• When Jennifer Okpechi (31) moved to the UK in 2023, she had no idea that the stock market would become her lifeline. What started as a side hustle back in Nigeria has now grown into a full-time career that has grown her money by almost £100,000 in just two years. Here’s how she made it work.

    Living in the UK as a Full-Time Stock Investor

    I moved to the UK in 2023 for my master’s degree. The plan was simple: come here to study and then return home. But after settling in, I decided to stay a bit longer. I often describe it as being on an extended holiday.

    I started out in Portsmouth, where I completed a postgraduate degree in Digital Business Management. Like many other immigrants, I worked in healthcare support jobs before securing a full-time consulting role, which I eventually quit when sponsorship wasn’t forthcoming. In April 2025, I relocated to Manchester, hoping it would expose me to bigger opportunities and, ideally, a job with visa sponsorship.

    That hasn’t happened yet. I’ve been without a 9-to-5 for four months now. Instead, I doubled down on investing, trading stock options and steadily growing my portfolio. Since moving to the UK, I’ve built my stock portfolio to nearly £100,000.

    It may look like a sudden leap, but it’s really the product of years of practice and discipline. I’d been learning about investing since I was 16, when my parents drilled the habit into me. Money working for me always felt natural because I grew up watching it happen. My dad was deeply invested in real estate, while my mum preferred financial instruments.

    That curiosity led me to experiment early. In my first year of university, I got into fixed-income products like treasury bills, eurobonds, and FGN bonds. The returns were high, steady, and reliable. Those investments became my foundation, bringing in a stream of passive income I could count on, and partly funding my relocation alongside my parents’ support.

    Becoming a full-time investor in the UK wasn’t the original plan, but it became the most practical one. My attempts to secure sponsorship at my former company failed, and job applications were exhausting. Recruiters only seemed interested in my visa status, and the constant rejections wore me down. Job hunting felt like a job in itself, only without the paycheck. And I knew I had skills I could monetise without waiting for anyone’s approval.

    So I made a choice: stop chasing jobs, refine my trading skills and rebalance my investments, while establishing my presence as an investment thought leader online. When I ran the numbers, I realised I could live comfortably if I consistently made £100–£200 daily from the market, mostly through stock options trading. That became the goal.

    It wasn’t easy. I had to unlearn and relearn strategies and commit fully. But it’s finally paying off. Now, I earn up to £200 or more daily from trading.

    Since quitting my job in February, this has been my reality. If I keep going at this pace, I can eventually sponsor myself — in UK terms, that means proving I can fund my stay without an employer. I still have about a year left on my visa, but the consistency of my income, from both trading and the fintech AI startup I’m building, puts me in a strong position.

    That stability also gives me options: I could apply for a Global Talent Visa, set up my startup to sponsor me directly, or even explore opportunities in other countries. Either way, I won’t be boxed in.

    Portfolio Breakdown: The Road to £100k 

    My first real taste of the stock market came in 2019, when MTN launched on the Nigerian Stock Exchange. That was my very first stock purchase.

    Around the same time, Bamboo, a Nigerian app that allowed direct access to U.S. stocks, also launched. I signed up immediately and bought my first shares.

    My First Stock Purchases:

    • $500 in Apple
    • $800 in Tesla
    • ₦300k in MTN
    • ₦700k spread across Okomu Oil, Dangote Cement & tier-one banks

    Back then, I was a business development manager for a luxury goods company, earning about ₦500,000–₦700,000 a month plus bonuses. Almost everything I earned went into investments. 

    At first, stocks were just one slice of a larger portfolio. But soon, I realised their unique edge: unlike treasury bills or bonds, they gave me two returns — capital gains when prices went up, and dividends when companies paid them out. That combination hooked me. Stocks became the centrepiece of my investment journey, not just a hedge against inflation but a vehicle where money could multiply faster than I had ever seen.

    But when I moved, I had to start building my portfolio almost from scratch. 

    My old Bamboo account still holds about $14k worth of stocks I’d built over the years, but I leave that largely untouched to grow long-term.

    In the UK, I manage my portfolio through platforms like Trading 212, eToro and Robinhood, which offer commission-free trading and instant buying and selling. For the first time, investing felt less like a side hustle and more like a full-fledged commitment.

    These platforms also introduced me to stock options trading, which I never had access to in Nigeria.

    Stock investing involves buying and holding shares to grow wealth over time, while stock options trading is short-term. I trade on the rise and fall of stock prices, and that’s how I currently make around £200 a day.

    When I moved to the UK, I didn’t arrive with a big pot of money to throw into the stock market. I started with about $2,000 and topped up month after month. 

    Where The Money Came From:

    • My previous 9-to-5 as a digital business consultant
    • My paid investment group of 300+ members

    I don’t leave money lying around. Even £20 sitting in my account for a few days feels wasted; I’d rather put it in the market. My friends joke that if I say I’m broke, it just means I’ve invested all my money. They’re not wrong.

    That discipline helped my stock portfolio reach £100k in over two years — not just from what I put in, but from capital gains, reinvested profits, and steady growth. 

    My Current Portfolio (2025, £100K)

    Right now, I balance between growth and income stocks:

    • 75% Growth Stocks: Palantir, Tesla, Nvidia, Broadcom, Netflix, Meta

    • 25% High-Yield Income Stocks: REIT funds, ETFs, Index funds

    Options trading has been another big part of my growth. I don’t trade every day, but I aim to make £100–200 when I do. That consistency, dollar-cost averaging, and avoiding greed have kept me profitable. 

