Nigeria’s pension fund assets have increased to N18.35 trillion as at December 2023.

According to a report obtained, the pension funds grew by N3.36 trillion or 18 per cent to close 2023 at N18.35 trillion as against N14.99 trillion recorded in December 2022.

The N3.36 trillion growth last year was one of the highest since the commencement of the Contributory Pension Scheme (CPS) about 20 years ago.

Further analysis showed that the funds had grown N1.56 trillion or 10 per cent in 2022, rising from N13.42 trillion in 2021.

Pension funds had risen by N1.1 trillion or 8.3 per cent in 2021 from N12.30 trillion recorded in 2020.

In 2020, pension assets rose by 16.9 per cent or N2.08 trillion in 2020 from N10.21 trillion posted in 2019.

A breakdown of how Pension Fund Administrators (PFAs) under the supervision of PenCom invested the fund as at last December, showed that about 70 per cent of the fund was invested in Federal Government’s securities.They invested a total of N11.92trillion in FGN Bonds, Treasury Bills, Agency Bonds, SUKUK Bonds and Green Bonds.

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Also, the total number of RSA registrations hit 10.19 million as of the end of December 2023, reflecting a 3.3% increase from 9.86 million recorded as of the end of 2022.

A breakdown of the portfolio, showed that investments in federal government securities (N11.92 trillion) accounted for 64.9% of the total assets, which is in line with PenCom regulation to invest most of the contributions in fixed less risky assets like the FGN bonds, treasury bills etc.

Additionally, corporate debt securities (N1.91 trillion) accounted for 10.2% of the assets, while investments in the Nigerian equities market (N1.57 trillion) contributed 8.6% to the total.

A total of N1.67 trillion was invested in money market instruments as of the end of the year, accounting for 9.1% of the total pension assets.

In terms of breakdown by fund category, Fund II continues to dominate with a total asset value of N7.8 trillion, accounting for 42.5% of the funds.

This is the default fund for contributors below the age of 49 years as it allows PFAs 55% of the portfolio in variable instruments.

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Fund III followed with a total portfolio of N4.94 trillion, while Fund V recorded the least amount of N731.4 million.

The Nigerian pension industry has recorded significant strides in recent years, as represented in its growing penetration rate. In the last five years, the industry asset value has more than doubled, following several reforms that shaped and is still shaping the industry.

One of such policies include the increment of the minimum regulatory capital requirement for PFAs from N1 billion to N5 billion, triggering a series of mergers and acquisitions in the industry.

A move which was aimed at fortifying the financial capacity of the pension administrators. Recall that before the recapitalization in 2021, there were 22 PFAs, however following the implementation, the number of players reduced to about 19, with more anticipated mergers in 2024.

Also, the restructuring of some major commercial banks into Holding companies, with diversified interest in the pensions industry spurred improved competition in the industry.

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New players such as Access Pensions, Norrenberger Pensions, GT Pensions, Tangerine amongst others have helped to drive increased growth in the industry through market efficiency and profitability.

Access Holdings recently announced that its subsidiary, Access Golf Nigeria has received the necessary regulatory approval to acquire a majority stake in ARM Pension Managers, a move that could further reduce the number of PFAs.

According to the records, a total of 101,820 Retirement Savings Account (RSA) holders switched their Pension Fund Administrators (PFA) in 2023, representing an increase of 10.2% compared to the 92,413 transfers recorded in the previous year, and the highest on record.

A total of N462 billion was moved by the RSA holders in the review year, 28% higher than the N361.5 billion that was transferred in the previous year, bringing the total since the inception of the transfer window to N1.14 trillion.

This transfer is in line with section 13 of the Pension Reform Act (PRA) 2024, which specifies that an RSA holder may transfer his/her account from one PFA to another.

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