According to a report by Forbes , Dangote, Tony Elumelu and Jim Ovia lost a lot of
money as a result of the devaluation of Naira. The Forbes report by Mfonobong Nsehe
below...

A few weeks ago, the Governor of the Central Bank of Nigeria, Godwin
Emefiele, announced a nearly 10% devaluation of the Naira, Nigeria’s currency,
after admitting that a plunge in world oil prices and dwindling dollar reserves
were making it difficult to defend the value of the currency. The Naira is now
trading at N187 to $1, compared to N165 in November. In dollar terms, the
devaluation has knocked more than $40 billion off the value of Nigeria’s
economy.

Dangote is the biggest loser among Nigeria’s richest people as the Naira’s slump,
coupled with falling stock prices, has erased more than $7.8b of his fortune
since Feb, when Forbes locked in the values for its annual ranking of the World’s Billionaires.

Dangote was worth $25 billion at the time; as of market close on Tuesday, he’s
worth $17.2 billion. More than half of the drop in his fortune has happened since
early November. As of Nov. 7, Dangote was worth $21.6 billion, $4.4 billion more than now.

Here’s why: The last few weeks have been a bit of a disaster for many companies
listed on the Nigerian Stock Exchange. Several blue-chip stocks such as Dangote
Cement, Zenith Bank, Transcorp and United Bank of Africa among several others
have hit one-year-lows as a result of the fall in oil prices, a general uncertainty
regarding the 2015 general elections, Central Bank regulatory headwinds, and
weak earnings from large cap companies. These have all contributed toward
putting naira-denominated assets including equities at risk.

After Dangote, the second biggest loser among Nigeria’s ultra-rich is Tony
Elumelu, the Chairman of Heirs Holdings, an investment company. Heirs Holdings,
which is wholly-owned by Elumelu, is the controlling shareholder in Transcorp, a
publicly-listed conglomerate with interests in power production, hotels and
agriculture. Transcorp’s current market capitalization is now $700 million, down
from $1.4 billion at the beginning of November. Heirs Holdings has lost an
estimated $345 million in paper value on Transcorp, and its stake in the company
as at Monday is now worth roughly $400 million, down from $700 million.

Elumelu’s investments in other listed companies like UBA, Africa Prudential PLC
and UBA Capital have shed a little over $27 million in value.

Other big losers include Nigerian multi-millionaire banker Jim Ovia, a co-founder
of Zenith Bank. The value of his stake in the financial services provider is $240
million as of late Monday, down from more than $350 million last month. He owns
a 9% stake in the bank.

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