    Key Wins in 2025

    This year, my biggest stock market wins came from Palantir and Netflix: 

    • Palantir: I put in £5,000 last year and made £30,000 when the stocks surged

    • Netflix: I bought during a dip in early 2025, and made over £10,000 

    My portfolio is at its peak this year. My strategy is simple: keep rebalancing, buy good companies’ stocks at the right time, and never panic sell. Losses are temporary; the value always comes back if you hold strong stocks.

    I’ve seen firsthand how fast money can grow once it’s working for you. Over time, investing has shifted from curiosity to obsession, and now it’s the backbone of my dream to retire early and live free.

    The Future

    I’m not where I want to be yet financially. I think big and like chasing big things; that’s why I’m still hustling. People think because I don’t have a 9-to-5, I must have it all figured out, but honestly, I’m still working towards my FIRE number — the amount of money I need invested to cover my living expenses indefinitely without working. In other words, the point at which my investments generate enough passive income to fund my lifestyle comfortably. I don’t have a specific amount in mind, but I know I’m not there yet.

    If I moved back to Nigeria today, that number would already feel within reach; I’d probably be living like a baller. But in the UK, the bar is much higher. Lifestyle costs, taxes, and inflation all push the target further out, making the journey more demanding.

    For me, success is simple: peace, freedom, happiness, good food, and the ability to sleep without stress. That’s what I’m chasing.

    When I pick stocks, I keep it practical. I only buy companies backed by strong products, services, and leadership. If a company isn’t adapting to new technology, especially AI, it’ll fall behind. I ask: Does this company solve a real problem? Even if I don’t need the product, do others rely on it? That mindset has paid off, but investing isn’t about greed. It’s about conviction, patience, and discipline.

    In the next 3–5 years, I want to be job-optional, living off my portfolio as a full-time investor while scaling my startup. I’m building Money Bestie, an AI-powered financial coaching app. It’s the tool I wish I had when I started, giving people personalised, practical financial advice.

    At the end of the day, life itself is one long gamble. Investing taught me that while you can’t escape risk, you can decide the kind you take. Learning to choose my risks with intention has transformed my life in ways I never imagined.


    Next Read: How I Landed a $175k/Year Investment Banking Job as a Nigerian in the US


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  • Nigeria’s stock market has its ups and downs. But if you had put some money in the right stocks in 2022, you might be sitting on millions today. Others? Not so much.

    So, we looked at how 10 major stocks have performed since 2022. To help you make sense of it, we also spoke to an investment expert for insights. The big question is, are they worth your money now?

    What does it mean to invest in stocks?

    Think of it like this: 

    • Stocks: A stock represents ownership in a company. When you buy a stock, you own a small piece of that company.
    • Shares: Shares are the individual units of a stock. If a company has 1 million shares and you own 1,000 units, you own 0.1% of the company.

    The terms “stocks” and “shares” are often used interchangeably.

    • Equities investing: This is the act of buying shares (or stocks) in a publicly listed company. When a company needs funds, it can raise money by selling shares to the public. Investors who buy these shares become part-owners of the company and share in its profits or losses.

    How do you make money from stocks?

    • Dividends: Some Nigerian companies share their profits with shareholders as dividends, usually paid twice a year.
    • Capital gains (and losses): If a stock’s price increases, you can sell it for a profit. For example, if you bought shares at ₦10 per unit and the price rises to ₦20, you’ve doubled your money. But stocks can also lose value. If the price drops to ₦5 and you sell, you’ve taken a “capital loss.

    Unlike lower-risk investment options like FGN bonds, money market mutual funds, or savings accounts, stocks are medium-risk—they can rise, fall, or even crash unexpectedly. 

    10 Nigerian Stocks That’ve Made (Or Wrecked) Investors Since 2022

    We tracked the performance of 10 major Nigerian stocks in 2022 vs. 2025, using historical data from Investing.com, a platform that monitors global and local financial markets. Over the past three years, Nigeria has faced economic shocks, inflation spikes, naira devaluation, and forex volatility, alongside shifting monetary and government policies. Many leading Nigerian companies have also suffered significant foreign exchange (forex) losses, all of which have shaped stock performance.

    Here’s how a ₦100,000 investment in these Nigerian stocks would have changed between 2022 and 2025, showing whether the investment grew in value or took a loss. 

    1. BUA Foods

    According to historical data from Investing.com, BUA Foods traded at ₦61.40/unit on March 11, 2022. Today, it’s up to ₦376.20/unit, which is a 512.70% increase.

    If you had invested ₦100k in 2022, you’d have bought 1,628 units of BUA Foods stock. And they’d be worth ₦612,453.60 today. This means a ₦512,453.60 gain in three years.

    • March 11, 2022: ₦61.40/unit.
    • March 11, 2025: ₦376.20/unit.
    • Capital gain on ₦100K: ₦512,453.60.

    2. Nestlé

    Nestlé traded at ₦1,435/unit in March 2022. Today, it’s down to ₦1,009/unit, a 29.65% drop.

    ₦100k would have bought you 69 units of Nestlé stock in 2022. But they’d be worth  ₦69,621 today. This means a ₦30,379 loss over three years.

    • March 11, 2022: ₦1,435/unit.
    • March 11, 2025: ₦1,009/unit.
    • Capital loss on ₦100K: ₦30,379.

