Dangote Petroleum Refinery is seeking to raise approximately $1 billion through a private placement as it prepares for a future stock market listing, in a move that could become one of the largest pre-IPO fundraising exercises in African corporate history. According to a placement document reviewed by Reuters, the fundraising values the refinery at about $39.1 billion, underscoring growing investor confidence in the company’s role as a strategic energy asset for Nigeria and the wider continent. Investor interest has reportedly already exceeded $2 billion, suggesting strong demand ahead of the offer’s completion.
The refinery is offering 3 billion ordinary shares at $0.35 per share, with a minimum subscription requirement of one million shares, equivalent to $350,000. The shares will be subject to a 365-day lock-up period, while proceeds from the fundraising will be used for expansion projects and general corporate purposes. The 650,000-barrel-per-day refinery, which began production in 2024 and reached full operational status in 2026, has significantly reduced Nigeria’s dependence on imported refined petroleum products by producing diesel, aviation fuel, petrol, and other petroleum products locally.
The private placement forms part of a broader strategy to position the refinery for a future public offering. Recent developments have strengthened expectations of an eventual listing, including support from major financial institutions such as Standard Bank and a special waiver from Nigeria’s National Pension Commission allowing pension fund managers to participate in the proposed IPO. Industry observers view the transaction as a key test of investor appetite for large-scale African industrial assets and one of the most significant capital market opportunities on the continent in recent years.
For African capital markets, the fundraising represents more than a corporate financing exercise. Analysts say a successful private placement and eventual listing could deepen market liquidity, attract international institutional investors, and create a benchmark for future mega-listings across the continent. With plans to further expand refining, petrochemicals, logistics, and related industrial operations, the Dangote Refinery is increasingly being positioned as a cornerstone of Africa’s industrialization agenda and a symbol of the continent’s growing capacity to finance large-scale infrastructure and manufacturing projects.

