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More Nigerians Are Investing in Stocks Than Ever Before. Here is Why

by Kingsley Okeke
April 15, 2026
in Opinions & Perspectives
Reading Time: 3 mins read
Nigerian stocks

Something significant is happening in Nigeria’s stock market. More people are buying shares, trading is up sharply, and the money flowing through the Nigerian Exchange (NGX) has reached levels the market has never seen before. The question worth asking is: who exactly is driving this, and what changed?

The Numbers Tell a Clear Story

In the first two months of 2026, total transactions on the NGX (domestic and foreign combined) jumped 115.33% year-on-year to ₦2.404 trillion, compared to ₦1.116 trillion in the same period of 2025. That is more than double the activity in just one year.

The most striking detail buried in those numbers is who is doing the buying. In February 2026 alone, domestic investors (ordinary Nigerians) accounted for 90.99% of all trading activity, putting in ₦1.403 trillion out of ₦1.542 trillion in total transactions. Foreign investors contributed just 9%. This is not a market being moved by Wall Street hedge funds or international portfolio managers. It is being moved by Nigerians.

The Old Way Was Broken

To understand why this surge matters, you have to understand how investing worked before. For most Nigerians, buying shares meant walking into a stockbroker’s office, filling out forms, and having tens of thousands of naira ready just to get started. The process was slow, confusing, and frankly designed for a different era. It is no coincidence that, until recently, most active NGX accounts were held by people over the age of 50.

Young Nigerians (the largest demographic in the country) were locked out. Not because they lacked interest, but because the barrier to entry was too high.

Apps Like Bamboo Changed the Equation

That is where investment apps come in. Platforms like Bamboo, Risevest, Trove, and Cowrywise have done something simple but powerful: they put a brokerage account in everyone’s pocket.

Bamboo, founded in Lagos in 2018, lets users buy Nigerian and US stocks starting from as little as ₦5,000. There is no paperwork, no broker’s office, and no need for financial jargon. You download the app, verify your identity, deposit money, and start investing. The same process that once took days and required a minimum of ₦50,000 or more through traditional channels now takes minutes.

Bamboo also introduced fractional investing, which means a young person earning a modest income can buy a small piece of an expensive stock rather than having to afford the full share price. This single feature opened the market to millions of people who would otherwise never have participated.

Beyond Bamboo, platforms like Cowrywise and Risevest have introduced dollar-denominated investment options, allowing Nigerians to hedge against naira volatility while building wealth. PiggyVest, originally known as a savings app, has expanded into investment products with low entry points suited to first-time investors.

Why Now

The boom in retail investing is not only about apps. The strong returns of the last two years have helped. When the NGX delivers 51% in a single year, word travels fast. Friends talk, social media posts go up, and curiosity turns into action. The apps simply make it easy to act on that curiosity immediately.

Macroeconomic reforms, particularly the stabilisation of the naira and a reduction in inflation expectations, have also made equities look more attractive compared to simply keeping money in a bank account.

What This Means Going Forward

A market built on millions of small, active domestic investors is a fundamentally different market than one dependent on foreign capital. The trend of Nigerians taking ownership of their own financial futures through the stock market is one of the more quietly significant developments in the country’s economic story right now.

The apps are not the whole story, but they are a major chapter in it. They have done what decades of financial literacy campaigns could not: made investing feel normal, affordable, and within reach for everyday Nigerians.

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...

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