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FG, States, LG and FCT spend N11.185 trillion in six years.

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By Omoh Gabriel, Business Editor
—–FG N5.137trillion
—–States N3.798trillion
—–LG N2.248trillion
—–South-South N1.602trillion
—–North West N1.182trillion
—–South West N952billion
—–North East N789.210billion
—–North Central N757.654billion
—–South East N625.6billion
—–FCT N136.14billion
THE Federal Government received a total of N5.137 trillion as its share of the federation account in the last six years representing 45.9 per cent of the total allocation.
States and local governments got N6.047 trillion during the period which is 54 per cent of the total allocation. This amounted to a total of N11.185 trillion for the three tiers of government from the common pool– federation account. This amount is the total net allocation to the various tiers of government in the country after allowance was made for total deductions from states for external and contractual obligations. .
Figures released by the Federal Ministry of Finance showed that between June and December 1999, the first six months of this administration, the Federal Government got N154.633 billion while states and local governments combined got N131.655 billion. In 2000, the Federal Government share of the federation account amounted to N531.612 billion as against the N515.451 billion allocated to states and local governments.
According to the figures, in 2001 the federation account rose with the Federal Government receiving N723.920 billion while states and local governments received N662.947 billion. The allocation to the various tiers of government further improved in 2002 as the Federal Government got from the federation account a total of N791.030 billion while states and local governments got N763.109 billion.
In 2003 when the revenue allocation formula was adjusted, the Federal Government had N739.208 billion allocation while states and local governments had N954.687 billion. In 2004 the federal government got a total of N967.244billion while states and local got received from the federation account a total of N1.324trillion. Last year the federal government drew from the federal account as its own share the sum of N1.229trillion while states and local government got a total of N1.695trillion.
The boost in government revenue from the federation account rose on account of the favourable conditions in the crude oil market where the price has always been above the budget bench mark since the inception of this administration. Part of the allocation is the contentious excess crude revenue. Since assumption of office by the administration seven years ago, the average price of crude oil in the international market has been above the budget benchmark.
While the budget was based on $22 or $25, and more recently $33 per barrel, the price of crude has always risen during the period on the average to between $40 and $65 per barrel, thus giving rise to oil windfall sometimes referred to as excess crude oil proceeds.
The proceeds have, most of the time, generated disagreement between the Federal and state governments which clamour for the sharing of the money. The Minister of Finance Dr. Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala recently provided details of the current position of excess crude revenue account saying that;
– ‚Äú$25.66 billion has been collected since the saving of excess crude started in January 2004
– The yearly breakdown is 2004 – $5.918 billion; 2005 – $13.036 billion and 2006 (so far) – $6.036 billion.
– Of this total, $2.959 billion or half of the 2004 savings was shared by common consent between all tiers of government in 2005, leaving a balance of $22.66 billion in the account. There have been 22 payments made out of this sum of $22.66 billion since October 2005. These can be summed up as follows: Three payments totaling $12.119 billion for payment of Paris Club debts; Fifteen payments totaling $1.042 billion for 7 Niger-Delta Power stations and associated gas development;
Three payments totaling $1.146 billion to the three tiers of government to compensate for the difference between bench mark and budget price of $35 a barrel when budget was appropriated and the $30 bench mark at which we had been disbursing for the first 3 months of the year prior to passage of the appropriation bill. One payment totaling $17, 331, 168 to NPC and UNDP for the additional 2 days of census. With $14.325 billion in total payments, what is left in the account now is $8.33billion.
The Minister emphasised that the excess crude account is managed transparently with oversight by all tiers of government every month at the monthly meetings of Federal Allocation Accounts Committee (FAAC) where a statement of accounts on the excess crude savings is made available.”
The gains from crude oil earnings and favourable revenue generated by the various tiers of government in Nigeria ordinarily should have enhanced the welfare of Nigerians but this seems not to have impacted positively on the citizenry in terms of improved standard of living which, by current estimate, has gone down as more than 70 per cent of the population are said to be living below one dollar per day.
Available data with the Central Bank of Nigeria showed that in 1999, the Federal Government spent a total of N947.690 billion when Obasanjo took over the Presidency of the country. In 2000, CBN records showed that government had a total expenditure of N701 billion while in 2001 it spent a total of N1.018 trillion. The sum of N1.018 trillion was spent by the Federal Government in 2002 and N1.225 trillion in 2003. But the same government in these years of bumper price from the international oil market has run its affairs on deficit, borrowing huge sums from the money market to finance its expenditure at very high cost.
