After two years of currency turbulence that drained profits and drove up finance costs, Nigeria’s biggest listed companies are showing not just a return to profitability, but something far more important — a surge in cash generation that could reshape their growth trajectories.
In the first half of 2025, the stabilising naira has not only erased the crippling foreign exchange losses of recent years but delivered foreign exchange gains for some, pushing bottom lines into the black. Yet, analysts say the real measure of resilience is not in reported profits, but in the ability to produce hard cash from daily operations.
A Nairametrics review of five industry heavyweights — MTN Nigeria, Dangote Cement, Seplat Energy, Nestlé Nigeria, and BUA Cement — found they collectively pulled in ₦2.92 trillion in operating cash flow in the first six months of 2025. That’s 140% higher than the same period last year and even surpasses their entire cash generation for 2024 by 14%.
Profits have rebounded just as sharply: combined after-tax earnings hit ₦1.21 trillion, a dramatic reversal from the ₦403 billion loss posted in H1 2024.
Telco Triumph: MTN’s Balance Sheet Revival
MTN Nigeria emerged as a standout performer, generating ₦956 billion in operating cash flow — more than double its after-tax profit of ₦415 billion. The company’s improved fortunes come from surging data revenue, price adjustments, and easing macro pressures. Its equity position, once in deep negative territory at year-end 2024, has almost fully recovered, setting the stage for a possible dividend comeback.
Industrial Muscle: Dangote Cement’s Steady Strength
Dangote Cement matched its profit growth with cash generation, producing ₦874 billion in operating cash flow, more than twice last year’s H1 figure. The boost came from stronger earnings, leaner inventories, and tighter asset management — factors that give the company financial firepower to fund expansion while keeping shareholders happy.
Energy Play: Seplat’s Cash-Rich Strategy
Seplat Energy’s accounting profit may look modest at ₦42 billion, but the cash story is striking — ₦755 billion in operating cash flow, driven by hefty depreciation charges and robust pre-tax earnings. Management says this liquidity will go towards debt repayment, dividend continuity, and strategic reinvestment.
FMCG Recovery: Nestlé’s Quiet Turnaround
Nestlé Nigeria moved from a ₦177 billion loss last year to a ₦50.57 billion profit, but its biggest win was flipping negative operating cash flow into ₦187.6 billion positive. While dividends remain off the table for now, analysts say the strong cash position offers flexibility for growth initiatives and debt reduction.
Mixed Signals: BUA Cement’s Profit-Cash Gap
BUA Cement delivered ₦150 billion in operating cash flow against a ₦181 billion after-tax profit. The shortfall hints at operational cash pressures, potentially from working capital demands or slower receivables collection, despite a staggering 435% year-on-year profit surge.
Why Cash Matters Now
For investors, the message is clear: in 2025’s more stable economic climate, operational cash flow — not just profit — is becoming the defining metric of corporate health. With balance sheets strengthening and liquidity on the rise, the coming months could see a wave of expansion spending, debt repayments, and shareholder rewards.
Whether this cash boom is a brief upturn or the start of a sustained cycle will be tested in the second half of the year. For now, Nigeria’s corporate titans are proving that in a volatile economy, resilience is best measured not in earnings per share, but in the strength of the cash register.