The Nigerian Exchange Limited (NGX) has imposed a total of N562.6 million in penalties on 32 listed companies for failing to meet deadlines for filing audited and unaudited financial statements during the 2024/2025 financial year.
The sanctions were disclosed in the latest X-Compliance Report released by NGX Regulation Limited (NGX RegCo) on April 24, 2026, highlighting persistent reporting lapses across multiple sectors of the capital market.
According to the report, defaults in audited financial statements (AFS) accounted for the bulk of the penalties at N371.8 million, while unaudited financial statement (UFS) breaches contributed N190.7 million.
Insurance companies emerged as the most frequent offenders, with firms such as Mutual Benefits Assurance Plc, Universal Insurance Plc, Regency Alliance Insurance Plc, and Prestige Assurance Plc repeatedly flagged for both audited and interim filing violations.
Despite efforts to regularise its filings, Mutual Benefits Assurance remained one of the most penalised entities, driven by multi-year delays, including its 2023 audited report which attracted a N53.64 million fine.
Among the top offenders, Oando Plc recorded the highest cumulative penalties of N95 million, followed by Mutual Benefits Assurance (N64.64 million) and International Energy Insurance Plc (N56 million). Other companies with significant sanctions include Conoil Plc, Secure Electronic Technology Plc, and Jaiz Bank Plc.
The report also showed that large and mid-tier firms were not exempt, with First HoldCo Plc, Sterling Financial Holdings Plc, and Caverton Offshore Group Plc among those penalised.
Further analysis indicated that while AFS-related penalties are typically larger due to statutory requirements and multi-year delays, UFS violations occur more frequently, pointing to widespread lapses in quarterly reporting compliance.
Banks and financial institutions such as Fidelity Bank Plc and Jaiz Bank recorded multiple sanctions linked to delayed quarterly filings. Similarly, consumer and industrial firms including PZ Cussons Nigeria Plc and International Breweries Plc were penalised for both audited and interim reporting delays.
Smaller firms like Briclinks Africa Plc and NCR Nigeria Plc recorded minimal penalties, while new entries such as Ecobank Transnational Incorporated and International Breweries Plc were sanctioned in April.
The X-Compliance Report remains a key transparency tool used by NGX RegCo to enforce disclosure standards and protect market integrity. Under NGX rules, listed companies are required to file audited financial statements annually and unaudited reports quarterly within stipulated timelines.
Market analysts say the scale of the penalties—now exceeding half a billion naira—signals a tougher regulatory stance by the NGX, aimed at improving corporate governance and ensuring stricter adherence to reporting obligations.
With repeated offences recorded across successive reports, stakeholders expect heightened compliance as regulatory scrutiny intensifies across Nigeria’s capital market.












