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Tracking Dividends — How Lafarge Africa Compares in 2026

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Chinyere

Well-Known Member
Mar 23, 2026
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Current share price: ₦214 ex-dividend
Dividend declared: ₦6
Dividend Yield: Is 2.73% yield attractive compared to fixed-income alternatives like T-bills (~27.5% MPR environment)?
 
Current share price: ₦214 ex-dividend
Dividend declared: ₦6
Dividend Yield: Is 2.73% yield attractive compared to fixed-income alternatives like T-bills (~27.5% MPR environment)?
At a ₦214 share price with a ₦6 dividend, the yield is about 2.8% which is tiny compared to short-term fixed-income alternatives like T-bills in a ~27.5% MPR environment.

In other words, the dividend alone isn’t attractive for income-focused investors right now. The real appeal would have to come from potential capital appreciation, not just the cash payout. It’s more a growth play than an income play in the current rate climate.
 
At a ₦214 share price with a ₦6 dividend, the yield is about 2.8% which is tiny compared to short-term fixed-income alternatives like T-bills in a ~27.5% MPR environment.

In other words, the dividend alone isn’t attractive for income-focused investors right now. The real appeal would have to come from potential capital appreciation, not just the cash payout. It’s more a growth play than an income play in the current rate climate.
Exactly! With a 2.8% yield versus T-bills yielding ~27.5% in this high-rate environment, the dividend is almost negligible as a source of income. Investors here would be chasing capital gains, not cash payouts—so the stock works more as a long-term growth play than an immediate income option.
 
Exactly! With a 2.8% yield versus T-bills yielding ~27.5% in this high-rate environment, the dividend is almost negligible as a source of income. Investors here would be chasing capital gains, not cash payouts—so the stock works more as a long-term growth play than an immediate income option.
Exactly. In a high-rate environment like this, a 2.8% yield is hardly meaningful for income. The real play here is capital appreciation—so it’s more about long-term growth than immediate cash returns.
 
Exactly. In a high-rate environment like this, a 2.8% yield is hardly meaningful for income. The real play here is capital appreciation—so it’s more about long-term growth than immediate cash returns.
In this kind of high-rate environment, 2.8% won’t move the needle for income. The real value is in price appreciation, making it a growth play rather than a cash-flow investment.