I was going through the financial statement of some fintech companies like OPAY and Moniepoint, and I discovered that they make more money thank the normal banks. Yet, they’re not listed on the Nigerian stock market. Why?
Do they have disadvantages?
Or their current structures doesn’t warrant them to list it to the public.
You’ve raised a very insightful observation. Let’s break it down step by step. 1. Prerequisites for Listing Companies in Nigeria For a company to list on the Nigerian Exchange Group (NGX), it must meet certain regulatory and financial requirements. Broadly: A. Regulatory Requirements (for all companRead more
You’ve raised a very insightful observation. Let’s break it down step by step.
1. Prerequisites for Listing Companies in Nigeria
For a company to list on the Nigerian Exchange Group (NGX), it must meet certain regulatory and financial requirements. Broadly:
A. Regulatory Requirements (for all companies, including fintechs):
Must be a public limited company (PLC) or convert to one.
Comply with the Companies and Allied Matters Act (CAMA) regarding corporate governance.
Have audited financial statements for at least 3 years.
Submit a prospectus to the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) for approval.
Meet minimum share capital requirements:
Main Board: Minimum ₦2 billion paid-up capital
Alternative Securities Market (ASeM): Minimum ₦500 million paid-up capital
Demonstrate profitability track record for at least 3 years, depending on the board.
B. Financial Requirements:
Minimum profit thresholds (varies by board).
Adequate liquidity, proper internal controls, and transparency.
Often, fintechs are high-growth but not yet consistently profitable over 3 years.
2. Why Fintechs Like OPAY or Moniepoint May Not Be Listed Yet
Despite sometimes making impressive revenue, many Nigerian fintechs remain unlisted due to a combination of structural and strategic reasons:
A. Corporate Structure
Many fintechs in Nigeria are private companies or subsidiaries of larger groups.
To list, they must convert to a public limited company (PLC), which requires restructuring ownership, governance, and board composition.
B. Profitability vs. Revenue
Fintechs can generate high gross revenue, but after operational costs (agent commissions, tech infrastructure, marketing, compliance), net profits may not be stable.
NGX generally prefers companies with sustained profitability for listing.
C. Funding Strategy
Many fintechs prefer private equity, venture capital, or strategic funding rounds instead of going public.
Listing publicly introduces regulatory scrutiny, reporting requirements, and potential loss of control.
For example, OPAY has raised hundreds of millions via private investors rather than issuing public shares.
D. Market Readiness
Public listing requires robust internal controls, reporting, risk management, and corporate governance.
Many fast-growing fintechs prioritize growth and expansion over regulatory compliance for listing.
3. Potential Disadvantages of Listing
Loss of control: Founders may need to dilute equity.
High compliance cost: Regular reporting to SEC/NGX.
Public scrutiny: Every decision is under market and media watch.
Market volatility: Stock prices may fluctuate regardless of business fundamentals.
4. Summary
Fintechs in Nigeria may appear more profitable than banks in revenue terms, but net profit, corporate structure, regulatory readiness, and strategic growth goals determine listing decisions.
Many are still private by choice, focusing on scaling before taking the public route.
Listing is not automatically better; it’s a strategic step, not just a reflection of revenue.
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