KEY POINTS
- Ogbechie’s Eterna stake rebounds above $20 million
- Shares rise 27 percent in nine weeks
- Recovery follows earlier $6.39million decline
Nigerian oil executive Gabriel Ogbechie has clawed back significant value in his holdings in Eterna Plc as the company’s shares rebound on the Nigerian Exchange, restoring his stake to more than $20 million after months of pressure.
Ogbechie, founder of Rainoil and chairman of Eterna, controls a 62.82 percent position in the Lagos-based energy company. Over the past 64 days, the value of his stake has risen by N6.23 billion ($4.3 million) to N29.09 billion ($20.08 million), reversing losses accumulated earlier this year.
The gain follows a sharp slump between April 30 and Aug. 18, when weak sentiment around tax policy, macroeconomic uncertainty and tighter regulation pulled Eterna’s share price lower. The decline wiped $6.39 million off Ogbechie’s holdings during that period, driving them down from N40.93 billion ($26.72 million) to N31.13 billion ($20.33 million).
Eterna’s stock recovers on stronger outlook
Founded in 1989 as Eterna Oil & Gas, the company has expanded from a small downstream operator into a broader energy business with interests in lubricants, chemicals, crude trading and retail distribution. The shift has helped cushion the firm against market swings, though its shares have remained sensitive to policy risks and shifts in investor appetite.
According to Billionaires Africa, over the past nine weeks, Eterna’s shares have surged 27.24 percent, climbing from N27.9 on Sept. 26 to N35.5. The rally pushed its market valuation above $32 million and delivered gains to long-term shareholders looking for signs of renewed stability.
For Ogbechie, the improvement lifted the value of his stake from N22.86 billion ($15.78 million) in late September to N29.09 billion ($20.08 million). The rebound suggests investors are warming to Eterna’s strategy and positions the company more firmly as a beneficiary of Nigeria’s evolving energy market.


