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The Nation Newspaper·4 min read·medium

Understanding market capitalisation through a real growth journey

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Understanding market capitalisation through a real growth journey
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This article explains that market capitalisation is more than just a stock market number, representing a company's long-term value creation and investor confidence. It emphasizes that share price growth is a result of sustained operational performance rather than just market fluctuations.

For many people, market capitalisation is little more than a number displayed at the end of a company’s name on the Nigerian Exchange (NGX) . It rises one day, falls the next, and is often treated as another piece of financial jargon reserved for analysts and stockbrokers. Yet, behind every movement in market capitalization, lies a far more important story: the story of wealth creation. Market capitalisation is often explained with a simple formula: the share price multiplied by the total number of outstanding shares. While technically accurate, that explanation barely scratches the surface. In reality, market capitalisation is the market’s collective assessment of a company’s ability to create value over time. It reflects years of investment, expansion, profitability, governance, resilience and, most importantly, investor confidence in future earnings. Some companies get listed on the Nigerian Stock Exchange , and over the years, grow in share price; clearly demonstrating long-term shareholder wealth creation. Such growth is not merely a reflection of a higher share price; it is the cumulative outcome of sustained business performance, and the confidence investors have placed in the company’s performance over time. Related News Stock Exchange highlights contributions of new listings Read Also: Nigeria to evacuate 271 more citizens from South Africa Tuesday This distinction matters because companies do not become more valuable simply because their share prices rise. Rather, their share prices rise because investors increasingly believe in the underlying business. In this regard, market capitalisation is not the engine of wealth creation; it is the scoreboard that records it. Operational growth is also then matched by financial performance. Over the years, successful companies consistently report revenues running into trillions of naira, with annual profits after tax regularly measured in hundreds of billions. Such earnings have translated into consistent dividend earnings on the Nigerian Exchange. These companies create value, not only through capital appreciation, but also through recurring income. This dual source of returns: growing share value alongside regular dividend payments, is one of the defining characteristics of sustainable long-term wealth creation. This is an important lesson for investors – particularly first-time participants in the capital market. Wealth creation rarely occurs through dramatic overnight price movements. Instead, it is typically built through years of disciplined execution by well-managed businesses. Market capitalisation simply reflects the cumulative effect of those years of value creation. It is why the world’s largest companies are rarely those that experienced a single extraordinary year; they are usually those that consistently created value over decades. --> --> TAGS: Nigerian Exchange (NGX)

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