Aliko Dangote, the richest person in Africa, is preparing to take his massive petroleum refinery public in what could become the largest IPO the continent has ever seen. The Dangote Petroleum Refinery and Petrochemicals FZE is targeting a valuation between $39 billion and $50 billion, a figure that would dwarf anything previously listed on an African exchange.
Pre-IPO interest has already exceeded $2 billion, drawing attention from retail investors, institutional funds, and global capital allocators alike. The offering is tentatively scheduled for September 2026, though Nigeria’s Securities and Exchange Commission recently pumped the brakes on unauthorized marketing activities since no formal IPO application has been filed or approved.
What the refinery actually is, and why it matters
Located in Lagos, the Dangote refinery is the world’s largest single-train refinery, with a processing capacity of up to 650,000 barrels per day.
Nigeria, despite being one of Africa’s biggest oil producers, has historically been a net importer of refined fuel. The refinery is designed to flip that dynamic entirely, positioning Nigeria as a potential net exporter of refined petroleum products.
The IPO plan calls for offering approximately 10% equity in the refinery. The structure involves roughly 3 billion shares priced at $0.35 each, targeting an initial raise of about $1 billion. Demand has already doubled that figure before any formal offering has even begun.
Proceeds from the listing are earmarked for an ambitious $40 billion, five-year expansion plan aimed at further boosting Nigeria’s refining capacity.
The SEC steps in
On June 23, 2026, Nigeria’s SEC mandated a pause on all unauthorized marketing activities related to the IPO. No formal application has been submitted, and no prospectus has been approved.
The tentative September 2026 timeline gives regulators and the company several months to align on disclosures, pricing, and listing mechanics.
One of the more interesting structural elements is Dangote’s ambition for a cross-listing across multiple African exchanges. If executed, this would mark the first multi-exchange IPO on African soil. The primary listing would be on the Nigerian Exchange (NGX), but additional listings on other African markets would broaden the investor base significantly.
What this means for investors
For energy and commodities investors, this represents direct exposure to a transformative infrastructure asset. The company aims to raise between $1 billion and $4 billion in fresh capital ahead of the listing.
The risk side of the ledger isn’t empty, though. Nigeria’s regulatory environment, currency volatility with the naira, and the broader political landscape all factor into the calculus. Investors will also want clarity on governance structures, given that Dangote Industries operates across multiple sectors with significant family control.
A $39 billion to $50 billion valuation range raises questions about whether global institutional investors can efficiently deploy capital into the NGX at that scale, given historically constrained foreign investor participation through currency controls and settlement infrastructure.
One notable wrinkle: reports have referenced the use of USDT, the dollar-pegged stablecoin, for IPO subscriptions, potentially opening the door for crypto-native investors to participate.
Disclosure: This article was edited by Editorial Team. For more information on how we create and review content, see our Editorial Policy.

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