    3. GTCO

    GTCO stock has more than doubled in three years. In 2022, it traded at ₦22.40/unit. Today, it’s at ₦59.95/unit, a 167.63% increase.

    Investing ₦100k in 2022 would have gotten you approximately 4,464 units of GTCO’s stocks, which would now be worth ₦267,616.80. That’s a ₦167,616.80 profit. 

    • March 11, 2022: ₦22.40/unit.
    • March 11, 2025: ₦59.95/unit.
    • Capital gain on ₦100K: ₦167,616.80.

    4. Dangote Cement Plc

    Dangote Cement has delivered steady growth over the past three years. In March 2022, it traded at ₦273.50/unit. Today, it’s at ₦480/unit: a 75.5% increase.

    A ₦100K investment in 2022 (≈ 365 units) would now be worth ₦175,200, giving you a  ₦75,200 return. 

    • March 11, 2022: ₦273.50/unit.
    • March 11, 2025: ₦480/unit.
    • Capital gain on ₦100K: ₦75,200.

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    5. Airtel Africa

    Airtel Africa’s stock price has grown significantly over three years. In March 2022, it traded at ₦1,260/unit. Today, it’s grown by 71.18% to  ₦2,156.90/unit.

    If you had invested ₦100K in 2022, you’d have bought 79 units. At today’s price, your investment would be worth ₦170,395.10, giving you a ₦70,395.10 gain.

    • March 11, 2022: ₦1,260/unit.
    • March 11, 2025: ₦2,156.90/unit.
    • Capital gain on ₦100K: ₦70,395.10.

    6. Seplat Petroleum

    Seplat petroleum stock has delivered exceptional growth over the past three years. In March 2022, it traded at ₦990/unit. Today, it’s at ₦5,700/unit, a jaw-dropping 475.76% increase.

    You’d have bought 101 units with ₦100k in 2022. Today, those units would be worth  ₦575,700, giving you a ₦475,700 appreciation. 

    • March 11, 2022: ₦990/unit.
    • March 11, 2025: ₦5,700/unit.
    • Capital gain on ₦100K: ₦475,700.

    7. Transcorp Hotels

    In 2022, Transcorp Hotels stocks traded at ₦5.38/unit. By 2025, it had surged to ₦126.10/unit, reflecting a 2,243.84% increase over three years.

    A ₦100,000 investment in 2022 would have been enough for approximately 18,587 units. Today, those shares would be valued at ₦2,343,820.70, marking a ₦2,243,820.70 increase in value.

    • March 11, 2022: ₦5.38/unit.
    • March 11, 2025: ₦126.10/unit.
    • Capital gain on ₦100K: ₦2,243,820.70.

    8. MRS (Chevron)

    Back in 2022, MRS (Chevron) stock traded at ₦12.04/unit. If you had invested ₦100,000, you would have secured 8,305 units. With the stock now at ₦178/unit, your investment would have grown to ₦1,478,290, delivering a ₦1,378,290 profit and a 1,378.40% return.

    • March 11, 2022: ₦12.04/unit.
    • March 11, 2025: ₦178/unit.
    • Capital gain on ₦100K: ₦1,378,290.

    9. Total Nigeria Plc

    If you had put ₦100,000 into Total Nigeria stocks in 2022, you would have acquired 377 units at ₦264.90/unit. With the stock now at ₦637/unit, your shares would be valued at  ₦240,149, giving you a ₦140,149 increase and a 140.15% return.

    • March 11, 2022: ₦264.90/unit.
    • March 11, 2025: ₦637/unit.
    • Capital gain on ₦100K: ₦140,149.

    10. Guinness Nigeria 

    Guinness Nigeria experienced modest growth over the same period. If you had invested ₦100,000 at ₦65/unit in 2022, you would have bought 1,538 units. At today’s price of ₦79.90/unit, your investment would now be worth ₦122,886.20, giving you a ₦22,886.20 appreciation and a 22.92% return.

    • March 11, 2022: ₦65/unit.
    • March 11, 2025: ₦79.90/unit.
    • Capital gain on ₦100K: ₦22,886.20. 

    Note: On the Nigerian Exchange (NGX), shares are bought in whole numbers, so these calculations show the maximum number of whole shares ₦100,000 could buy. For example, at ₦1,435 per Nestlé share, you’d get 69 shares (₦99,015), not 69.69 units. Any leftover cash stays uninvested.

    *Potential dividends were excluded for simplicity and to keep the focus on stock price changes over time.

    Is It Giving ‘Buy’ or ‘Bye’?

    With all the market swings, is now the time to invest, or should you sit this one out? 

    Efe Ogunnaiya, a multi-asset portfolio manager with 25 years of experience analysing financial markets, shares her key stock investment principles to help you make the right call:

    • There’s always an opportunity in the stock market if you pick wisely:
      Not every stock is worth buying, but as long as a company is financially strong and well-managed, it can be a good investment. 
    • If the price drops, buy more:
      Stock prices fluctuate. if you believe in a stock’s long-term value, don’t panic. Instead, keep buying to lower your overall cost per share.
    • Diversify; don’t put all your eggs in one basket:
      Spread your money across different asset classes, industries, and, if possible, countries. A good rule of thumb: never invest more than 25% of your money in a single stock, industry, or company.
    • Cash is also a strategy:
      Don’t sleep on cash! Keeping some money in a savings account or low-risk investments like Treasury Bills (T-Bills) or Money Market Funds gives you flexibility.
    • No time to manage stocks? Hire a fund manager:
      If stock picking isn’t your thing, you can invest in an equity mutual fund or hire a fund manager (if you’ve got more money to spare). This way, professionals make the decisions for you.

