The Okomu Oil Palm Company Plc has delivered another standout performance, posting audited full-year 2025 results that underscore its entrenched position as one of Nigeria’s two largest palm oil producers alongside Presco Plc.
Pretax profit surged 69.26% to N90.6 billion from N53.5 billion in 2024, while post-tax profit rose 45.03% to N57.9 billion. Revenue expanded 52.18% to N198.1 billion from N130.2 billion, fueled by higher sales of palm oil, rubber, and processed products amid firm domestic demand and improved international pricing.
Domestic operations in Nigeria generated N172.6 billion of the total, reflecting Okomu’s deep roots in the local market, while exports contributed N25.5 billion—evidence of the company’s growing global footprint even as it prioritizes supply to Nigerian refiners and manufacturers.
Okomu has maintained its leadership in Nigeria’s palm oil market and broader agricultural sector through decades of disciplined plantation development, operational efficiency, and strategic diversification. Established in 1976 as a federal government pilot project in Edo State, now Nigeria’s leading palm oil-producing region, accounting for roughly 12% of national output, the company was privatized in 1990 and has since scaled to become a benchmark operator.
It controls approximately 19,000 hectares of mature oil palm and over 7,300 hectares of rubber plantations, supported by two high-capacity mills capable of processing more than 80,000 tons of crude palm oil (CPO) annually. In 2025, the company benefited from continued yield improvements, with fresh fruit bunch (FFB) output rising through better extraction rates (around 24%) and third-party purchases from outgrowers, helping it capture a meaningful share of the country’s 1.57 million tons of total palm oil production.
What sets Okomu apart is its vertically integrated model: owning the full value chain from planting to milling and marketing allows it to control quality, reduce intermediary costs, and respond quickly to market shifts.
The company’s long-standing technical partnership with Socfin has brought international best practices in agronomy, while ongoing replanting programmes, such as the hundreds of hectares renewed each year, ensure long-term productivity gains.
Analysts have consistently highlighted Okomu’s superior margins and cash discipline compared with peers, driven by these efficiencies even as raw material costs climbed 30.47% to N29.5 billion (largely from plantation upkeep of N10.9 billion) and employee benefits rose to N31.03 billion amid operational scaling and a 50% staff salary adjustment in prior years.
Sustainability and community engagement have also been central to Okomu’s resilience. As an RSPO member, the company integrates environmental safeguards, while its inclusive smallholder model partners with thousands of nearby farmers to secure additional FFB supply and boost rural livelihoods. Corporate social responsibility spending supports education, skills training, and infrastructure in 29 neighboring communities, reinforcing social license to operate in a sector often challenged by land-use tensions.
These efforts have helped Okomu navigate macroeconomic headwinds—naira volatility, inflation, and high energy costs—better than many peers, turning currency gains (N8.7 billion in realized forex income, 69.53% of other income) into a competitive edge.
On the cost front, the company absorbed increases in raw materials, depreciation (N21.9 billion), finance costs (N4.6 billion), and other expenses (N34.7 billion), offset partly by a N1.7 billion fair value gain on biological assets. Income tax of N32.6 billion left post-tax profit at N57.9 billion.
The balance sheet remains solid: total assets grew to N138.8 billion, led by property, plant and equipment of N61.8 billion, while liabilities rose to N90.04 billion, with trade payables at N14.5 billion. Shareholders’ equity stood at N48.8 billion, with retained earnings of N48.9 billion.
In reward for shareholders, the board approved a final dividend of N15 per 50 kobo share, payable May 26, 2026, to those on record as of April 27, 2026. When combined with interim payouts, the full-year distribution reaches an attractive N55 per share, continuing Okomu’s reputation for generous returns.
Market reaction on the Nigerian Exchange has been subdued in the immediate aftermath, with the stock holding steady at N1,765.00. Yet the longer-term picture tells a different story: year-to-date gains of 61.19%, with more than 19 million shares traded, reflect sustained investor conviction in Okomu’s fundamentals.
In a sector still struggling to meet domestic demand, Okomu’s track record of consistent volume growth, margin expansion, and export diversification positions it as a cornerstone of national agribusiness strategy.






