* Nigeria set to see IPOs again

* IPOs virtually dried up after a 2008 crash

* Exception was oil company Seplat which listed in 2014

* Aviation firm, resinsurer, oil company and MTN set to list

 

By Chijioke Ohuocha

LAGOS, June 1 (Reuters) – More companies are lining up to list on the Lagos stock exchange, kick starting Nigeria’s IPO market after a long drought.

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Sources familiar with matter said two companies – Skyway Aviation Handling Company (SAHCOL) and Nigerian Reinsurance Corporation – were preparing for initial public offerings this year, while Singapore-owned Indorama Eleme Petrochemicals Ltd planned a public float in Lagos next year.

They follow on the heels of South Africa’s MTN which has said it plans to list its Nigerian unit this year but has not set a date.

IPOs dried up in Nigeria after a 2008 crash, aggravated by the global financial crisis, wiped more than 60 percent off the stock market’s capitalization. The benchmark share index has since recovered, gaining 42 percent last year but IPOs have yet to resume, apart from oil company Seplat’s dual listing in Lagos and London in 2014.

SAHCOL is going through the regulatory process ahead of a planned IPO in August when core investors will sell a stake, while Nigerian Reinsurance aims for an IPO in November in which the government will sell part of its stake, the sources said.

“I’m expecting more transactions out of Africa in the equity markets, both in Nigeria and across Africa,” Miguel Azevedo, Citibank’s managing director and head of investment banking, Middle East and Africa, said.

“I think at the end of the year we will see that 2018 was the biggest year for African IPOs since the financial crisis.”

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Alex Okoh, director general of the Bureau of Public Enterprises, said the government has 11 assets it plans to either concession or sell to strategic investors this year, ranging from power assets to sports stadiums.

Nigeria’s stock market rose 16 percent in the first quarter, helped by rising oil prices, but has recently seen a sell off and is down 0.4 percent year to date as rising U.S. interest rates hit emerging markets and due to political risk ahead of a presidential election next February. (Reporting by Chijioke Ohuocha; Additional reporting by Didi Akinyelure and Alexis Akwagyiram Editing by Susan Fenton)