    Ogunnaiya also highlights that the “Financial services, oil and gas, and telecoms industries appear promising for long-term growth” in the stock market. 

    At the same time, she warns that investing isn’t without risks, “Make sure you invest only through SEC-licensed entities and only invest in what you understand.”

    How to Start Investing in Nigerian Stocks

    You can’t just walk into the Nigerian Stock Exchange (NGX) building on Lagos Island and buy stocks or shares yourself. You need an intermediary — a licensed stockbroker. There are over 200 SEC-registered and NGX-certified stockbroking firms in Nigeria, and you can find a full list on the SEC or the NGX website.

    To start, you’ll open a stockbroking account with one of these firms. Once your account is set up, you’ll receive login details to their platform, where you can browse available stocks and buy shares in any company you’re interested in.

    What to Consider Before Investing in Nigerian Stocks

    Ogunnaiya explains that before investing, you should assess the following: 

    • Economic State: How is the economy performing? Are there sectors that remain strong regardless of economic conditions?
    • Industry Outlook: What’s the general state of the industry? Is it growing or struggling?
    • Dividend History: Does the company have a record of paying dividends? If so, how frequently?
    • Stock Performance: How has the stock price moved over the past three to five years? Past growth doesn’t guarantee future gains, but it’s a useful indicator.
    • Company Leadership: If you don’t trust the company’s leadership, you might want to think twice before investing.
    • Financial Health: Look at the company’s profit history, asset size, and overall financial performance over the past three to five years.

    You can find data on stock prices, dividend history, and financial performance on platforms like Investing.com or the NGX website.

    Bottom Line

    Stocks can be a great way to build wealth, but they come with risks. If you can think long-term and handle market swings, they might be worth it. But if you prefer stability, safer investment options like money market funds or Federal Government of Nigeria bonds (FGN) bonds could be a better choice. The key is knowing your risk tolerance and investing accordingly.

    Some stocks have soared, others have stumbled, but the Nigerian stock market is still full of opportunities for those who know where to look.

    Join 1,000+ Nigerians, finance experts and industry leaders at The Naira Life Conference by Zikoko for a day of real, raw conversations about money and financial freedom. Click here to buy a ticket and secure your spot at the money event of the year, where you’ll get the practical tools to 10x your income, network with the biggest players in your industry, and level up in your career and business.


    Also Read: These 10 Money Market Mutual Funds Are Making Nigerians Rich in 2025


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  • In 1998, this 53-year-old retiree took charge of her financial freedom with small, consistent investments. Over the years, she strategically grew her assets and positioned herself for an early, comfortable retirement. 

    This is how she made it work in Nigeria. 

    As Told To Aisha Bello

    Model not affiliated with the story. Actual subject is anonymous.

    I spent my entire career as an accountant in an insurance company, helping people plan for retirement. During my active years, I saw firsthand what happens when people don’t prepare early enough — the anxiety, the regrets, and the desperate attempts to stretch out insufficient pensions. 

    I was 26 when I received my first paycheck, and I never wanted that to be me.

    Also, I didn’t grow up rich. From a young age, I understood that if I wanted financial security when I was older, I had to build it myself. So, while most people were thinking about how to spend their salary, I was thinking about my retirement plans.

    That’s why, from my first paycheck, I made a non-negotiable rule: save and invest 40% of my income, no matter what.

    27 years later, I retired at 53 as a director, with a portfolio worth over ₦1 billion spread across real estate, stocks, bonds, forex, and fixed deposits. Over the next 20 years, I’ll also receive a monthly pension of ₦500,000.

    This didn’t happen by luck. It was the result of deliberate decisions, smart investments, and some hard lessons along the way.

    Breaking down my Retirement Portfolio

    Here’s what my assets look like today:

    Now, let’s talk about how I built each of these.


    Fixed Deposit: The early money move that made a difference (₦65M)

    In 1997, I started my career as an entry-level accountant, earning ₦16,000 per month. At this point, the Nigerian minimum wage was ₦450 before President Olusegun Obasanjo passed a new wage bill to give workers ₦5,500 in 2000. 

    At the time, I wasn’t investing; I was just saving aggressively. But everything changed when a friend at National Bank introduced me to fixed deposits. 

    That small decision laid the foundation for the rest of my financial journey. 

    My organisation had a unique payment structure: I received a portion of my salary monthly, while the rest was paid upfront at the beginning of the year. My basic salary (₦16,000) accounted for 60% of my total income (₦26,000 per month), while the remaining 40%, which covered housing and furniture allowances, was paid in bulk annually.

    In 1998, I decided to take a risk with my annual upfront salary, which was about ₦128,000. 

    Subsequently, I saved my annual upfronts in fixed deposits with the National Bank until the bank failed to meet the Central Bank of Nigeria’s capital requirement in 2002. The CBN took control, and three years later, the bank was acquired by Wema Bank. Afterwards, I made fixed deposits with different banks to grow my savings.

    Today, I no longer use banks for fixed deposits — except for VFD Microfinance Bank, where I’m a shareholder. Instead, I invest through asset management companies like Vetiva, FSDH and Anchoria because of their higher interest rates.

    For instance, GT Bank’s fixed deposit rate is 5.25% per year, and FSDH’s returns can be up to 10% per annum, depending on the investment amount.

