NEM Insurance Plc has announced a final dividend of ₦1.50 per share for the financial year ended December 31, 2025, with a qualification (record) date of April 14, 2026 and payment scheduled for May 14, 2026.
This continues a pattern of dividend payments from the company. In recent years, NEM has consistently rewarded shareholders with annual dividends, which have grown over time — for example, a ₦1.00 per share payout was paid for 2024, and earlier figures show steady increases from previous years.
From a financial perspective, NEM Insurance has been performing well, with strong revenue growth and profitability in recent periods. Its insurance revenue and profits have shown resilience even in challenging environments, and it has diversified across multiple insurance lines such as motor, fire, accident, and oil‑&‑gas
Dividend payments are one way investors benefit from holding stocks beyond price movement — they provide real cash returns and signal confidence from management that earnings are strong enough to support shareholder payouts.
Given that dividends are just one part of total return, do you prefer companies that pay reliable dividends consistently, or those that reinvest earnings for future growth even if they pay little or no dividend?
This continues a pattern of dividend payments from the company. In recent years, NEM has consistently rewarded shareholders with annual dividends, which have grown over time — for example, a ₦1.00 per share payout was paid for 2024, and earlier figures show steady increases from previous years.
From a financial perspective, NEM Insurance has been performing well, with strong revenue growth and profitability in recent periods. Its insurance revenue and profits have shown resilience even in challenging environments, and it has diversified across multiple insurance lines such as motor, fire, accident, and oil‑&‑gas
Dividend payments are one way investors benefit from holding stocks beyond price movement — they provide real cash returns and signal confidence from management that earnings are strong enough to support shareholder payouts.
Given that dividends are just one part of total return, do you prefer companies that pay reliable dividends consistently, or those that reinvest earnings for future growth even if they pay little or no dividend?