Thursday 02 September 2010
- Culled from The PunchWorried by the non-compliance of some companies in the
emerging markets sector of the Nigerian Stock Exchange with the post- listing
requirements, stockbrokers and shareholders have urged the regulators to take
necessary steps to enforce compliance.To some shareholders, the companies, which are not
complying with the requirements of the regulators should be delisted by the
regulators. The NSE had recently delisted some companies considered
to be moribund.Generally, the post-listing requirement of the NSE
stipulates that the companies listed in the first tier segment of the equities
sector must present their financials to the NSE at the end of every quarter,
while those in the emerging markets or the second tier securities market are
required to present theirs every six months.An investigation conducted by our correspondent indicated
that most of the companies in the emerging markets sector had not submitted
their results in the last seven years, while some in the first tier securities
market were also non-compliant.Though it is not compulsory for companies to pay
dividends, some of the companies involved have also not paid dividends to their
shareholders in the last eight years.Stockbrokers and shareholders, who spoke with our
correspondent on the development, noted that it was a regulatory challenge,
which must be tackled headlong.For instance, the Managing Director of GTI Capital
Limited, Mr. Abubakar Lawal, said, â€It is neither here nor there, but this is
clearly a regulatory challenge.â€The Chairman, Ibadan Zone, Shareholders Association,
Chief Aderemi Oyepeju said, â€All the companies that refuse to bring their
results within five years should be delisted. That has been the lapse on the
part of the NSE and the SEC. “Those who want to go private should delist from the NSE
like Incar Nigeria Plc did recently. I want the regulators to act fast to
protect investors. The new administrator of the NSE should implement it as soon
as possible.â€The National Co-ordinator of the Independent Shareholders
Association of Nigeria, Chief Sunny Nwosu, said, “Before any company seeks
listing on the NSE, it must get the approval of the SEC. The NSE is a self
regulatory organisation. The SEC should ask the NSE to give a clue into what
had happened to the companies. “Already, they have failed to ask the
companies to give explanations to the regulators and shareholders. If they want
to delist, they should tell us.â€