Nigeria’s Securities and Exchange Commission has fined Stanbic IBTC Capital Limited, the investment banking subsidiary of Stanbic IBTC Holdings PLC, ₦50.145 million ($34,490) for using digital distribution channels during Guaranty Trust Holding Company Plc’s (GTCO) public offer without regulatory approval. Stanbic initially reported ₦50.15 billion ($34.49 million) in NGX filings, which it has since clarified via email and a call that it was a clerical error.
Stanbic disclosed the penalty in its H1 2025 financial statements. The fine is tied to GTCO’s ₦392.49 billion ($269.71 million) capital raise last year, part of a race by banks to meet the Central Bank’s recapitalisation rule. Stanbic was the lead issuing house—an investment bank/ financial institution acting as the main intermediary for a company issuing shares or bonds to the public—and the offer adopted physical and digital channels to rope in more retail investors.
Digital platforms are designed to enhance the efficiency of public offering subscriptions and rights issue processes, while also opening them up to retail investors. In 2021, over 150,000 new retail investors participated in Nigeria’s first digital public offer, which involved MTN. But even as market operators embrace new channels, they must carefully balance innovation with regulation, or pay a price for it.
SEC did not respond to comments at the time of publication.
The fine further spotlights the steep regulatory requirements of the financial sector. The CBN, SEC, and NGX fined seven banks $10.7 million in 2024. Stanbic IBTC Holdings Plc paid ₦113 million ($77,650.42) as penalties in H1 2025, a 28.93% drop from ₦159 million ($109,260.33) in H1 2024.
In 2024, the Nigerian Exchange Group rolled out NGX Invest, a platform designed to streamline public offerings and rights issues, after securing regulatory approval from the SEC, with Access Holdings and Fidelity Bank among early adopters.
Issuing houses need approval from the SEC before they can deploy with platforms. “An Issuing House requires approval from the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) before embarking on a public offer for an Issuer/Company, whether it plans to use traditional channels or digital channels for distribution,” said Michael Pratt, Investment Banker, Comercio Partners, a Lagos-based investment firm.
“The key thing to note is that the offer itself must be approved by the SEC, not necessarily the distribution channel. The approval is required primarily to ensure investor protection, maintain market integrity, and promote transparency.”
Failure to receive approval can attract heavy fines, as Stanbic learned, or in severe cases, licence suspension or withdrawal.
According to market operators, the penalty won’t derail the digitalisation drive sweeping the capital markets, where apps pushed retail investments to ₦516.50 billion ($354,924.27) in July 2025.
“Whilst some capital market operators may yet argue that it does, fines for non-compliance would not significantly impact the digital drive in Nigeria’s investment space,” said Pratt. “In fact, it is important that the commission uses this to deter practices which are not in line with the commission’s guidelines.”
Correction (October 3, 2025, 3:40 pm): An earlier version of this article reported that the SEC fined Stanbic IBTC ₦50.15 billion, as reflected in filings published on the NGX website. Stanbic has since clarified that this figure was a clerical error in the filing. According to its internal audited financial statements, the actual fine was ₦50.145 million. We have updated this article accordingly.
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