When you own Nigerian shares registered in your name, dividends are paid to you as the registered shareholder. Here is how the process works.
When a Nigerian company listed on the Nigerian Exchange Group (NGX) makes a profit, it may choose to distribute some of that profit to shareholders as a dividend. If you own shares in that company — and they are registered in your name — you are entitled to receive your share of that dividend.
A dividend is a cash payment made by a company to its shareholders, usually as a portion of its annual or interim profits. Not all companies pay dividends — but many established NGX-listed Nigerian companies have a history of regular dividend payments.
The company's board of directors proposes a dividend per share based on the company's profits and financial position. Shareholders vote to approve it at the Annual General Meeting (AGM). Once approved, the company declares:
Dividends are paid to the registered shareholder as of the record date. This is why direct registration matters: if your shares are registered in your own name, you are the registered shareholder and you receive the dividend directly.
If your shares are held through a nominee or collective arrangement, the dividend is paid to the nominee — and then distributed onward according to the platform's internal rules. For most investors in most circumstances this works fine, but it adds an intermediary step and depends on the platform passing the dividend through correctly.
With Shares Saver, your shares are registered in your own name. Dividends from those companies are paid based on your registered holding.
Nigerian companies typically pay dividends by bank transfer (e-dividend) to registered shareholders who have provided their bank account details to the company's registrar. The Central Securities Clearing System (CSCS) and the company registrar handle the logistics.
Dividends are one of the two main ways investors benefit from owning shares — the other being price appreciation. For long-term investors using a platform like Shares Saver, reinvesting dividends or using them to fund additional share purchases is a powerful way to compound investment returns over time.
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