    Right now, I have ₦65 million in fixed deposits and earn fixed interest annually.  

    Real Estate: My biggest asset class (₦500M)

    I’ve always believed that owning property is key to financial security in Nigeria. 

    In 2001, I bought my first property in Isolo, Lagos, for ₦7 million. When I sold it in 2008, its value had appreciated to ₦100 million, a 1328% increase. 

    In 2009, I bought a plot of land in Ajah for ₦3 million. Seven years later, I sold it for ₦45 million. The value skyrocketed because of rapid development in the area; new housing projects were being built, and the road network improved significantly, driving more people to rent homes there. 

    I currently own three properties in Lagos worth a combined ₦500 million and earn ₦10 million in rental income from each property annually. 

    FGN Bonds: My safety net (₦300M)

    I prioritise security, so Federal Government of Nigeria (FGN) bonds have always been part of my plan. And as an accountant, I’ve always known about them.

    FGN bonds are managed by the Debt Management Office (DMO), which allows the government to borrow money from citizens in exchange for interest payments. 

    Regular FGN bonds require a minimum of  ₦50 million, and these predominantly long-term investments range from three to fifty years.

    FGN Savings Bonds, which are short-term, offer a more accessible option. They have a minimum subscription of  ₦5,000 and a two- to three-year term. Once the bond matures, the principal is returned.

    With FGN Savings Bonds, I receive quarterly interest (coupon payments), while longer-term FGN bonds pay interest twice a year. At the beginning of every month, the government issues savings bonds for those who want to buy; the most recent interest rate was around 18%.

    My children also have FGN Savings Bonds, and they’re already earning passive income, with quarterly interest payments deposited into their accounts. Since they don’t need the funds, I reinvest their earnings to compound their wealth over time.

    To get FGN bonds, you need an agent. I have bought through GT Bank, FSDH, and Vetiva in the past, but I currently use Afrinvest. I reviewed their financials while working, so I knew it was safe to go through them.

    I hold both short- and long-term FGN bonds worth ₦300 million. 

    Foreign Exchange Investment: Beating inflation with hard currency  ($25,000)

    For foreign exchange investments, I use Zenith Bank and FSDH for fixed deposits and Vetiva for my Eurobond investments. This is different from online forex trading, where people actively buy and sell various currencies to make a profit. Forex trading is high-risk and requires active monitoring.

    I focus on foreign currency investments by depositing dollars in fixed-income instruments like Eurobonds and dollar-denominated fixed deposits. This protects my money from naira devaluation while earning a stable return.

    I started investing in forex two years ago when the naira started losing value. My initial investment of $23,500 has since grown by 6%.

    Stocks: Slow and steady growth (₦22M)

    I invested heavily in stocks until the 2008 stock market crash changed everything. The market dropped by at least 70%, and people lost their lives over the financial ruin. At the time, I had invested ₦500,000 and later bought rights issues worth ₦4 million to increase my shares. Rights issues allow existing shareholders to buy more shares when a company wants to raise capital.

    The Nigerian stock market has only recently regained some stability. After the 2008 crash, I stopped actively investing in stocks, though I held the ones I already owned. I still receive annual dividends from solid companies like GTB, First Bank, Flour Mills, Nestlé, and Transcorp Hotels. At this point, I’ve already gotten my initial investment and continue to earn from them.

    The only new stock I’ve bought recently is VFD Microfinance because I trust the company’s growth potential. I initially invested ₦5 million, then bought their rights issue for ₦8 million. 

    Today, my stock portfolio is valued at ₦22 million.

    Anyone interested in stocks can’t just walk into the Nigerian Stock Exchange (NGX) building on Lagos Island to buy shares; you need a licensed stockbroker. They handle buying and selling on your behalf. I used to use Meristem but now work with FSL Capital Limited.

    Pension: The passive income that gives me peace of mind (₦500K/Month)

    In 2004, the federal government introduced a new pension scheme that required me to contribute 8% and my employer 10% of my salary towards retirement. 

    I also had the option for voluntary pension contributions, which I locked into because it meant more pension income. Before this, we had a fixed system where every employee had to pay ₦4 monthly, while the employer added  ₦10. That didn’t do anything, but the new scheme meant my pension was directly proportional to what I earned in service.

    When it comes to pensions in Nigeria, you can either choose Programmed Withdrawal (PW) or  Annuity. With Programmed Withdrawal, you receive a set amount of money for a set period, say 10 or 20 years, after which the payments stop. 

    An annuity, on the other hand, is paid for life. When you opt for an annuity, your money is transferred to a life insurance company that administers income until you die. This type of pension is for life but can be transferable to living family members based on the specific terms of the contract.

    I opted for Programmed Withdrawal because, as an accountant, I prefer to have control over my finances. With an annuity, I’d need to transfer my entire balance to an insurance company and receive fixed payments for life. I don’t need any company to manage my money; I have the experience. With Programmed Withdrawal, my funds remain invested, and  I can still benefit from returns. 

    I now receive a monthly pension of ₦500,000 and will continue to receive that for the next twenty years. 

    In addition, I bought a personal pension plan from the insurance company where I worked. A year before retiring, I stopped the plan, took my money, and invested it in other assets.


    Investment Diversification: Not all eggs in one basket

    If a project requires funding, I liquidate some of my investments to finance it. Then, when I have more funds available, I’ll reinvest.

    But the rules are different with government bonds. If I invest in a two- or three-year bond,  I wait until maturity to access my funds. Although I can sell the bond, it’s not a liquid asset, and I won’t get my money back immediately.

