Business
BRB Capital Group acquires Amalfi Capital to build regulated bridge between Lagos and global markets

*The acquisition pairs an FCA-authorised UK platform with BRB Capital Group’s SEC-regulated Nigerian operations, creating cross-border investment infrastructure for the £8.1bn UK-Nigeria trade corridor
BRB Capital Group, on June 10, 2026, announced the acquisition of Amalfi Capital Limited, an FCA-authorised investment advisory and brokerage firm headquartered in London, in a landmark move to build a regulated investment corridor between Nigeria, the United Kingdom and global capital markets.
The acquisition follows approval by the Financial Conduct Authority for BRB Capital Limited, the Group’s UK entity, to acquire 100% of Amalfi Capital Limited. The acquired entity has been renamed BRB Capital Management Limited and will operate as the Group’s United Kingdom platform, serving professional and institutional investors, corporates, family offices and eligible counterparties across both markets.
Through this acquisition, BRB Capital Group now combines FCA authorisation in the United Kingdom with SEC-regulated operations in Nigeria, placing the African-led financial services group in a distinctive position to connect capital, investors and opportunities across two strategically important markets.
For decades, capital has moved between Nigeria and the United Kingdom through trade, remittances, investment, family networks and institutional relationships. Yet the investment infrastructure connecting both markets has remained fragmented. Nigerian investors seeking access to London have often faced regulatory complexity and limited dedicated channels, while UK investors looking at Nigerian and African opportunities have frequently lacked a regulated partner with deep local presence, origination capability and market understanding.
BRB Capital Group’s acquisition of Amalfi Capital is designed to address that gap.
“Global investors do not lack appetite for Africa; they lack avenues into Africa they can trust. This acquisition allows BRB Capital to build a bridge that is regulated on both sides, rooted in both markets, and accountable to the highest standards of fiduciary responsibility,” Etimbuk Bassey, CEO of BRB Capital Group, said.
The Group’s UK platform will focus on investment banking advisory, fund management and agency dealing services for professional clients and eligible counterparties. It will support cross-border M&A, corporate finance, capital raising, investment structuring,
regulated execution and access to Nigeria-focused and international investment opportunities, with safekeeping arranged through third-party custodians.
The acquisition comes at a time of growing economic alignment between Nigeria and the United Kingdom. Bilateral trade between both countries reached £8.1 billion in the year to Q3 2025, growing by 11.4% year on year, while Nigeria’s pension assets surpassed
₦27.45 trillion in 2025, creating rising institutional demand for diversification and professionally managed investment access.
The United Kingdom’s post-Brexit trade strategy has also elevated Nigeria as a priority economic partner, supported by the Enhanced Trade and Investment Partnership. At the same time, Nigeria’s foreign exchange reforms and capital market developments have renewed global investor interest in Africa’s most populous nation.
For UK professional investors, BRB Capital Management Limited provides a regulated route into Nigerian and African opportunities, supported by the Group’s market presence and institutional relationships in Lagos. For Nigerian institutional and professional investors, the platform provides access to London’s capital markets, hard-currency investment opportunities and international diversification strategies. For professional and high-net-worth Nigerians in the United Kingdom, the Group’s ambition is to move the financial relationship beyond remittances toward long-term wealth creation.
“The opportunity between Nigeria and the United Kingdom is significant, but capturing it requires more than ambition. It requires regulatory credibility, operational competence, market discipline and the ability to execute seamlessly across both corridors.
“BRB Capital Group combines a strong regulatory foundation, deep market relationships and over four decades of collective experience across both corridors, enabling us to serve clients with solutions that are reliable, well-governed and built for long-term value,” said Dr Ebele Onyeabo, GMD of BRB Capital Group
BRB Capital Management Limited is operational with immediate effect from its headquarters in London. The firm retains Amalfi Capital’s existing FCA permissions and regulatory standing and will operate under BRB Capital Group’s compliance and governance framework. BRB Capital Group’s Nigerian operations will continue to serve domestic institutional, corporate and retail clients.
Together, the Group’s UK and Nigerian platforms form an integrated cross-border investment platform purpose-built for the Nigeria–UK corridor. The Group’s long-term vision is to become the definitive financial institution for investors moving between both markets — from pension funds seeking international diversification, to UK family offices looking for disciplined African exposure, to Nigerian corporates seeking access to global capital, and professional diaspora investors building long-term wealth across borders.
About BRB Capital Group
BRB Capital Group is an African-led financial services group with regulated operations in Nigeria and the United Kingdom.
The Group provides investment banking advisory, fund management, brokerage, wealth management and capital markets services to professional investors, corporates, institutions, sovereign entities and high-net-worth clients.
Through its UK platform, BRB Capital Management Limited (FCA FRN: 768977), the Group holds Financial Conduct Authority authorisation to conduct regulated activities for professional clients and eligible counterparties in the United Kingdom.
BRB Capital’s mission is to build inclusive wealth beyond borders by connecting African opportunities with global capital within a framework of trust, transparency and strong regulatory governance.
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Business
Incoming NIA Chairman outlines three-pronged agenda to deepen market

