May 15, 2026
NGX Chairman

Nigeria’s largest and most liquid listed companies are sitting on a combined free cash flow of ₦2.29 trillion as of March 2026, more than doubling from ₦927.5 billion a year earlier, underscoring balance-sheet strength and dividend capacity, according to data compiled by MoneyCentral.

Airtel Africa, Dangote Cement, MTN Nigeria and Seplat Energy accounted for about 76% of the total, highlighting how telecoms, cement and oil names continue to dominate cash generation on the NGX.

MTN Nigeria and Airtel Africa lifted combined cash generation 95.8% to ₦907.1 billion, helped by 2025 tariff increases that improved pricing power and the naira’s relative stability, which eased pressure from foreign-currency liabilities.

MTN also benefited from the IHS Towers transaction and about ₦288 billion in tower-related savings, which reduced lease liabilities and strengthened levered free cash flow. Airtel’s Nigerian business remained its strongest cash contributor, outpacing East African and Francophone operations.

Dangote Cement continued to produce robust cash flow while maintaining an aggressive dividend policy, though capital spending remains a key drag across the cement sector. BUA Cement typically generates less cash because of heavy expansion spending on new production lines.

Seplat Energy has emerged as a cash-flow powerhouse after consolidating Mobil Producing Nigeria assets, with cash holdings of ₦279 billion. CEO Roger Brown says the company is positioned to deliver $1 billion of shareholder returns over the coming years as it targets 200 kboepd.

Investors tend to favor free cash flow over EBITDA because it shows what is left after capital spending and acquisitions.

In an economy still dealing with inflation, FX volatility and higher funding costs, a rising cash pile offers a stronger buffer against shocks and supports dividends, debt service and expansion.

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