It’s important to separate market sentiment from company fundamentals. Recently, Ellah Lakes Plc has actually recorded repeated losses, so the concerns some investors have are not completely unfounded.
For example:
The company reported about ₦146 million revenue but an operating loss of about ₦1.87 billion due to high administrative and personnel costs.
Losses were also driven by foreign exchange losses and rising operating costs as the company expands into palm oil, rice, and sugar production.
Over time, retained losses have continued to grow, and profitability has not yet been achieved.
So the honest truth is this:
Fundamentally, the company is still in the investment/expansion stage, not the profit stage. That means it is a high-risk, long-term type of stock, not a short-term performance stock.
Now, we have seen similar situations before. A company like Oando Plc recorded losses in the past but later returned to profitability after restructuring and cost control.
This shows that loss-making companies can turn around — but not all of them do.
The real issue is strategy and time horizon:
If you are a short-term trader, a loss-making company is risky.
If you are a long-term investor, you are betting on future growth, not current profit.
But whether long-term or short-term, fundamentals must eventually support the price — that is the honest truth.
Do you think Ellah Lakes is a long-term growth story that needs time, or do you think the fundamentals must improve first before the price can be justified?
For example:
The company reported about ₦146 million revenue but an operating loss of about ₦1.87 billion due to high administrative and personnel costs.
Losses were also driven by foreign exchange losses and rising operating costs as the company expands into palm oil, rice, and sugar production.
Over time, retained losses have continued to grow, and profitability has not yet been achieved.
So the honest truth is this:
Fundamentally, the company is still in the investment/expansion stage, not the profit stage. That means it is a high-risk, long-term type of stock, not a short-term performance stock.
Now, we have seen similar situations before. A company like Oando Plc recorded losses in the past but later returned to profitability after restructuring and cost control.
This shows that loss-making companies can turn around — but not all of them do.
The real issue is strategy and time horizon:
If you are a short-term trader, a loss-making company is risky.
If you are a long-term investor, you are betting on future growth, not current profit.
But whether long-term or short-term, fundamentals must eventually support the price — that is the honest truth.
Do you think Ellah Lakes is a long-term growth story that needs time, or do you think the fundamentals must improve first before the price can be justified?