Nigerian Exchange Group Plc (NGX Group) is understood to have convened a closed-door gathering of chief executives and senior representatives from African capital markets in Lagos, as part of a broader push to advance cross-border listings and deepen regional financial integration.
The engagement, led by Group Managing Director and Chief Executive Officer Temi Popoola, brought together stakeholders from across the African Securities Exchanges Association ecosystem to explore ways of enabling more seamless investor participation across jurisdictions.
Participants reportedly included representatives from key markets, namely the Johannesburg Stock Exchange (JSE), Ghana Stock Exchange (GSE), Nairobi Securities Exchange (NSE), Ethiopian Securities Exchange (ESX), and the Bourse Régionale des Valeurs Mobilières (BRVM), which serves eight West African countries. Regulatory stakeholders were also present, signaling growing alignment around the expansion of intra-African capital flows.
A strategic session featuring Alhaji Aliko Dangote and the Director General of the Securities and Exchange Commission, Dr. Emomotimi Agama, offered insight into a pipeline of large-scale capital market opportunities, reinforcing ongoing conversations around enabling multi-market listings across the continent.
While details remain limited, discussions are understood to have centered on strengthening cross-border capital-raising pathways and enhancing the ability of issuers to access multiple markets efficiently, while also enabling both institutional and retail investors to participate regardless of domicile. According to sources, exchanges are expected to play a facilitative role in investor engagement and market coordination, with execution remaining the preserve of issuers and their advisers.
Market observers have welcomed the engagement as a meaningful step toward deeper coordination among African exchanges, noting the growing importance of collaborative frameworks as a pipeline of large-scale transactions begins to test the depth, connectivity, and resilience of the continent’s financial systems.
Culled from Nairametrics