Techsoma Homepage
  • Reports
  • Reports
Home FinTech & Digital Money

The Rise of Asset Tokenisation: How Blockchain is Entering Nigeria’s Real-World Economy

by Kingsley Okeke
October 21, 2025
in FinTech & Digital Money
Reading Time: 3 mins read
Blockchain offers tokenised assets to Nigeria

In Nigeria, the technology of blockchain and tokenisation is moving from niche use cases to mainstream applications of real-world assets. Fractional ownership of property, tokenised investment vehicles, and other “real assets on chain” are increasingly discussed and regulated. This article examines how these developments are playing out, what opportunities they present for Nigeria, and what hurdles remain.

What Is Asset Tokenisation?

Put simply, asset tokenisation is converting a tangible or intangible real-world asset, such as real estate, a piece of art, infrastructure, or a company share, into a digital token that lives on a blockchain. This token can represent ownership rights, usage rights, or economic interest.

Key features include:

  • Fractional ownership: instead of one owner holding the entire asset, many token-holders can hold very small units of it.
  • Greater liquidity: previously illiquid assets (for example, large real estate or private equity) become easier to divide and trade.
  • Digital transferability: ownership rights can be transferred via blockchain rather than paper systems.
  • Potential cost reductions: fewer intermediaries and lower transaction overhead.

In Nigeria’s context, this offers significant promise given the large stock of physical assets, the youth-driven fintech ecosystem, and the push for digital innovation across sectors.

Where Nigeria Stands Today

Nigeria has made substantial strides in recognising blockchain, tokenised assets, and digital assets in its regulatory architecture.

The Securities and Exchange Commission of Nigeria (SEC) regards many virtual assets as securities unless proven otherwise, meaning tokenised assets could fall under its supervision. The Investments and Securities Act 2025 (ISA 2025) classifies digital and virtual assets as securities and expands the SEC’s oversight of virtual-asset service providers and token offerings.

The “Rules on Issuance, Offering Platforms and Custody of Digital Assets” provides regulatory direction for token offerings and digital exchanges. The Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) has released guidelines allowing banks to hold accounts for registered VASPs, a major shift from earlier prohibitions. This evolving legal environment is creating more clarity for tokenised use of assets, although some uncertainties remain.

Practical Use Cases and Sectors

Some of the sectors where tokenisation is starting to gain traction in Nigeria include:

Real estate – Tokenisation could make large property assets more accessible to multiple investors and improve transparency, though tokens are not yet recognised as substitutes for legal title to land.

Asset management – Tokenisation in asset management is expected to enhance liquidity and accessibility of both physical and digital assets.

Emerging digital asset markets – Digital tokens can be used to distribute fractional interests in assets such as private equity or venture projects, unlocking new investment opportunities.

The Promise for Nigeria

  1. Increased access: Nigerians may access previously exclusive asset classes by owning tokenised fractions.
  2. Innovation and fintech leadership: Nigeria could position itself as a regional hub for tokenised asset innovation.
  3. Transparency and record-keeping: Blockchain offers immutable timestamps and auditable chains of ownership, which could help address issues like title fraud.
  4. Funding new projects: Tokenised assets may open new fundraising channels for start-ups, infrastructure, or property development.

Outlook for Nigeria’s Tokenised Future

Tokenisation of real-world assets offers a compelling opportunity for Nigeria: improved access, innovation, and efficiency in asset markets. The regulatory changes underway, including ISA 2025, SEC rules, and VASP licensing, are giving the space more structure and legitimacy.

For tokenisation to fulfil its promise, the country must build legal certainty, robust market infrastructure, and investor trust. If this alignment happens, Nigeria could become a major hub for tokenised real assets, enabling fractional ownership of property, infrastructure, and other high-value assets.

ADVERTISEMENT
Kingsley Okeke

Kingsley Okeke

I'm a skilled content writer, anatomist, and researcher with a strong academic background in human anatomy. I hold a degree...

Recommended For You

CBN’s New AI Mandate: How Nigeria’s Banks and Fintechs Must Automate AML by 2027
FinTech & Digital Money

CBN’s New AI Mandate: How Nigeria’s Banks and Fintechs Must Automate AML by 2027

by Onyinye Moyosore
March 13, 2026

Nigeria's financial world just got a major tech upgrade in the fight against dirty money. On 10 March 2026, the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) released new rules that require...

Read moreDetails
Prembly launches ‘FraudLens’ to help Nigerian banks and FinTechs stop financial crime

Prembly launches ‘FraudLens’ to help Nigerian banks and FinTechs stop financial crime

March 11, 2026
4 women in Fintech Nigeria Techsoma Feature

IWD 2026: Meet 4 Women Building Nigeria’s Biggest Fintechs

March 8, 2026
Official announcement post detailing the Flutterwave and Yango payment integration in Zambia

Flutterwave and Yango: The Strategic Play Behind Their Zambian Partnership

February 25, 2026
Quidax and Lisk

Quidax and Lisk Join Forces to Bring Blockchain Finance to Africa

February 24, 2026
Next Post
Tosin Eniolorunda Moniepoint Series C funding press release

Moniepoint Raises Additional $90 Million to Close $200 Million Series C

Pewbeam AI Marks a Breakthrough in Church Technology with First Live Test at CCI Ibadan

Pewbeam AI Marks a Breakthrough in Church Technology with First Live Test at CCI Ibadan

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

ADVERTISEMENT

Subscribe to our Newsletter

Recent News

AI Hallucinations

AI Hallucinations Are Getting Worse as Models Scale, and the Industry Has No Real Fix

March 13, 2026
2Africa subsea cable

Iran-Israel War and Houthi Attacks Halt Meta’s 2Africa Subsea Cable Project in the Persian Gulf

March 13, 2026
National Grid in Nigeria currently fails remote workers

Nigeria’s Power Crisis Forces Remote Workers to Spend Up to ₦13,000 Daily on Generator Fuel

March 13, 2026
CBN’s New AI Mandate: How Nigeria’s Banks and Fintechs Must Automate AML by 2027

CBN’s New AI Mandate: How Nigeria’s Banks and Fintechs Must Automate AML by 2027

March 13, 2026
UNIVEN and African Technology Forum Form a Powerful Alliance to Build Africa’s AI-Ready Generation

UNIVEN and African Technology Forum Form a Powerful Alliance to Build Africa’s AI-Ready Generation

March 13, 2026

Where Africa’s Tech Revolution Begins – Covering tech innovations, startups, and developments across Africa

Facebook X-twitter Instagram Linkedin

Quick Links

Advertise on Techsoma

Publish your Articles

T & C

Privacy Policy

© 2025 — Techsoma Africa. All Rights Reserved

Add New Playlist

No Result
View All Result

© 2026 JNews - Premium WordPress news & magazine theme by Jegtheme.