• About Us
  • Privacy Policy
  • Contact Us
  • Advertise With Us
  • Home
Metrowatchonline
Sunday, June 1, 2025
  • Home
  • News
  • Security
  • World
No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • News
  • Security
  • World
No Result
View All Result
Metrowatchonline
No Result
View All Result
Home Opinion

Oando Exited OVH 3 Years before NNPC Retail Buy Out, OPINION By Femi Awoyemi | METROWATCH

Public and analysts' records available to our economic and market intelligence (EMI) unit affirm that @Oando_PLC was out of OVH three (3) years before @nnpclimited RETAIL chose to buy it out (btw, OVH stands for Oando, Vitol, and Helios).

Emmanuel Babs by Emmanuel Babs
August 23, 2024
in Business, Highlights, Opinion, Top News
0
Oando Exited OVH 3 Years before NNPC Retail Buy Out, OPINION By Femi Awoyemi | METROWATCH

*Femi Awoyemi

There is no equivalence with evidence in the financial, business, and economic space, as it is done in the political space. Records exist for a reason in the former, and players seeking to push self-interested agendas must come with evidence and not innuendos in this space.

Despite misgivings about an entity, I, as a member of the governance community, understand that it is unhelpful if we allow misrepresentations to replace objectivity and accountability. On this note, I offer my thoughts on the NNPC-OVH issue without holding a fort for any party.

Public and analysts’ records available to our economic and market intelligence (EMI) unit affirm that @Oando_PLC was out of OVH three (3) years before @nnpclimited RETAIL chose to buy it out (btw, OVH stands for Oando, Vitol, and Helios).

A review of Oando’s financial statements shows that it divested its downstream business (OVH) in three tranches: 60%, 35%, and 5%. At that time, it was seeking to raise funds to invest in the ConocoPhillips transaction, for which it later got entangled with the SEC, where a key investor (who also happens to be a business associate of a former Vice President) sought to exit its investment in the company. This dragged on for years, and investors are still making their peace with it.

ALSO READ...

I’m Loyal to Tinubu, Says Reno Omokri

Kano Sports Contingent Accident Devastating, Says Tinubu

Interestingly, Oando achieved a significant milestone today in its long-term upstream strategy.

Proshare’s Economic and Market Intelligence Unit (EMI) represents that Oando completed its acquisition of 100% of the shareholding interest in the Nigerian Agip Oil Company (NAOC) from the Italian energy company Eni. That may go unheralded for many reasons, but the news is making the rounds. Shareholders of Oando Plc are genuinely unhappy with the company for many reasons, none the least the promise sold to them, which did not materialize and for which the company has to engage on a different premise.

In a separate report, it was stated that Oando’s divestment from the downstream business was a key part of its strategic representation to the market to move out of the lower-margin downstream and midstream businesses to focus on the more lucrative Upstream ventures.
1. OVH – Initial Divestment – 30th June 2016; and
2. Final Divestment – 29th November 2019

It would appear that either by design or default, when Oando exited entirely in 2019, OVH continued to use the Oando brand under a Trademark Licence Agreement (TLA) because of the goodwill associated with the brand name.

This is why the filling stations continued to bear the name Oando (some still do till today). We understand that the TLA was terminated effective 24 March 2023, but NNPC has 18 months to rebrand fully as part of the TLA.

This means that the use of the name would legally cease by the end of September 2024.

From Proshare’s records, OVH sold to NNPC retail before the expiration of this window, and the investing and general public should appreciate the business/political nuance at play. If this has changed, it is news to us.

The @nnpclimited should consider issuing a clarifying statement as a matter of sovereign integrity.

There are good times to hide behind obscurity, but this is not one of them.

 

 

ABOUT THE AUTHOR:
Awoyemi is chief executive of Proshare Limited.

Tags: NNPC LimitedOandoYemi Awoyemi
Previous Post

OVH Acquisition: The Facts — a right of reply by NNPC Ltd | METROWATCH

Next Post

Obaseki Renames First East Circular Road Benin as Late Archbishop Ekpu Road | METROWATCH 

Emmanuel Babs

Emmanuel Babs

Related Posts

House of Representatives

N9.4tn Debt: Reps Invite Oando, Chevron, Mobil, Shell, Others for Investigative Hearing

March 2, 2025
NNPC Ltd Launches Crude Theft Monitoring Applications

NNPC Limited Denies Cut in Price of PHRC Petrol

November 29, 2024
At Senate Hearing, Official Reveals Dangote Refinery Gets 60% of its Crude from NNPCL | METROWATCH

Sources: Dangote Petrol 11 Naira/Litre Cheaper Than Imported PMS

November 3, 2024
Nigerian Government Okays Exxon Mobil $1.28Bn Assets Divestment to Seplat Energy

Nigerian Government Okays Exxon Mobil $1.28Bn Assets Divestment to Seplat Energy

October 22, 2024
At Senate Hearing, Official Reveals Dangote Refinery Gets 60% of its Crude from NNPCL | METROWATCH

Declare Us Sole Suppliers of Fuel, Dangote Refinery Tells  Court Amid Shortfalls to NNPCL 

October 22, 2024
NNPC Retail Sensitizes 1,000 Auto Mechanics on CNG Adoption, Oleum Lubricant Range

NNPC Retail Sensitizes 1,000 Auto Mechanics on CNG Adoption, Oleum Lubricant Range

October 19, 2024
Next Post
Obaseki Renames First East Circular Road Benin as Late Archbishop Ekpu Road | METROWATCH 

Obaseki Renames First East Circular Road Benin as Late Archbishop Ekpu Road | METROWATCH 

  • About Us
  • Privacy Policy
  • Contact Us
  • Advertise With Us
  • Home

© 2024 Metrowatch Online Published by Miraculous Media Connect Limited. All rights reserved

No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • News
  • Security
  • World

© 2024 Metrowatch Online Published by Miraculous Media Connect Limited. All rights reserved

Go to mobile version