| By: Francis Onyemachi
The Securities and Exchange Commission, SEC, few days back ordered an immediate halt to all marketing and promotional activities related to a purported Initial Public Offering (IPO) by Dangote Petroleum Refinery & Petrochemicals FZE.
The regulator said it has not received or approved any application for the refinery’s public offer, warning that ongoing promotions could mislead investors and violate Nigeria’s capital market regulations.
Here are seven key reasons behind the SEC’s decision.
1. Dangote Refinery Has Not Filed an IPO Application
According to the SEC, no application for the registration of an IPO or public offer of shares by Dangote Petroleum Refinery has been submitted or approved.
Without regulatory approval, any public campaign suggesting an imminent IPO is unauthorized.
2. Unauthorized Marketing Campaigns Were Already Underway
The Commission said it observed widespread circulation of advertisements, flyers, digital banners, emails, and social media promotions encouraging investors to participate in the purported offer.
These campaigns created the impression that the IPO had regulatory backing when it had not.
3. Some Capital Market Operators Were Soliciting Investors
SEC expressed concern that some Registered Capital Market Operators (CMOs) were actively promoting the offer and encouraging investors to subscribe.
The regulator said such actions could undermine investor confidence in Nigeria’s capital market.
4. The Promotions Could Mislead Investors
The Commission warned that aggressive pre-marketing campaigns risk creating false expectations about the availability and legitimacy of the offer.
According to SEC, investors may be induced to commit funds based on information that lacks regulatory approval.
5. Pre-Funding and Guaranteed Allocation Claims Violate Market Rules
SEC specifically faulted invitations asking investors to open accounts, pre-fund investments, or secure “guaranteed allocations.”
The regulator described these practices as market manipulation and a breach of the Investments and Securities Act.
6. Investor Funds Could Be Exposed to Unnecessary Risk
To protect investors, SEC directed operators to stop accepting deposits, commitments, expressions of interest, or account openings related to the purported IPO.
The Commission also ordered that any funds already collected be refunded to investors within 24 hours.
7. Only SEC-Approved IPOs Can Be Marketed
The regulator reminded investors that every public offer must first receive SEC approval before marketing can begin.
It advised the investing public to rely only on official communications issued by the Commission and ignore any high-pressure fundraising or “pre-IPO” investment schemes.
What Happens Next with the IPO?
SEC clarified that if Dangote Petroleum Refinery eventually files an application and receives regulatory approval, an official prospectus will be issued in line with the Investments and Securities Act 2025.
Until then, all promotional activities relating to the proposed IPO remain unauthorized.