    In contrast, fixed deposits with banks are more flexible. If I invest in a one-month fixed deposit, I can withdraw my funds at the end of the month or even before that if needed.

    I’ve had real estate projects that required funding, so I terminated some investments to finance them. Then, when I generated returns, I reinvested what I took out. 

    I believe in diversifying my investments, so I don’t put all my eggs in one basket. I mix fixed deposits, government savings bonds, real estate, and shares. I’m also into foreign exchange investments. If I decide to run a business now and invest some funds, that’s diversification.

    This way, I can rely on others for support if anything happens in one sector.

    My Two Cents on Investing For The Future 

    Economic challenges are constant – inflation, downturns, market volatility, and instability have always existed and won’t stop. Regardless of any economic downturn, you must plan and invest towards your retirement to ensure a secure financial future. My two cents:

    • Start early, no matter how small. 
    • The best time to start investing is with your first paycheck.
    • Prioritise investments over saving. Think of savings as money you can access anytime, but it doesn’t grow much. And investments as money locked for a period, earning higher interest.
    • When you save, your money sits in the bank, earning minimal interest, but when you invest, you put your money to work.
    • Don’t worry if the interest seems small at first; consistency is key.
    • Increase your investments as your income grows.
    • Aim to save at least 30% of your salary.
    • If 30% is too much, start lower and increase it gradually.

    Bottom Line

    Don’t be greedy about earning high interest rates. Explore low-risk investments, start investing early, be consistent, and aim to invest at least 30% of your income. 


    Editor’s note: This subject chose to keep her legal name and information confidential for privacy reasons, and Zikoko has verified her assets and earnings via income statements and necessary documentation.



    ALSO READ: I’m 22, and This Is How I Grew My Money by 29% in 2024

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  • Every week, Zikoko seeks to understand how people move the Naira in and out of their lives. Some stories will be struggle-ish, others will be bougie. All the time, it’ll be revealing.


    Nairalife #295 bio

    What’s your earliest memory of money?

    It’s probably the standard money gifts from visiting relatives when I was a child. Of course, my mum did the whole, “Let me keep it for you,” and I never saw it again.

    Ah. The Nigerian child’s rite of passage

    I also remember my parents giving me ₦20 for snacks in primary school, which wasn’t bad because it could get me four ₦5 biscuits. But I always noticed that other students had more, and I wanted more too. 

    For instance, I really liked a drink called “Tandi,” but it cost about ₦25, and I couldn’t afford it on the ₦20 my parents gave me. I could only indulge when I chose not to buy as many snacks to save money. Others didn’t have to do that. 

    I also noticed that my mates’ parents dropped them off at school in cars while I trekked to school. I don’t know if it was a comparison thing, but it was clear that some people had more. I might have also paid more attention to money because we didn’t always have it at home.

    Tell me more about that

    It’s not like we were poor. My dad’s a self-employed civil engineer, and my mum worked as a secretary in an international development firm. My siblings and I attended good schools and paid our fees on time.

    But money was cyclical. My dad didn’t always have projects, which determined how we lived. When there was money, there was plenty of money — I’m talking cartons of fish and chicken in the freezer. When things weren’t great, we just managed. 

    Do you remember the first time you worked for money?

    Oh yes. That was in junior secondary school. I have fine handwriting and used to write in cursive. My classmates gave me their books to write their names and decorate the pages for them, and they paid in school money.

    What’s school money?

    I attended a boarding school that didn’t allow students to hold money. So, my parents would deposit money with the bursary for me to withdraw in small amounts throughout the term. But the bursary didn’t give us actual money; it was more like printed vouchers we could use in the tuck shop. That’s what my classmates paid me in.

    I don’t even remember how much I made from this because I didn’t charge a fee; my classmates just always dropped something. I also practised hairdressing on them and often got paid random amounts in return. 

    Both “businesses” meant I hardly ever spent my actual bursary allowance. I almost always collected my allowance back at the end of the school year. Honestly, I didn’t even spend like that in school. I’ve always had a scarcity mindset that pushes me to gather money, spend a little and save the rest.

    The next time I worked for money was in uni.

    When was this?  

    2013. I was in 300 level and decided to take advantage of the high density of rich kids in my private university; the girls loved fashion and making their hair. So, my sister and I thought of buying hair attachments and wigs for cheap in Lagos’s Tradefair market and selling them for a profit in school. 

    My monthly allowance was ₦20k – ₦30k, but I hardly spent money. So, I had enough to buy my first batch of Miss Rose attachment, Yaki straight and Miss Lula hair pieces. I don’t remember all the cost details, but I made a profit of between ₦1k – ₦2k per piece. I did that business for about a month and a half, and I remember making ₦20k in profits in the first month. It was like free money because I didn’t exactly need it. It was just nice to have extra money.

    Why did you stop the business so soon?

    Word got around, and my hostel mistress learned about the business and warned me. Apparently, I should’ve registered my business first or risk being summoned by the disciplinary committee. I decided it wasn’t worth the stress and just left it. I didn’t try any business again and just lived on my allowance until I left uni in 2015. 

    NYSC next?

    Yup. I moved out of my state for service in 2015, and my parents paid the ₦300k rent for the apartment I lived in for that year. I served at the state ministry and got a ₦10k monthly stipend in addition to the ₦19800 from NYSC.

