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BREAKING: Abuja High Court Rule Against Increment In Prices Of DStv, GOtv Subscription—-A Federal High Court in Abuja, on Monday, ordered the stoppage of the planned increase in DStv and GOtv subscription prices by Multichoice Nigeria Limited.

LEADERSHIP reports that the Pay-TV operator, Multichoice Nigeria Limited, had last week announced another price increment across its DStv and GOtv packages effective May 1, 2024.

The company attributed the price increases to “rise in the cost of business operations” in Nigeria.

According to the notice signed by Multichoice CEO, John Ugbe, and sent to its subscribers and customers via email last week Wednesday, a copy of which was sighted by our Correspondent, the new prices for DStv packages are Premium package will now cost N37,000 monthly as against the current N29,500 subscription fee.

The price of the Compact+ bouquet has also increased to N25,000 from 19,800 monthly.

DStv said subscribers on its Compact bouquet will now pay N15,700 as against N12,500 they are currently paying, while those on the Confam package are to pay N9,300, compared to N7,400 currently being paid.

Under the new price regime, viewers on DStv Yanga bouquet will now be paying N5,100 for the monthly subscription, instead of the N4,200 currently being paid.

Padi subscribers will, from May 1, 2024, be paying N3,600 instead of the current N2,950 price.

HDPVR Access subscribers will pay N5,000 as against the N4,000 being paid now.

For GOtv users, Multichoice said customers on its Supa Plus package will now be paying N15,700, from the current price of N12,500. Its Supa bouquet will now go for N9,600 as opposed to the current N7,600 being charged.

GOtv Max subscription has also increased to N7,200 from N5,700 while its Jolli package will go for N4,850 from N3,950. Multichoice said its customers on the lowest GOtv package, Jinja, will be paying N3,300 monthly, as opposed to N2,700 they are currently paying.

Users of Smallie will now be paying N1,575 as against N1,300

LEADERSHIP recalls that Multichoice had increased its subscription fees twice in the past year.

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FirstBank Reaches ₦500bn Capital Threshold Before CBN Deadline

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FirstBank Reaches ₦500bn Capital Threshold

FirstBank Reaches ₦500bn Capital Threshold Before CBN Deadline—-First HoldCo Plc says its commercial banking subsidiary, First Bank of Nigeria Ltd., has met the Central Bank of Nigeria’s N500 billion minimum capital requirement.

The disclosure was made in a statement on Wednesday by Mr Olayinka Ijabiyi, Acting Group Head, Marketing and Corporate Communications, FirstBank.

Ijabiyi said the milestone followed strategic capital initiatives, including a Rights Issue, Private Placement and proceeds from divesting the group’s merchant banking subsidiary.

He said the successful capitalisation reflected strong market confidence in FirstHoldCo’s business model, long-term vision and growth prospects.

“With a fortified capital base, FirstBank is positioned to accelerate real sector support, deepen financial inclusion and deliver innovative, digitally driven customer experiences,” Ijabiyi said.

He added that the recapitalisation strengthens financial resilience and provides a platform for earnings growth through expansion, technology and new opportunities.

In March 2024, the CBN directed commercial banks to raise minimum capital to N500 billion within 24 months to strengthen sector stability.

Ijabiyi said FirstBank had fulfilled the requirement well ahead of the regulatory deadline.

He said FirstHoldCo plans to raise fresh funding in 2026 to inject additional capital into subsidiaries and new business adjacencies.

According to him, the move aims to enhance service offerings and support strategic expansion.

Commenting, Chairman, Mr Femi Otedola, thanked shareholders for their trust and support throughout the capitalisation programme.

“Securing FirstBank’s capital base ahead of schedule positions us firmly for our next growth phase,” Otedola said, appreciating guidance from the CBN and SEC.

Group Managing Director, Mr Wale Oyedeji, said the capital raise strengthens execution of strategic priorities and delivery of lasting value to stakeholders.

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FBN Quest Repossesses Nestoil HQ As $1bn Debt Row Deepens

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FBN Quest Repossesses Nestoil HQ

FBN Quest Repossesses Nestoil HQ As $1bn Debt Row Deepens—-Nestoil’s financial woes have taken a turn for the worse as FBN Quest Merchant Bank and First Trustees Limited repossessed the company’s Lagos headquarters over a $1 billion debt. Armed policemen were stationed at the entrance of the building, and the multi-storey facility at 41/42 Akin Adesola Street, Victoria Island, Lagos, was sealed and marked as repossessed.

This latest development follows a Court of Appeal ruling that reversed an earlier Federal High Court decision, allowing the receiver-manager to take over Nestoil’s assets. The debt, reportedly exceeding $1.01 billion and ₦430 billion, has been a longstanding issue for the oil and gas services group.

Nestoil had previously stated that the matter was a commercial dispute being addressed through legal channels, assuring stakeholders that operations remain unaffected across all business lines. However, the repossession of its headquarters signals a new phase in the years-long battle between Nestoil and its creditors.

A federal high court in Lagos had earlier, on October 22, 2025, issued a Mareva order authorising First Trustees and its subsidiary, FBNQuest Merchant Bank, to assume control of the company’s assets.

Justice D. I. Dipeolu granted the injunction against the defendants — Nestoil Limited, its affiliate Neconde Energy Limited, and the principal promoters, Ernest Azudialu-Obiejesi and Nnenna Obiejesi.

Dipeolu restrained all dealings relating to $1,012,608,386.91 and N430,014,064,380.77 — the total indebtedness as of September 30, 2025.

There were also additional debts personally guaranteed by Azudialu-Obiejesi, including over N366.8 billion, $61.2 million, $152 million, and N10.4 billion owed to Access Bank, First Bank, and Zenith Bank.

However, Nestoil and its promoters later approached a federal high court seeking to set aside the Mareva order prior to the latest development.

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