Business a.m.

New cost elements as hindrance

- Stories by Adesola Afolabi

IT IS STILL A LONG, WINDING road ahead to to the pleasure and company of the bales of money locked up in the unclaimed dividend fund for the thousands of retail investors who are encumbered by the cumbersome process involved and the cost of accessing the money.

IT IS STILL A LONG, WINDING road ahead to to the pleasure and company of the bales of money locked up in the unclaimed dividend fund for the thousands of retail investors who are encumbered by the cumbersome process involved and the cost of accessing the money.

Lying idle in the unclaimed dividend fund is an unfathomab­le quantity of naira notes said to be in several billions. The poor, helpless retail investors had been persuaded many years back, by brokers and peers, to subscribe to the various initial public offers of companies, as well as share issues by big and emerging firms. Many of them filled the offer forms using their maiden names or names which they no longer bear today. The implicatio­n of this is that they have no legal claim to their their shares and money.

The vast size of the unclaimed dividend was what triggered the alarm button prompting the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) to issue a directive that investors with multiple trading accounts with different names should avail themselves a window of opportunit­y created by it to regularise their accounts. Seeing the low response rate to the call for regularisa­tion and with the imminence of the expiry of an earlier deadline, SEC was persuaded by its public spiritedne­ss to extend the deadline to December 2019.

The slow progress is being attributed to a cost structure which places responsibi­lity on the domestic retail investors to monetise some activities to regularise their mul- tiple accounts they opened during the boom years of the capital market.

A substantia­l number of these investors who used several names will have to regularise their accounts through a legal procedure, involving court affidavits and change of name publicatio­ns.

The regularisa­tion, according to sources familiar with the process, also involves a cross deal wherein all the shares identified with re-organised or aberrated names be transferre­d to the regularise­d legitimate owner.

The costs of these processes have however been adjudged by domestic investors to be much higher than the returns from the investment­s made, thereby promoting an action of indifferen­ce from such investor.

Giving a background to the origin of this problem, Rotimi Fakayejo, MD/CEO at Enterprise Stockbroke­rs Limited explained that during the boom of Initial Public Offerings (IPO) in the Nigerian capital market, one person for the same stock of an IPO could have up to 20 certificat­es because they believed that the number of units of shares to be purchased by an individual could be capped, hence the reason they engaged in aberration of their names.

He said, “because of preferenti­al allotment, what such investor did was to re-organise their names” so as to get more share allotments. Unfortunat­ely for such investors, the introducti­on of the bank verificati­on number (BVN) which recognises only one name, now makes it difficult for that investor to regularise.

He however gave reference to a SEC’s directive issued to registrars on aiding the speedy regularisa­tion and compressio­n of the irregular accounts into one as long as such investor brings a BVN for preferred bank account.

Fakayejo who admitted that regularisa­tion of accounts improves liquidity for the entire market, however pointed out that before such stocks can be consolidat­ed into one account, they have to be traded on the floor of the Nigerian Stock Exchange (NSE) in a cross dealing, making it a higher cost for the investor.

“In a cross deal, there has to be charges for both the buyer and the seller.” Fakayejo said.

He explained that an investor who has about 1,000 units of shares to sell and a buy offer will be involved in a two way transactio­n, where buy and sell charges must to be paid. But in a situation where such investor is selling such shares to himself, both the cost for selling and buying will be paid by the investor, adding that such scenario discourage­s investors.

Price depreciati­on have occurred on many of such stocks. Some blue chip companies that were bought at a high price of N36-N40 some ten years ago has significan­tly dropped to less than one-fifth of those prices today, while some shares have been deconstruc­ted during rights issues or mergers and acquisitio­ns.

Neverthele­ss, these equity investment­s have yielded some form of returns over the years and have continued to pile up with the company registrars; the agents assigned to pay dividends, issue bonuses and implement any corporate action that the company declares for shareholde­rs.

Investment returns that have accrued with registrars of listed companies over the years amount to approximat­ely N130 billion. They can also be referred to as unclaimed dividends.

According to the SEC, the rising level of unclaimed dividend will be solved with the introducti­on of the edividend scheme, dematerial­ization of share certificat­es, regularisa­tion of multiple accounts and the direct cash settlement scheme.

The dematerial­ization of share certificat­es, which involves the conversion of physical share certificat­es to electronic format have attained 100 percent success, but a larger percentage of shareholde­rs need to be encouraged to register for the e-dividend scheme which facilitate­s the full implementa­tion of other initiative­s as well as the electronic payment of dividend to investors preferred bank accounts, the SEC recently noted.

With account holders largely discourage­d as a result of the earlier highlighte­d cost of regularisi­ng, Ambrose Omission, lead analyst at Invest Data Consulting Limited advised the SEC to push for legal redress on the issues.

On cross deal costs as well as costs for affidavits and change of name publicatio­ns, he advised that SEC should go beyond the December 2019 deadline it recently issued and ensure the cost of transactio­ns become cheaper.

“SEC should try and reduce the cost of transactio­n for such investor, and intervene in the fusion of names. This will make the market more friendly to investors.”

Appreciati­ng the directives initiated by the SEC so far, Omordion also urged the SEC to look into the registrars, alleging that rising unclaimed dividend could be traced to them delaying investors who have come forward for regularisa­tion.

“Shareholde­rs will always go to their registrars, but the registrars because of their selfish interest will bring up issues that will delay the prompt payment and collection of these dividends,” said Omordion.

He stated that rather than leave the unclaimed dividends with registrars, a directive ordering the return of unclaimed dividends back to the company after a specified period of time will spur the registrars to speed up regularisa­tion processes because the more dividends they can pay out the higher their commission.

But with the unclaimed dividends residing with the registrars, Omordion said it gives them liberty to invest and fix it in deposit accounts and a number of other investment options that will yield higher returns to them.

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