By Rosemary Iwunze
The incoming Chairman of the Nigerian Insurers Association, NIA, Mrs. Ebelechukwu Nwachukwu, has unveiled a strategic blueprint anchored on collaboration, public trust, and regulatory compliance.
Speaking at a pre-investiture press conference in Lagos, Nwachukwu who is the Managing Director of REX Insurance Company Limited said that she also targets transitioning insurance from a niche product into a mass-market essential.
She said: “I do not come to office at an ordinary time. With the advent of the new Insurance Act, we are entering a transformative era—one that demands higher standards of governance, stronger capitalisation, improved consumer protection, and deeper market penetration.”
To ensure the new Act translates into tangible benefits for operators and the public, Nwachukwu outlined three focal points aligned with the NIA’s core mandate: ‘Deepening Penetration via Strategic Alliances; Rebuilding Public Trust through Simplification; as well as Executive Compliance and Regulatory Advocacy.’
Acknowledging Nigeria’s historically low insurance penetration rate, she emphasized that capital injection alone is insufficient to drive growth. “The NIA plans to actively pursue alliances with banks, fintechs, microfinance institutions, and non-financial retail platforms to bridge access gaps.
“Transitioning insurance from a niche product into a mass-market essential. Leveraging digital distribution channels to reach millions of unserved Nigerians and micro-businesses.”
While speaking on the second focus, ‘Rebuilding Public Trust through Simplification,’ the incoming Chairman pledged to demystify insurance by rolling out massive enlightenment and enforcement initiatives across both private and public sectors.
She said that her third focus area would be ‘Executive Compliance and Regulatory Advocacy,’ adding that with the critical recapitalisation deadline weeks away, the NIA under her leadership will serve as a constructive partner to regulatory authorities.
Nwachukwu reaffirmed her commitment to steering the body toward unity and shared progress rather than competition.
“My chairmanship will be defined by collaboration, not competition; by deepening public understanding, not industry jargon; and by building bridges across the entire financial services landscape,” Nwachukwu stated.
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Business
Nigeria’s current account surplus rises 46% to $4.98bn

By Elizabeth Adegbesan
The Central Bank of Nigeria, CBN, yesterday said the nation’s current account surplus grew year-on-year (YoY) by 46 percent to $4.98 billion in the first quarter of 2026 (Q1’26).
The apex bank disclosed this in its Balance of Payments (BoP) report for Q1’26 noting that the current account surplus also grew quarter-on-quarter (QoQ) by 255.7 percent from $1.4 billion in Q4’25.
It stated: “Provisional balance of payments (BOP) statistics for Q1 2026 show a current account surplus of $4.98 billion, which was higher than the $1.40 billion and $3.41 billion recorded in the preceding quarter (Q4 2025) and corresponding period (Q1 2025) respectively.”
According to CBN, the growth in current account surplus was due to an increase in crude oil export earnings,gas export earnings, refined petroleum product export earnings and decrease in refined petroleum product imports and in net out-payments in primary income account.
It stated further: “Major contributors to the Higher Current Account Surplus increase in crude oil export earnings from $6.77 billion to $8.11 billion (19.79 percent).
“Increase in gas export earnings from $2.24 billion to $2.53 billion (12.95 percent).
“Increase in refined petroleum product export earnings from $1.97 billion to $2.37 billion (20.3 percent).
“Decrease in refined petroleum product imports from $2.48 billion to $0.31 billion (87.50 percent).
“Decrease in net out-payments in primary income account from $3.27 billion to $2.83 billion (13.46 percent).”
CBN noted that the Goods account (a major sub-account in the current account) recorded a higher surplus of $5.95 billion in Q1’26, as against $1.77 billion and $3.35 billion recorded in the preceding quarter and corresponding period of 2025.
On the other hand, the Financial account retained its net borrowing position, recording a net borrowing of $2.51 billion in Q1’26, as against $1.96 billion in Q4’25.
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Business
Mutual Benefits decries Nigeria’s credit gap, offers solutions

By Rosemary Iwunze
Mutual Benefits Assurance Plc has said a situation where only about six per cent of adults can currently access credit through formal financial institutions, is not ideal.
According to the company, while access to credit remains important for economic growth, financial protection mechanisms are equally essential in helping individuals and businesses withstand economic shocks.
According to the Managing Director, Mutual Benefits Assurance Plc, Femi Asenuga: “Through our diverse portfolio of solutions, Mutual Benefits continues to provide Nigerians with tools to build, preserve and protect wealth. These include education-focused protection plans, life assurance products, savings-oriented solutions, motor and property insurance and business protection products designed to safeguard livelihoods and future goals.
“The conversation around financial inclusion must go beyond opening bank accounts and accessing loans. True financial empowerment is achieved when individuals and businesses can access financing opportunities while also protecting their income, assets, families and future aspirations from unforeseen risks.
“For many Nigerian families and business owners, a single unexpected event such as a medical emergency, fire incident, business disruption or loss of income, can erase years of financial progress. This is why insurance and disciplined savings remain critical pillars of long-term financial resilience.”
As part of its commitment to advancing financial inclusion, Mutual Microfinance Bank continues to deliver accessible financing solutions tailored to the needs of small businesses, traders, salary earners, entrepreneurs and emerging enterprises across Nigeria. As at December 31, 2025, the Bank had disbursed loans totaling N1.372 billion, further strengthening access to formal credit for individuals and businesses across its target segments. This growth trajectory continued into 2026, with the loan portfolio rising to N1.558 billion by the end of Q1 2026, reflecting sustained momentum in supporting productive economic activity.
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