NewsOnline Nigeria reports that the year 2023 proved to be one of the most challenging periods for businesses in Nigeria.
The challenges stemmed from various factors, beginning with the dynamics of an election year. As is typical during general elections, investors tend to approach the period with caution, uncertain about the outcomes and policy directions of the incoming administration, leading to a reluctance to make long-term investment decisions.
To compound matters, the business landscape faced an early hurdle with an artificial cash scarcity at the start of the year.
This was exacerbated by a poorly executed currency note redesign, which, in turn, constrained consumer spending throughout the first quarter.
As the economy rebounded in the second quarter, then came the twin reforms of fuel subsidy removal and the unification of the foreign exchange market which pushed inflation on an upward spiral and the naira losing over 50% of its value.
This coupled with other macroeconomic malaise plaguing the nation in the past years resulted in a significant number of businesses exiting from the Nigeria scene in 2023.
In this post, NewsOnline Nigeria will reel out the number of companies that left Nigeria in 2023 and the reasons for their exit, and those that exited the Nigerian Stock Exchange despite its bullish trend this year.
In surrendering to defeat, the company had to pivot to a third-party distribution model for its pharmaceutical products.
The company’s exit came as a shock to many who have grown accustomed to its products and further highlighted the extent of the nation’s macroeconomic woes on the business community.
The company’s death in September culminated in a tumultuous year in 2022 where it had three CEOs, a series of complaints from staff and other legal issues.
According to a statement from the company’s management, they intend to sell the company and focus on other business areas. The company started operations in 2016 and it was reported to have accumulated around 5% share of the market in its 7-year history.
Although the company announced a third-party distributor will handle its products in Nigeria, it declined to name the distributor.
While the cost of the transaction was not disclosed, a statement from the company noted that its business in Nigeria has been profitable and the decision to sell syncs with its “strategy to focus on international oil and gas portfolio and core business areas”
The sale of its assets brought an end to Equinox’s over three decades of presence in Nigeria dating back to 1992.
In June 2017, the company commissioned a $300 million state-of-the-art plant in Agbara, Ogun state but just a year after, there were reports the plant had shut down over economic issues as it had difficulty breaking even.
The company noted that the food delivery business in Africa is difficult, and it wants to focus on physical goods where there is a path to profitability.
The year 2023 bore witness to a challenging landscape for Nigerian businesses, marked by a sequence of exits that reverberated across various sectors.
From tech startups like Lazarpay to multinational giants like GlaxoSmithKline and Procter & Gamble, the exodus was profound, signalling the profound impact of macroeconomic woes on these ventures.
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