AMCON sells stake in Ibadan DisCo for N100bn

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The Asset Management Corporation of Nigeria (AMCON) has sold it’s stake in the Ibadan Electricity Distribution Company (IBEDC).

Managing Director/Chief Executive Officer of AMCON, Gbenga Alake disclosed details of the sale during a media parley with media executives on Thursday.

Recall that the federal government in April 2024 said it would sell five power distribution companies under the management of banks and AMCON.

IBEDC, managed by AMCON, is one of five listed firms. The rest are the Abuja Electricity Distribution Company (AEDC), Benin Electricity Distribution Company, Kaduna Electricity Distribution Company, and Kano Electricity Distribution Company.

According to reports, AMCON owns 60 percent of Ibadan DisCo, while the Bureau of Public Enterprise (BPE) controls the remaining 40 percent stake.

Speaking at the conference, Alake said the corporation has sold its stake in the DisCo for N100 billion.

He said the AMCON will soon hand over to the preferred bidder.

“Today, I announce to you that Ibadan DisCo has been sold. When we came in, it has already been sold. It was sold for how much?” the AMCON boss said.

“We got in and said no, it cannot be. We said they should go and submit a new offer that we were not going to sell for that.

“At the end of the day, we got almost double of what Ibadan DisCos was going to be sold for.”

Alake said the sale has triggered legal battles, with “so many interests now fighting and writing”.

He said while the matter is in court, the AMCON is very positive that the right thing was done.

“We have sold it… and whatever is still happening in court, we will face it,” he said.

On May 15, report circulated that the African Initiative Against Abuse of Public Trust, a civil society organisation (CSO), has filed a lawsuit before the federal high court in Abuja against AMCON, Nigerian Electricity Regulatory Commission (NERC), Bureau of Public Enterprises (BPE), and the Ibadan DisCo over an alleged proposed sale of a 60 percent stake in IBEDC for $62 million.

The CSO, in the suit marked FHC/ABJ/CS/866/2025, described the sale as “secretive and illegal,” adding that the alleged amount is “corruptly undervalued”.

The African Initiative also claimed that the deal would lead to a loss of $107 million compared to the $169 million paid for the same stake during the 2013 privatisation of IBEDC.