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Home/ Questions/Q 14707
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Investorsam
Investorsam
Asked: March 29, 20262026-03-29T11:12:18+00:00 2026-03-29T11:12:18+00:00In: Stock Market Investing

What happened to shares that are in certificate form but the company is no longer traded on the ngx

What happened to shares that are in certificate form but the company is no longer traded on the ngx?.

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  1. Ochoyoda
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    Ochoyoda Contributor
    2026-03-29T15:39:40+00:00Added an answer on March 29, 2026 at 3:39 pm

    When a company’s shares are in certificate form and the company is no longer traded on the Nigerian Exchange Group (NGX), several things could have happened — and your shares may still have value depending on the situation. Let me break this down clearly: 1. The Company Was Delisted (But Still ExistRead more

    When a company’s shares are in certificate form and the company is no longer traded on the Nigerian Exchange Group (NGX), several things could have happened — and your shares may still have value depending on the situation.

    Let me break this down clearly:

    1. The Company Was Delisted (But Still Exists)

    This is the most common case.

    A company may be removed from NGX because:

    It failed to meet listing requirements

    Poor financial performance

    Mergers or restructuring

    Voluntary delisting

    What happens to your shares?

    You still own part of the company

    But you cannot sell easily on NGX

    The shares become illiquid (hard to sell)

    You may still:

    Receive dividends (if company still pays)

    Sell privately (off-market transactions)

    2. The Company Was Acquired or Merged

    Example:

    Company A merges with Company B

    Your shares may be converted to another company’s shares

    Or you may be paid cash

    In this case:

    Your share certificate may need verification or conversion

    3. The Company Went Bankrupt / Liquidated

    This is the worst case.

    If the company:

    Became insolvent

    Was liquidated

    Closed completely

    Then:

    Shares may become worthless

    Investors are paid last after creditors

    4. Your Shares May Still Be Valid But Need Dematerialization

    Since your shares are in certificate form, they are likely not yet in electronic format (CSCS).

    In Nigeria, you may need to:

    Open a CSCS account

    Submit share certificate to registrar

    Convert to electronic shares

    This process is called: Dematerialization

    You can do this through:

    A stockbroker

    Or the company’s registrar

    What You Should Do (Step-by-Step)

    Check if the company still exists

    Contact the company’s registrar

    Ask your stockbroker for guidance

    Verify with Securities and Exchange Commission Nigeria (SEC)

    Important Question For You

    Tell me:

    The company name

    Whether you inherited the shares or bought them

    I’ll tell you exactly:

    If they still have value

    What you should do next

    Many Nigerians still hold old paper share certificates that actually still have value — so don’t assume they are useless yet.

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    • Investorsam
      Investorsam
      2026-03-30T08:10:11+00:00Replied to answer on March 30, 2026 at 8:10 am

      Thank you. I now have direction on what to do next. I have contacted the registrar of the company because the company was merged in the early 2020's

      Thank you. I now have direction on what to do next.
      I have contacted the registrar of the company because the company was merged in the early 2020’s

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