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    MarketForces Africa » Analysis » T+1 Settlement Tightens Risk Window — EBC Flags Danger After SEC Stops Dangote IPO Promotion

    T+1 Settlement Tightens Risk Window — EBC Flags Danger After SEC Stops Dangote IPO Promotion

    Julius AlagbeBy Julius AlagbeJune 29, 2026 Analysis No Comments7 Mins Read
    T+1 Settlement Tightens Risk Window — EBC Flags Danger After SEC Stops Dangote IPO Promotion
    David Precious, Senior Market Analyst at EBC Financial Group,
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    T+1 Settlement Tightens Risk Window — EBC Flags Danger After SEC Stops Dangote IPO Promotion

    EBC Financial Group has spotted a conduct gap in Nigerian capital markets after the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) halted unauthorised Dangote Refinery initial public offer (IPO) promotion

    Recently, Nigeria’s SEC said no Dangote Refinery IPO application had been filed or approved, yet some licensed stockbroking firms and digital platform promoters had already been collecting advance payments from investors.

    The intervention comes less than a month after Nigeria moved to T+1 settlement, putting regulated intermediary conduct under closer scrutiny as the market speeds up.

    Commenting, David Precious, Senior Market Analyst at EBC Financial Group, said faster settlement is a sound reform, but shorter timelines leave less room to catch a fake offer after money has moved.

    “That makes pre-approval checks, platform controls and investor trust the next test for Nigeria’s capital market reform”.

    Nigeria compressed the settlement cycle for eligible capital-market trades from three business days to one business day in under seven months, a technical change that speeds up the exchange of securities and cash after a trade is made.

    EBC analysts said this case suggests the challenge now is ensuring that licensed capital market operators using that faster system follow the rules, which is a different kind of task from the technology upgrades already completed.

    “Finishing trades faster is not the problem here, and the decision to speed them up looks like a sound reform,” EBC Financial Group Senior Market Analyst said. “Completing a trade in one day instead of three makes the market run more smoothly.

    “The trade-off is that it leaves less time to catch a fake offer before the money has already changed hands. That is why careful checks may matter more than ever, and why they may need to happen before any money is taken, rather than after.”

    On 23 June 2026, the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) issued a cease-and-desist directive stating that no application for an initial public offering (IPO) by Dangote Petroleum Refinery and Petrochemicals FZE had been filed with or approved by the Commission.

    The SEC found that some licensed operators, including stockbroking firms and digital platform promoters, had been collecting advance payments from investors for the fake offer.

    It ordered them to stop all promotion, withdraw their marketing materials and refund the money collected within 24 hours. Operators who fail to comply face sanctions under Nigeria’s Investments and Securities Act 2025.

    Timing is important here because the SEC intervention came just weeks after T+1 went live, showing that conduct failures by licensed securities intermediaries can become more serious when settlement timelines are shorter.

    The SEC directive came less than a month after Nigeria completed its move to T+1 settlement on 1 June 2026. T+1 means a stock trade must now be fully completed within one business day instead of three.

    This was the final step in a fast reform that took the market from a three-day cycle to a one-day cycle in under seven months, after first moving from three days to two on 28 November 2025, according to the Central Securities Clearing System.

    The SEC introduced T+1 to make the market more efficient, reduce the risk that one side of a trade fails to deliver, make it easier to buy and sell, and bring Nigeria in line with international standards. Those gains are real and worth protecting. But a faster system may also change how much damage bad behaviour can do.

    How Nigeria’s Reform may be Shifting from Faster Technology to Stronger Conduct

    Nigeria’s reform so far has focused largely on technology and rules: a shorter settlement cycle, upgraded clearing systems and a new securities law. This episode points to conduct supervision as the next pressure point in Nigeria’s capital-market reform.

    The weakness here did not appear to lie in the trading system itself. It appeared to lie in the behaviour of some of the licensed securities intermediaries and platforms operating on top of it.

    Licensed firms, rather than anonymous fraudsters, were collecting money for an offer the regulator had never seen. The people investors are meant to rely on appeared to be the ones moving ahead of the rules, and a faster market may give the least room to put that kind of mistake right.

    The issue should not be framed only as retail investors responding to an online rumour. The SEC directive said licensed capital-market operators were involved in soliciting advance subscriptions, which puts the focus on regulated intermediary conduct as well as investor caution.

    The fake offer may also have spread easily for an understandable reason. A genuine Dangote share sale had long been expected, so a fake one could look believable. A trusted brand name and a widely anticipated deal may be exactly the conditions in which careful checking matters most, because they may also be the conditions in which investors feel most able to skip it.

    Why is it Important for Nigeria’s Effort to Win Back Investor Trust

    Nigeria has spent the past year rebuilding its reputation with investors. Currency reforms, stronger reserves and a sovereign credit rating upgrade have all been used to argue that the market is becoming more stable and more worth investing in.

    The faster settlement system may be seen as part of that same modernisation story.  Such behaviour by licensed operators could work against it. Investors, both foreign and local, may not separate the quality of a market’s technology from the conduct of the people running it.

    They may treat both as one risk. A faster, cleaner trading system may count for less if licensed operators can still collect money for offers that do not exist.

    This may be why the SEC basing its action on the Investments and Securities Act 2025 carries weight beyond this single case. As one of the first major enforcement actions under Nigeria’s updated market law, it could set an early example of how seriously rule-breaking will be treated as the market speeds up.

    What does this Mean for Licensed Platforms and Market Operators Moving Forward

    The takeaway may be less about caution and more about building checks into the system itself. In a one-day market, verification may no longer work well as a slow step performed late in the process.

    It may need to act as a live safeguard at every point where an offer is promoted, where an account is opened and where money is taken.

    The standard implied by the directive seems straightforward; operators may be best served by taking no money, opening no accounts and promising no shares until an offer has been filed with the regulator, reviewed and approved. For Nigeria’s capital market, conduct standards may now need to keep pace with the faster settlement infrastructure already in place.

    “Nigeria moved from three-day to one-day settlement in a short space of time, and that is an achievement,” Precious added.

    “The test of the reform may be less about the timeline and more about whether licensed securities intermediaries, platforms and advisers working within it can be trusted to act properly when there is far less room to correct a mistake. That may be the part of the journey that still lies ahead.”

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    Julius Alagbe
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    Julius Alagbe is a senior financial journalist and Editor at MarketForces Africa with nearly two decades of experience in finance, accounting, and economics reporting.He is one of Nigeria's most prolific financial market reporters, covering capital markets, monetary policy, corporate earnings, banking, telecoms, and macroeconomic developments across Africa.Julius has built a strong footprint reporting on Nigeria's leading corporates and financial services sector, including coverage of the Nigerian Exchange Group, Central Bank of Nigeria monetary operations, MTN Nigeria, GTCO, and major investment banking transactions.He regularly monitors the CBN’s open market operations, interbank FX markets, and equity market movements, providing readers with real-time intelligence on Nigeria’s financial landscape.His reporting draws on direct access to institutional research from firms including Moody’s Ratings, CardinalStone Securities, Fitch, and other leading African investment houses.Julius brings analytical depth and editorial rigour to every story, making complex financial data accessible to professionals, investors, and policymakers across Africa.Julius Alagbe is based in Lagos, Nigeria.

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