructure, enabling the company to provide east Africa's first triple-play service of digital pay-TV, high-speed Internet and voice-over-Internet protocol services.

ECP disclosed that East Africa has been characterized by limited supply of pay-TV and Internet services due to high costs and inadequate infrastructure.

Friday, September 18, 2009

Virgin Nigeria dropping the U.K. company's brand, Virgin Atlantic and seek fresh funding

The carrier new brand will be known as Nigerian Eagle Airlines and plans a private placement.


Virgin Atlantic, which has a 49% stake in the Nigerian carrier, has been reassessing its ties in recent months. Nigerian institutional investors hold majority control.


Virgin Nigeria dropped all its international flights in January to focus on what it called its "profitable domestic and regional operations."


Virgin Nigeria was part of an array of international affiliates launched by entrepreneur Sir Richard Branson, including airlines in Belgium, Australia and the U.S.

Sunday, September 13, 2009

Nigeria - Central Bank (CBN) is considering three options to recapitalise the country’s five troubled banks

The banks are: Intercontinetal Bank; Oceanic Bank; Union Bank; Finbank and Afribank.
The Central Bank is considering three local options aimed at acquisitions of the five troubled banks following the seeming collapse of its offshore investment mission.

The three options which the apex bank is considering are:

Option 1: Rights Issue

In which the apex bank hopes to execute a rights issue, converting the tier two capital (the amount injected) to 80 per cent stake in the affected banks’ shareholding, leaving the other shareholders with 20 per cent.

Option 2: Scheme of Arrangement

The CBN management is said to be considering the alternative of getting the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) and the Nigerian Stock Exchange NSE, to do a “Scheme of Arrangement”. The thinking in the CBN is that this option is the most viable now and if applied, it will involve a legal means of bringing shareholders of these banks to an extra-ordinary General Meeting to agree to a merger or acquisition arrangement.

Option 3: Acquisition

If the first two options fail, the apex bank would then go for the third option which is acquisition.

This involves nominating a bank in the country to acquire any of the five banks and then backing the action with statutory powers.