Secrets Reporters The illusion of corporate patriotism and industrial ingenuity has been shattered by personal greed and financial recklessness, as an explosive property document obtained by SecretsReporters uncovers the startling, lavish lifestyle of Nestoil Limited boss Ernest Azudialu-Obiejesi (popularly known as Ernest Obi Jackson) at a time when Nigerian financial institutions are gasping for air under the crushing weight of bad debts. While his corporate empire threatens to pull down the pillars of the Nigerian banking sector, Jackson has been living the ultimate lavida loca lifestyle in the United States, shielded by extreme luxury funded under highly questionable circumstances. The property document obtained by SecretsReporters details a real estate masterpiece located at 11703 Bistro Ln, Houston, Texas 77082. Sitting on a sprawling 0.41 acres within the prestigious Royal Oaks Country Club enclave, the single-family residence is an architectural monument to opulence. Boasting 5 massive bedrooms, 7 luxurious bathrooms, and a staggering 10,894 square feet of premium living area, the two-story estate features an elevator, a private pool, a game room, an outdoor kitchen, and a four-car garage. In local currency, this jaw-dropping estate is comfortably worth N6.3 billion Naira based on current market dynamics. Industry experts point out that Texas is a US market known for relatively low property prices compared to elite coastal hubs. Had a home of this massive magnitude and specification been acquired in luxury hotspots like Florida, New York, or California, it would have easily commanded a valuation well over N15 billion Naira. The official ownership timeline reveals that Ernest Azudialu-Obiejesi took absolute possession of this residential paradise on October 31, 2011, via a Warranty Deed. The document explicitly registers the owners as Azudialu Ernest Obiejesi and his wife, Obiejesi Maryann (also known in corporate circles as Nnenna Obiejesi). The timing of this multi-billion Naira luxury acquisition is not just suspicious; it is damning. The years 2010 and 2011 represented a period of unprecedented cash flows and massive capital mobilization for Jackson’s flagship companies, Nestoil Limited and Neconde Energy Limited. Between 2010 and 2011, Nestoil Limited secured major gas pipeline and offshore facility contracts from the Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation (NNPC) and the Shell Petroleum Development Company (SPDC). Chief among these was a significant portion of the massive $1.1 billion Nembe Creek Trunkline (NCTL) Replacement Project, where Nestoil was handed contracts to construct varying diameters of pipes across challenging riverine and swampy terrains in the Niger Delta. During this exact same window, on August 31, 2010, Jackson’s Nestoil secured the NGC-Alaoji and Owaza Gas Pipeline Projects from the Nigerian Gas Company (NGC), an NNPC subsidiary. The project, meant to supply gas to National Integrated Power Plants (NIPPs), was commissioned in May 2011. Concurrently, Nestoil acted as a subcontractor for the Nembe Creek Offshore Field Logistics Base (FLB), delivering 13 complex support buildings for offshore workers, commissioned in November 2010. As state funds poured into Nestoil for infrastructure development, Jackson’s second corporate vehicle, Neconde Energy Limited, was making massive waves in the banking halls. In 2011, the very same year the Houston megamansion was acquired, Neconde Energy secured an astonishing $558 million loan and debt facility, alongside an additional $150 million bridge financing arrangement. This colossal financial war chest of over $700 million was strictly approved to fund the acquisition of a 45% stake in Oil Mining Lease (OML) 42 from Shell, Total, and Nigerian Agip Oil Company. With billions of Naira flowing in from national oil contracts and hundreds of millions of dollars being pulled from commercial banks under the guise of corporate expansion, Ernest Obi Jackson’s personal real estate portfolio magically expanded across the Atlantic. While the Nigerian public was led to believe that these funds were being utilized to build indigenous capacity in the oil and gas sector, a N6.3 billion sanctuary was quietly being secured in Texas. Fast forward to May 2026, and the house of cards has come crashing down on the Nigerian economy. The corporate greed of yesterday has transformed into a systemic financial crisis today. Ernest Azudialu-Obiejesi’s corporate empire is currently the primary driver behind an unprecedented economic gridlock, with Nestoil Limited and its affiliates defaulting on a monumental N2.9 trillion ($2.1 billion) syndicated loan. The default is so severe and toxic to the nation’s financial stability that the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN), under Governor Olayemi Cardoso, has taken the unprecedented step of blocking dividend payments to shareholders at three of the country’s major banking institutions: United Bank for Africa (UBA), Access Holdings, and FCMB. The apex bank has issued a firm directive barring affected lenders from distributing earnings to investors until they have fully provided for their non-performing loan (NPL) exposure to Jackson’s troubled entities. The mathematical consequence of Nestoil’s financial delinquency is a colossal N2.16 trillion impairment charge ripped directly from the 2025 financial statements of five tier-one and tier-two lenders, including Access, UBA, Ecobank, FirstHoldCo, and FCMB. The specific breakdowns of how individual banks have been bled by this historic default paint a horrifying picture of corporate irresponsibility. United Bank for Africa (UBA) is forced to absorb loan loss provisions of N331 billion ($240.7 million) in its full-year 2025 results. The bank declined to pay a final dividend, causing its share price to plummet by 10% upon the opening of trading on Monday, April 27. Access Holdings witnessed its impairment charges on customer loans surge by an astronomical 209% to N287.3 billion ($208.9 million). Despite posting a record N743 billion profit after tax, the bank had to decline a final dividend to absorb Jackson’s toxic credit. FCMB Group watched its net impairment losses double to N92.5 billion ($67.3 million), forcing the group to contract its loan book defensively and completely withhold its FY2025 dividend. While everyday Nigerian shareholders are denied their hard-earned dividends and bank valuations take a massive beating on the floor of the Nigerian Exchange, Ernest Obi Jackson remains untouched, insulated by the sprawling walls of his Houston country club manor. The anatomy of this debt reveals a calculated exploitation of the Nigerian […]
.. Exclusive: Living Lavida Loca: How Nestoil Boss Ernest Obi Jackson Took Banks Loan To Fund Company But Acquired N6.3 Billion US Home first appeared on Secret Reporters.

