Dangote Refinery’s Private Placement Attracts $2 Billion Before IPO Even Launches
Dangote Refinery is heading to the stock market, and investors are not waiting for the starting gun. Aliko Dangote, President and Chief Executive of Dangote Industries Limited, revealed on Wednesday that investor appetite for the planned listing of Dangote Petroleum Refinery and Petrochemicals on the Nigerian Exchange is exceptionally strong, with indications of interest for the private placement already exceeding two billion dollars.
The announcement came during a high-profile visit to the refinery complex in Ibeju Lekki, Lagos, where Femi Otedola, chairman of First HoldCo and one of Nigeria’s most prominent billionaires, led a delegation of top executives on a tour of the 650,000 barrels-per-day facility, including the fertiliser plant and the deep-water jetty.
The visit turned into one of the most talked-about corporate moments of the year when Otedola revealed he intends to personally invest 100 million dollars in the private placement. He told the gathering he had sold his entire stake in Geregu Power specifically to free up funds for the Dangote Refinery investment.
Dangote was clear that while demand is overwhelming, not every request for allocation can be fulfilled. The response, he said, reflects genuine confidence not just in the refinery itself but in Africa’s broader industrial future.
He also set a timeline, telling journalists that the company is aiming to launch the IPO by September 2026 and that the listing is designed primarily for public participation, to broaden ownership of the refinery among ordinary Africans and investors across the continent.
The numbers behind the business are staggering. The refinery cost an estimated 20 billion dollars to build, took over a decade to complete, and began large-scale production of diesel, aviation fuel, and petrol in 2024. Bloomberg reported that Dangote is targeting a valuation of up to 50 billion dollars for the business, with up to ten percent of the stake potentially offered in the listing, a transaction Bloomberg previously valued at around five billion dollars.
Dangote also used the occasion to reveal plans for a proposed East Africa refinery with a projected capacity of 700,000 barrels per day, alongside polypropylene and base oil facilities, a project he said could begin construction within three to four years, moving faster than the Group’s own Vision 2030 plan originally anticipated.
When it lands, the Dangote Refinery IPO will likely be the biggest single capital market transaction in African history. #Dangote Refinery’s Private Placement Attracts $2 Billion Before IPO Even Launches#