    Service year was my first introduction to how expensive living alone could get. I thought a mattress was only supposed to cost ₦10k. Tell me why I was entering the market and hearing ₦70k – ₦100k for thick mattresses?

    Haha

    It was wild. My dad supplemented my income with ₦20k/month for the whole year, but I was always in survival mode. I had to pay for everything myself: food, electricity, and transportation, and it was tough. 

    Food was my biggest concern. That was the time that a bag of rice went from ₦7500 to ₦15k, and food generally seemed so expensive. It took the bulk of my money. I couldn’t even save like I used to.

    After I finished NYSC in 2016, I returned home to my parents and started working at my dad’s firm. I studied civil engineering in school, so that was automatically the next step.

    Did your dad pay you, though?

    Oh, of course. I even had a job title: engineer trainee. But the ₦50k/month salary was too small for me. I’d gotten ₦50k as my monthly allowance while in final year at uni. Why would I graduate and still earn the same thing?

    To be fair, my dad’s firm is quite small and runs like a one-man business. Projects didn’t always come in, and I hardly did anything for the almost two years I worked there. The original plan was to finish school and take over my dad’s business someday. But I entered the industry and quickly realised it was full of suffering. 

    Ahh. Why do you say that?

    Civil engineers wait for contracts, and when one does come, the pay is usually 10% of whatever the contract is worth. If the contract takes six months to complete, you’ll use that same 10% to feed your family and survive for the six months. It didn’t make sense to me. 

    Plus, the firm’s senior engineers only earned like ₦70k. Other engineering firms I knew were also one-man businesses that paid that low. I couldn’t do that long-term. 

    So, I began actively job-searching. My new plan was to get any graduate trainee program available to kickstart my career. I took multiple assessment tests for multiple organisations until I landed a ₦50k/month management trainee role —just a fancy name for HR— at a management consulting firm in 2018.

    Same salary?

    I was as shocked as you are. The firm made us attend a compulsory three-month training school before I officially started the role, and they paid ₦30k/month. I expected a salary bump to ₦100k after training, but they used one kind of English to explain why I still had to be on ₦50k/month for another three months before a salary review. When the review eventually came, it was ₦70k.

    Transportation took the bulk of my salary. I lived at home and had minimal responsibilities, but after removing transport fare, I could only afford to do my hair. I think I wore only one shoe for the year I worked there. But it wasn’t just the low salary that made me leave.

    I’m listening

    It was a toxic work culture. My boss was a living nightmare who was quick to berate staff for the smallest mistake. So, I started applications again and got another graduate trainee role at a bank in 2019. 

    This one paid ₦238k/month after the three-month training school. I was posted to the bank’s head office to work in the risk management department and was excited to acquire actual banking skills. I believed I had a high chance of quickly moving up the career ladder. The money was also a nice touch. It was the first time I was earning real money.

    But a few weeks after joining, I realised the growth opportunities at the bank weren’t so great. The person training me had been in one position for three years, and I, who was just joining, was now on the same level as him. 

    I didn’t want that kind of delay, especially since I felt I was already behind career-wise. It’d been almost five years since I graduated school, and I was still hustling graduate trainee roles. I needed speed. 

    That’s fair. So, what did you do?

    Six months into the job, a friend told me about another graduate trainee opportunity at an investment bank. I remember telling him I was tired of training schools, but he insisted that the bank was good.

    So, I applied and passed all the assessments. The offer came in 2020, and at ₦220k/month, it was a slight pay cut from what I earned at the bank. But my friend convinced me I’d have better prospects at an investment bank than a commercial one, so I took it.

    I remember being so shocked by the company culture. They didn’t joke with staff welfare, no one was stuck up, and everyone addressed each other by their first names. They even allowed people to air their grievances freely. It took me a while to accept that I was no longer in the toxic workplaces I was used to, and I kept waiting for the other shoe to drop. I still work there, and the shoe still hasn’t dropped. 

    I guess the time has come with career growth for you

    Yes, and several salary increases, too. The bank has a standard 18-month promotion policy. So unless you’re like the biggest fuck-up, you’ll get promoted within 18 months. I’ve gotten three promotions since I joined, and I’m now an associate. 

    I earn ₦1.1m/month now and get a yearly bonus. The amount is based on the company’s performance, but I have a pretty good idea of how much it’ll be. Last year, it was ₦5m. I’ll probably get around ₦7m this year.

    What kind of life does that afford you?

    I have a good life. I got married in 2020, and my husband handles the major bills like rent and school fees while I focus on household expenses like food, estate dues and other small costs related to our two children. 

    I’m still a big saver and constantly looking for opportunities to grow my wealth. I started my career late, and I believe I have to work twice as hard to meet up with my colleagues. So, the bulk of my income goes into different investments. 

    Walk me through your investment portfolio

    Stocks are an important component of my portfolio. I got into stocks when I started working at the investment bank because, well, I work in investment, and my employers talked about stocks, equity, and traditional investments.

    So, in 2020, I bought some banking stocks that did well because of the COVID scare. I made a 70% profit from my investment within 7 months, but I held on to my position instead of selling. In my head, stocks were something you held for a really long time. That works for US equities, but the Nigerian Stock Exchange is a different ball game— you just have to trade to make any kind of lasting profit. So, I lost those gains in about 7 months too, after the COVID lockdown scare started to wear off and investors regained confidence. 

    I began reading a lot about wealth and investment strategies. I read books like “The Wealthy Barber” and listened — I still do — to financial podcasts. I think I was obsessed at one point. I just wanted to make enough to pass a life of luxury to my kids.

