Not all Nigerian investment apps are the same. Here is how Shares Saver differs from generic investment apps — and why those differences matter for long-term investors.
There are a growing number of investment apps available to Nigerian investors. Most of them offer broadly similar interfaces: a portfolio screen, a list of stocks, a buy button. But behind the interface, investment apps can work very differently — and the differences matter significantly for anyone building long-term wealth.
Many generic investment apps are designed around transaction volume: they make it easy to buy, sell, and trade frequently. Shares Saver is built around the opposite philosophy — regular contributions, disciplined saving, and long-term direct ownership of Nigerian stocks. This is reflected in the platform's structure, not just its marketing.
The most significant structural difference: Shares Saver registers every investor's shares directly in their own legal name. Many generic investment apps hold shares in a nominee or pooled arrangement. You see a balance in the app, but the underlying shares are not in your name. With Shares Saver, your name is on the share register.
Direct registration is the foundation of Shares Saver. It is not an optional feature — every investor's shares are registered in their own name.
Try the investment app built differently. Direct ownership, regulated execution, and a savings plan model designed for long-term investors.
Shares Saver routes all share purchases through regulated Nigerian stockbrokers licensed to trade on the Nigerian Exchange Group. Not all platforms are equally clear about the chain of execution between your instruction and the actual NGX trade.
Shares Saver is centred on a savings plan model: you commit to a regular monthly contribution and the platform manages the execution and ownership process. Generic apps often put transaction initiation in the investor's hands, which can lead to inconsistent investing behaviour.
Shares Saver publishes its full fee structure clearly: a monthly subscription fee and a percentage management fee, with broker and exchange costs passed through at cost. Some generic investment apps use less transparent fee models — spreads, undisclosed broker margins, or fees buried in terms and conditions.
Shares Saver is not a trading platform or a speculative investment tool. It does not offer leverage, derivatives, or fast-execution trading features. If you are looking for a platform optimised for short-term trading, Shares Saver is not designed for that use case. It is designed for investors who want to build direct share ownership in Nigeria over the long term.
Shares Saver registers your shares directly in your own legal name via the CSCS. Many generic investment apps hold shares in a pooled or platform balance — you see a number on screen but do not own the underlying shares directly.
Yes. Because your shares are registered in your name via the CSCS, you can transfer them to any other SEC-registered Nigerian stockbroker at any time. This is not possible with platforms that hold shares in nominee accounts.
Reputable apps do. However, not all investment apps in Nigeria are transparent about their broker relationships or how share ownership is structured. Always ask a platform to confirm their broker partners' SEC registration status.
Yes. The savings plan model is designed to make investing accessible — you contribute a regular monthly amount and shares are purchased automatically when the threshold is reached. No manual trading or market timing is required.
Create a free Shares Saver account and start buying Nigerian stocks directly in your name.