Manny Ita
Nestlé Nigeria has signaled a definitive shift from crisis management to growth, following a landmark 2025 performance that saw its share price rally by 124%. This resurgence comes on the heels of a 2% decline in 2024 and a broader sector-wide boom, where the NGX consumer goods index outperformed the overall market with a 129% gain. Now firmly established as a member of the “Stocks Worth Over One Trillion Naira” (SWOOT) club with a market capitalization of N1.55 trillion, the company’s trajectory into 2026 is being closely watched by investors eager for the return of dividends, which have been suspended since 2023 due to heavy balance-sheet strain.
The company’s financial turnaround is anchored by a sharp reversal in profitability. After weathering two years of foreign exchange shocks and elevated finance costs, Nestlé Nigeria reported a profit after tax of N72.5 billion for the first nine months of 2025. Revenue grew by 33% year-on-year to reach N884.5 billion, a result of strategic pricing and resilient demand for its food and beverage products. Managing Director and CEO Wassim Elhusseini described the nine-month performance as “confirmation that the company’s return to profitability is sustainable, not temporary,” noting that the results “demonstrate that the turnaround achieved from the fourth quarter of 2024 has held through 2025, supported by strong topline growth and disciplined execution.”
To further fortify its position, management highlighted the early repayment of $20 million in inter-group foreign exchange debt as a critical move to reduce currency-related financial risks. While the company appears to have moved past “survival mode,” it continues to carry a negative retained earnings balance of approximately N171 billion. Current projections suggest that if the profit levels recorded in the third quarter of 2025 are sustained, it could take between seven to eight quarters to fully clear these accumulated losses. This timeline is vital for shareholders, as the clearing of negative retained earnings is the legal prerequisite for reopening the door to dividends.
Nestlé Nigeria: 2024 vs. 2025 Financial Performance Summary

From a valuation standpoint, the market is currently pricing Nestlé Nigeria at approximately 16 to 17 times its trailing twelve-month earnings and 7.4 times its core operating earnings (EV/EBITDA). Analysts suggest this indicates a business that is priced for recovery but still needs to prove its long-term durability. For the valuation to become more attractive, the company must address its current net profit margin of 8%, which remains below its pre-crisis average of 12%. Experts indicate that Nestlé needs to push annual profits toward the N110–N130 billion range, with earnings per share reaching approximately N140, to restore historical efficiency levels. Investors are now looking toward the full-year 2025 audited results, expected in the first quarter of 2026, as the next major indicator of whether Nestlé can maintain this momentum.