In August 2023, the total value of unclaimed dividends rose to N190bn, representing a 7.35 per cent rise from N177bn recorded in 2021, which was the last figure from the SEC.
The apex regulator, saddled with the dual responsibilities of regulating and developing the Nigerian capital market, disclosed this to journalists on Thursday after a three-day investor clinic it held in Yobe State to address complaints from investors in the region.
According to the Head of the SEC Zonal Office in Kano, Mr Danladi Mohammed, the investor clinic was jointly organised by the Securities and Exchange Commission and the Gombe State Investment & Property Development Company to proffer solutions to investors with unclaimed dividends and related matters.
Mohammed said the three-day exercise was aimed at creating awareness and enlightenment on e-dividend, dematerialisation of share certificates, and a direct cash settlement payment system, among other initiatives, and handling inquiries and complaints from shareholders for the people of Yobe State and its environs.
“The initiative is one in a series of programmes and strategies towards reducing the level of unclaimed dividends, which stood at N190bn in August 2023, by creating awareness, particularly in the regions, to make the investing public come forward to take what rightfully belongs to them.
“This is one of the key objectives of the Capital Market Development Master Plan 2015–2025,” he said.
It will be recalled that the Director General of the Securities and Exchange Commission, Lamido Yuguda, while briefing the members of the House Committee on Capital Markets and Institutions on the overview of the capital market and its importance to the Nigerian economy, intimated that the commission had made several efforts in the past and has a lot of strategies and measures in place to tackle the rise in unclaimed dividends.
He said, “The core mandate of the commission is to regulate and develop the capital market of Nigeria to be on par with its counterparts in other jurisdictions in all ramifications, and the commission is not resting on its oars to achieve and sustain that mission.
“The commission will embark on a series of investor clinics in 2024 in all the regions of the federation to provide the platforms for investors to reap the benefits of investing in the capital market.”
The commission noted that, at the end of the three-day event, it was able to address the many complaints by investors who attended the clinic, which included the request for guidance on e-dividend adoption, change/reconciliation of names, scheme consideration pay-off, verification share certificate, transmission of shares, payment of outstanding dividends, and many other issues.`
Capital market experts have attributed the rise in unclaimed dividends to either a change in residential address by investors and failure to update records with the registrars or investment companies or not keeping track of personal investments or investments owned by deceased relatives.