Alleged profligacy of the Federal, states and local governments drew flak from the International Monetary Fund (IMF) and the World Bank which described Nigeria as a country where oil wealth has not benefitted its populace. Despite government’s excess earnings from crude oil which is far above successive budget estimates, government, in 1999, incurred a deficit of N285 billion.
CBN data showed that in 2000, government incurred a deficit of Nl 03 billion, N22 1.04 billion in 2002 and in 2003, N301 .4 billion. As a result of this huge deficit financing, despite government earnings, the Federal Government spent a total of N556 billion to service domestic debt. This implied that because a chunk of the money was borrowed from the banking system, government spent a large portion of its yearly recurrent budget in paying domestic debts.
Financial analysts were worried that much of the country resources is being frittered away on debt servicing. In 2002, government spent N12.4 billion on agriculture, one of its priority sectors, while a total ofN3 3.3 billion was spent on servicing domestic debt. Another priority area of government– road and construction– had only N9.27 billion as total expenditure in the recurrent expenditure of government, while health received N50 billion. The organised private sector at various fora has lamented government’s poor handling of the economy.
A break down of allocation to states in the six geo-political zones show that the South-South states where the oil producing states are received the highest allocation of N1.602trillion for both states and local governments in the zone representing 14.3 per cent of the total allocation in the period. This was closely followed by the North West zone which had a combined allocation to the seven states and local governments in the area N1.182trillion or 10.57 per cent.
South West zone had a total of N952.239billion allocation to the six states and the various local governments in the zone representing 8.51 per cent. North East zone followed with a total allocation of N789.210billion or 7 per cent in the seven years this administration has been in power. North Central zone had a seven year allocation to both the states and local governments in the zone a total of N757.654billion or 6.7 per cent while states and local governments in the South East had a total allocation of N625.620billion or 5.59 per cent.
A further break down of the net allocation to states of the federation showed that Delta got the highest allocation during the period. The state government, according to figures released by the Federal Government, got a total of N387.431billion of the total net allocation to states and local governments. While the state government within the seven year period got N321.0billion, allocation to Local governments in the state totaled N66.429billion. Second is Rivers State with a total allocation of N357.506billion made up of N286.395billion allocated to the state government and N71.11billion allocated to local governments in the state.
Akwa Ibom with N313.574billion was next. The state government received a total allocation of N238.0billion while its local governments received a total of N75.568billion during the six year period. Bayelsa State got N285.636billion to place fourth as the state government got N259.882billion from the federation account while its local government councils were allocated a total sum of N25.754billion. Kano state placed fifth largest in the allocation of federal resources as the state got a total of N254.388billion made up of N123.494billion state allocation and N130.893billion as allocation to local governments in the state.
Lagos was next with a total of N226.6billion made up of N125.6billion allocation to the state government and N101.056billion to local governments in the state.
According to federal ministry of Finance data Katsina state was seventh with a six year allocation of N192.9billion made up of N96.824billion allocation to the state government and N96.085billion allocated to local governments in the state. Following was Oyo state with a total of N180.299billion made up of N94.561billion state government allocation and N85.738billion allocation to local governments in the state.
Kaduna state followed with a combined allocation of N177.416billion; N96.803billion for the state government and N80.613 for the local government. Borno state on its part got N165.562billion both for the state and local governments; Of this amount N86.641billion was allocation to the state government while N78.920billion was local government allocation. Ondo state one of the oil producing state also got N165.256billion for state and local government. It got N115.556billion as state allocation and N49.700billion as allocation to local governments. Niger state got a total of N164.525billion made up of N87.755billion for the state government and N76.769billion for the local governments.
Imo State which got the highest in the South East received N155.539 just as Jigawa and Benue got N151billion allocation for both the state and local governments. Sokoto and Bauchi had a grand total of N146billion each while Osun state got a total of N143.515billion. Adamawa had N136.914billion while Kebbi got N134.683billion. Edo state and its local governments got N131.539billion almost the same with Anambra state with a total allocation of 130.174billion during the period. Nasarawa and Gombe states got the least allocation of N96.730billion and N99.636billion respectively (see table for further details)
File allocation.