    The research helped and I’m a lot more focused with my investments now. My portfolio is currently spread out across dollars, commercial papers and equity — mostly equity because I think it’s the biggest multiplier of wealth. You can make three times your investment in a year by trading equity. 

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    This is the part where I cut in and ask how equity trading works

    It’s basically like forex trading, except it’s not a scam. Equity is regulated by the SEC and other security exchanges.

    This is how it works: Let’s say a company is currently valued at ₦28, but you observe the pace at which the company is growing and generating revenue and speculate that the fair price should actually be ₦40. That means it’s only a matter of time before the company is valued higher. So, you buy the shares at ₦28 and wait for them to be worth ₦40 in the future. That’s how people make money.

    When Tinubu came into power, people who knew about equity were waiting on stocks they suspected would be affected by policy changes. When the fuel subsidy was removed, the price of oil and gas companies doubled in value within 10 days. One of these companies is now worth 400% more than it was at the beginning of the year. If you had invested ₦10m then, calculate how much a 400% profit would be.

    Mad o 

    Equity trading is very high risk – high reward. The same way you can make so much easily is the same way loss can happen. But it works if you already have impressive capital. If you’re worth ₦100m and invest only 10%, a loss wouldn’t really affect you like that. But you can make so much more profit.

    Personally, I try to take as much informed risk as possible. I took a ₦2m staff loan from work earlier this year to buy a commercial paper that offered 20% interest. Why the loan? There’s a thing called the time value of money. I’m paying an 8% interest on that loan but making 20% from the investment. That’s a 12% spread that’s like free money. My yearly goal is to profit at least 30% on whatever capital I put on the market.

    I also set yearly financial goals for how much money I expect to close the year with. This is inclusive of my monthly savings, work bonus, and profit from my equity investments. In 2023, I made ₦20m. I started this year with a ₦35m goal, but I’m on track to close out the year at ₦40m.

    I’m curious: Do you have long-term investment goals?

    My initial investment goal was to grow my wealth to the point where I could stop working. Due to the nature of my work, I see people make money from actively trading stocks, so I knew it was possible. 

    So, I set a $1m goal when a dollar was still ₦500, and it seemed realistic. I just needed to preserve my capital savings, make at least 10% profit each year, and use the power of compounding to grow my investment.

    Explain to me like I’m five 

    So, compounding is the amount of interest you earn on your savings that keeps getting added to your initial savings. There are several compounding calculators online. I did an estimate that went something like this: $5k in savings compounded every month at a specific interest rate would get up to $500k in 10-15 years. I reasoned that I’d get to $1m if I saved even more aggressively. 

    Now I know that’s just lofty thinking sha. The naira has fallen so much; it’d take more than aggressive saving and compounding to make a million dollars. Instead, I’m now working towards getting to ₦100m in liquid assets within three years, meaning I’ll need to make at least ₦20m every year for the next three years. That’s a lofty goal because I’m only sure of ₦13m from my yearly savings and bonuses, but I’ll get there. Maybe I’ll need to take one risky position on the equity market.

    With ₦100m, I can focus on making 10% — which is ₦10m —  in investment profits yearly, so I’ll no longer need to work as hard as I do. My money will do the work, and I can rest. It may not give me a lavish lifestyle, but I’ll be able to stay afloat and set up my kids to be comfortable. If God forbid, my husband no longer earns enough to support our lifestyle or something happens to him, my investments will come in handy. My husband and I are even considering relocation, so it could also go into that.

    You mentioned you mostly handle the household expenses. What does that look like in a typical month?

    My husband gives me a ₦300k monthly upkeep allowance, but with how expensive things are now, it hardly does anything, and I have to supplement with my income too. To break it down:

    Nairalife #295 expenses

    I pay the estate dues (around ₦1m) from my yearly bonus, and I save or invest the balance. I hardly spend on myself because I’m obsessed with meeting my financial targets.

    What happens when you hit your ₦100m goal?

    I’ll go on a sabbatical or just travel. I’ve actually never travelled anywhere. My husband and I couldn’t go on a honeymoon because we got married during the pandemic, and I had two children in quick succession. 

    I’d even hoped for 2024 to be my travel year, ₦100m or not. But the economy is shit. I’m now looking at 2025. My husband isn’t so keen on it, but I’ll travel alone if I have to — even if it’s Cotonou or somewhere close. I estimate it won’t cost more than ₦5m.

    What’s something you want right now but can’t afford?

    Honestly, nothing. I don’t have ostentatious wants. My husband got me a Toyota Corolla as a push gift after I had my baby in 2021, and I’d been fantasising about upgrading the car. But with fuel prices doubling these days, I’ve come to appreciate the car because it’s fuel efficient. I might just paint it because I keep scratching it.

    Is there an ideal amount you think you should be earning?

    If not for my career delays, I should be earning around ₦1.8m right now. Fortunately, I work in a company that prioritises career progress and income growth, so I should get there by next year.

    Inflation is still a concern. I expected to be able to afford so much more with what I currently earn, so I don’t even know if there’s an ideal amount. I’m comfortable, though. I’m just looking forward to hitting my savings and investments target.

    How would you rate your financial happiness on a scale of 1-10?

    7. I’ve made so much progress with building wealth and my investment portfolio within four years, and I’m grateful for that. But I’d have achieved more if I’d started my career earlier.


    If you’re interested in talking about your Naira Life story, this is a good place to start.

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