BUA Foods Momentum Pauses Ahead of Q2 Earnings
Fast-moving consumer Goods company BUA Foods Plc’s momentum has been fractured by thin trading in its shares on the Nigerian Exchange (NGX).
The fast-moving consumer goods company, which had championed the league of market movers as the most valuable, has given up its trophy in the absence of significant market catalysts.
Trading data from the Nigerian stock market showed that the company’s share price flatlined at N939 amidst the latest round of company re-rating in the local bourse.
Stockbrokers reported that low activity on BUA Foods restricted price movement, trading at about 3% below its 52-week high in the equities market last week.
The market value of the company’s 18 billion outstanding shares was steady at N16.902 trillion ahead of the second-quarter 2026 earnings release.
Investors and analysts are anticipating BUA Foods’ earnings to drive the next round of momentum after a strong re-rating in the equity market in the first quarter of the year.
In Q1, BUA Foods Plc delivered a commendable performance, defying a difficult consumer environment to grow both revenue and profitability year-on-year. Revenue came in at ₦394.6 billion, a 10.73% decline from ₦442.1 billion in Q1 2025.
The downtrend was driven by declines in the sugar and flour divisions, the two key earnings drivers for BUA Foods. Reflecting weak demand, the sugar division reported a 19% decline in revenue to ₦171.7 billion in 3M 2026, down from ₦211.3 billion in the equivalent period.
Flour division recorded a 22% decline in revenue to ₦137.4 billion in 3M 2026, driven by alignment with strategic and competitive market pricing initiatives.
Operating expenses were held at ₦21.6 billion, down 3.59% despite inflationary pressures, while administrative expenses were slashed by 48.55% to ₦5.8 billion, more than offsetting a 42.32% increase in selling and distribution costs to ₦15.8 billion.
BUA Foods’ operating profit grew 11.32% to ₦154.7 billion, with operating margin improving to 39.2% from 31.4%.
Despite this, key ratios painted a flattering picture. Return on equity stood at 49.8%, return on assets at 36.6%, and net profit margin expanded to 36.1% from 28.3%. The debt-to-equity ratio improved to 42.3% from 51.3%, reflecting continued balance sheet strengthening.
Investor sentiment toward the firm is largely stable, with the stock price holding at ₦967 per share early in May as investors weigh top-line softness against the impressive improvement beneath it.