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Finance

Afreximbank successfully closed its second Samurai Bond transactions, raising JPY 81.8bn or $527m

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African Export-Import Bank said it has successfully closed its second Samurai bond transaction, securing a total of JPY 81.8 billion (approx. USD 527 million) through Regular and Retail Samurai Bonds offerings.

The execution surpasses the Bank’s 2024 debut issuance size, attracting orders from more than 100 institutional and retail investors, marking a renewed demonstration of strong Japanese investor confidence in the Bank’s credit and its growing presence in the yen capital markets.

On 18 November, Afreximbank priced a JPY 45.8 billion 3-year tranche in the Regular Samurai market following a comprehensive sequence of investor engagement activities leveraging Tokyo International Conference on African Development (TICAD9), including Non-Deal Roadshows (NDRs) in Tokyo, Kanazawa, Kyoto, Shiga and Osaka, a Global Investor Call, and a two-day soft-sounding process which tested investor appetite across 2.5-, 3-, 5-, 7-, and 10-year maturities.

With market expectations of a Bank of Japan interest rate increase, investor demand concentrated in shorter tenors, resulting in a focused 3-year tranche during official marketing.

The tranche attracted strong participation from asset managers (22.3%), life insurers (15.3%), regional corporates, and high-net-worth investors (39.7%).

Concurrently, Afreximbank priced its second Retail Samurai bond on 18 November, a JPY 36.0 billion 3-year tranche, more than double the inaugural JPY 14.1 billion Retail Samurai issuance completed in November 2024.

The 2025 Retail Samurai bond also marks the first Retail Samurai bond issued in Japan in 2025.

Following the amendment to Afreximbank’s shelf registration on 7 November 2025, SMBC Nikko conducted an extensive seven-business-day demand survey through its nationwide branch network, followed by a six-business-day bond offering period.

The offering benefited from strong visibility supported by Afreximbank’s investor engagement across the country, including the Bank’s participation at TICAD9, where Afreximbank hosted the Africa Finance Seminar to introduce Multinational Development Bank’s mandate in Africa and its credit profile to key Japanese institutional investors.

MBC Nikko Securities Inc. acted as Sole Lead Manager and Bookrunner for both the Regular and Retail Samurai transactions. Chandi Mwenebungu, Afreximbank’s Managing Director, Treasury & Markets and Group Treasurer, commented:

“We are pleased with the successful completion of our second Samurai bond transactions, which marked a significant increase from our inaugural Retail Samurai bond in 2024, and which reflect the growing depth of our relationship with Japanese investors.

The strong demand, both in the Regular and Retail offerings, demonstrates sustained confidence in Afreximbank’s credit and mandate.

We remain committed to deepening our engagement in the Samurai market through regular investor activities and continued collaboration with our Japanese partners.”

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Finance

Ecobank unveils SME bazaar: a festive marketplace for local entrepreneurs

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Ecobank Nigeria, a member of Africa’s leading pan-African banking group, has announced the launch of the Ecobank SME Bazaar—a two-weekend festive marketplace designed to celebrate local creativity, empower entrepreneurs, and give Lagos residents a premium shopping experience this Detty December. The Bazaar will hold on 29–30 November and 6–7 December at the Ecobank Pan African Centre (EPAC), Ozumba Mbadiwe Road, Victoria Island, Lagos. Speaking ahead of the event, Omoboye Odu, Head of SMEs, Ecobank Nigeria, reaffirmed the bank’s commitment to supporting small and medium-sized businesses, describing them as the heartbeat of Nigeria’s economy. She explained that the Ecobank SME Bazaar was created to enhance visibility for entrepreneurs, expand market access, and support sustainable business growth.
According to her, “This isn’t just a market—it’s a vibrant hub of culture, commerce, and connection. From fresh farm produce to trendy fashion, handcrafted pieces, lifestyle products, and delicious food and drinks, the Ecobank SME Bazaar promises an unforgettable experience for both shoppers and participating SMEs. Whether you’re shopping for festive gifts, hunting for unique finds, or soaking in the Detty December energy, this is the place to be.” Ms. Odu added that participating businesses will enjoy increased brand exposure, deeper customer engagement, and meaningful networking opportunities—making the Bazaar a strong platform for both festive-season sales and long-term business growth. The event is powered by Ecobank in partnership with TKD Farms, Eko Marche, Leyyow, and other SME-focused organisations committed to building sustainable enterprises.

