
After a record-setting run in 2025, the Nigerian Exchange Group has entered 2026 with momentum intact. But beneath the surface, something has changed; the effortless gains are fading, and broad rallies are giving way to selective positioning. As prices climb, the gap between fundamentally strong companies and overvalued names is becoming more obvious. Investors are beginning to look beyond momentum, focusing instead on earnings quality, balance sheet strength, and long-term positioning.
This perspective is shaping capital flows across the market, and a handful of stocks continue to stand out, not because of hype, but because of earnings strength, structural positioning, and valuation logic.
In this feature, we highlight a mix of banking, consumer, telecom, and oil & gas that continue to stand out based on valuation, earnings potential, and strategic relevance in Nigeria’s evolving economy.
This is not investment advice but a data-informed look at where the market still sees potential in 2026.
MTN Nigeria — Betting on Nigeria’s Digital Economy
MTN Nigeria is no longer just a telecom company; it’s becoming a digital infrastructure play.
The company continues to generate the bulk of its revenue from data services, which have grown consistently in recent years, supported by rising smartphone penetration and increased internet usage. Its fintech arm, MoMo, is also expanding, positioning MTN within Nigeria’s fast-growing digital payments space.
From a numbers standpoint:
- MTN has historically delivered double-digit revenue growth, driven primarily by data
- EBITDA margins remain strong (often above 50%, among the highest on the NGX)
- The company has maintained a consistent dividend-paying profile, making it attractive for income investors
The risk remains FX exposure and regulatory pressure, but the long-term thesis is clear:
MTN is one of the closest things to a pure play on Nigeria’s digital growth story.
Zenith Bank — Profitability, Discipline, and Dividend Strength
If consistency were a stock, it would look a lot like Zenith Bank. In an environment where many banks are navigating post-expansion pressures, Zenith has remained focused on efficiency and profitability. Its cost-to-income ratio is among the best in the industry, and it continues to generate strong returns on equity.
Key fundamentals investors pay attention to:
- Return on equity (ROE) typically in the 20–25% range
- Strong dividend yield, often among the highest in Nigerian banking
- Beneficiary of high interest rates, which continue to support net interest margins
Despite these advantages, the stock often trades at relatively conservative multiples, making it a value-and-income combination.
For investors who want stability in a volatile market, Zenith remains a core holding.
Dangote Refinery — The Structural Shift Investors Are Watching Closely
The Dangote Refinery is not just another industrial project; it is shaping up to be one of the most consequential economic developments in Nigeria in decades.
Owned by the Dangote Group, the refinery, with a nameplate capacity of 650,000 barrels per day, is expected to significantly reduce Nigeria’s reliance on imported refined petroleum products and ease long-standing pressure on foreign exchange. For now, however, investors are watching from the sidelines.
The refinery is not yet listed on the Nigerian Exchange, although plans have been indicated for a potential listing, opening the door for public investment in what could become one of the most valuable energy assets on the market. That expectation alone has already begun to shape investor sentiment.
Even without a listing, its financial relevance is difficult to ignore:
- Nigeria’s fuel import bill, historically running into billions of dollars annually, could decline materially
- Reduced demand for foreign exchange may help stabilise the naira over time
- Energy and logistics costs for businesses could become more predictable
But the real investment story, at least for now, is indirect.
As the refinery scales operations, sectors such as manufacturing, transportation, and consumer goods stand to benefit from improved fuel availability and potentially lower cost volatility. In that sense, the refinery is already influencing how investors think about other listed companies on the NGX.
When and if it eventually lists, it could redefine the composition of Nigeria’s equity market. Until then, the Dangote Refinery remains less of a stock to buy and more of a structural shift investors are positioning around.
Okomu Oil Palm Company — Quietly One of the Strongest Cash Generators
Okomu Oil doesn’t get the same attention as banks or telecoms, but its numbers are hard to ignore. Operating in Nigeria’s agro-industrial space, the company benefits from strong demand for palm oil, both locally and internationally. More importantly, it has demonstrated the ability to convert revenue into profit efficiently.
What stands out:
- Consistently high profit margins compared to most manufacturing firms
- Strong export earnings, providing a natural hedge against naira depreciation
- Solid dividend history, supported by real cash flow, not accounting profits
In a market where many companies struggle with cost pressures, Okomu stands out for one reason:
it is a cash-generating business in a supply-constrained sector.
Seplat Energy — Oil Exposure Without the Chaos
If investors want exposure to Nigeria’s energy sector without excessive volatility, Seplat often comes into the conversation. The company operates across oil and gas, with a growing focus on gas production, a segment increasingly seen as critical to Nigeria’s energy transition.
Financially, Seplat offers:
- Revenue linked to global oil prices (providing upside in strong commodity cycles)
- Increasing gas revenues, which offer more stable, long-term cash flows
- Dollar-denominated earnings, helping hedge against naira risk
Its dual listing (Nigeria and London) also introduces a level of transparency and governance that many local investors value. Seplat’s appeal lies in balance; it offers exposure to energy upside without being purely speculative.
Final Thought: This Market Is Rewarding Discipline
What ties these stocks together is structure.
- MTN → digital growth + strong margins
- Zenith → profitability + dividend income
- Dangote Refinery → macroeconomic impact
- Okomu Oil → cash flow + export advantage
- Seplat → energy exposure + dollar earnings
In 2026, the NGX is no longer a “buy anything” market. It is a “buy right” market.
And increasingly, the investors who win are not the ones chasing momentum but the ones who understand where real value still exists beneath the surface.