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Finance

16 banks have recapitalised before deadline—CBN

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The Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) has said that16 banks have so far met the new capital requirements for their various licences, some four months before the March 31, 2026 deadline. The apex bank also indicated that 27 other banks have raised capital through various methods in one of the most extensive financial sector reforms since 2004. Addressing journalists at the end of the Monetary Policy Committee (MPC) meeting in Abuja, CBN Governor Mr Olayemi Cardoso said the banking recapitalisation was going on orderly, consistent with the regulator’s expectations. He said, “We are monitoring developments, and indications show the process is moving in the right direction.” Nigeria has 44 deposit-taking banks, including seven commercial banks with international authorisation, 15 with national authorisation, four with regional authorisation, four non-interest banks, six merchant banks, seven financial holding companies and one representative office.
Cardoso explained that eight commercial banks had met the N500 billion capital requirement as of July 22, 2024, rising to 14 by September of the same year. The number has now increased to 16 as the industry continues to race toward full compliance. He said that the reforms would reinforce the resilience of Nigerian banks both within the country and across the continent. “We are building a financial system that will be fit for purpose for the years ahead. Many Nigerian banks now operate across Africa and have been innovative across different markets. These new buffers will better equip them to manage risks in the multiple jurisdictions where they operate,” Cardoso said. According to him, the reforms would strengthen the financial sector’s capability to support households and businesses. He said, “Ultimately, this benefits Nigerians—our traders, our businesses and our citizens—who operate across those regions. “It should give everyone comfort to know that Nigerian banks with deep local understanding are present to support them. Commercial banks are also creating their own buffers through the ongoing recapitalisation.”
He added that the apex bank considered several factors in determining the new capital thresholds, including prevailing macroeconomic conditions, stress test results and the need for stronger risk buffers. He reassured on the regulator’s commitment to strict oversight as the consolidation progresses. “We will rigorously enforce our ‘fit and proper’ criteria for prospective new shareholders, senior management, and board members of banks, and proactively monitor the integrity of financial statements, adequacy of financial resources, and fair valuation of banks’ post-merger balance sheets,” Cardoso said. He said the CBN remained confident that the banking system would emerge stronger at the conclusion of the recapitalization exercise, with institutions better prepared to support Nigeria’s economic transformation Banks have up till March 31, 2026 to beef up their minimum capital base to the new standard set by the apex bank. Under the new minimum capital base, CBN uses a distinctive definition of the new minimum capital base for each category of banks as the addition of share capital and share premium, as against the previous use of shareholders’ funds.
While most banks have shareholders’ funds in excess of the new minimum capital base, their share premium and share capital significantly fall short of the new minimum definition. The CBN had in March 2024 released its circular on review of minimum capital requirement for commercial, merchant and non-interest banks. The apex bank increased the new minimum capital for commercial banks with international affiliations, otherwise known as mega banks, to N500 billion; commercial banks with national authorisation, N200 billion and commercial banks with regional license, N50 billion. Others included merchant banks, N50 billion; non-interest banks with national license, N20 billion and non-interest banks with regional license will now have N10 billion minimum capital. The 24-month timeline for compliance ends on March 31, 2026. Under the guidelines for the recapitalisation exercise, banks are expected to subject their new equity funds to capital verification before the clearance of the allotment proposal and release of the funds to the bank for onwards completion of the offer process and addition of the new capital to its capital base. The CBN is the final signatory in a tripartite capital verification committee that included the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) and the Nigeria Deposit Insurance Corporation (NDIC). The committee is saddled with scrutinising new funds being raised by banks under the ongoing banking sector recapitalisation exercise.

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