Investment apps make it easier to buy and own stocks. But not all investment apps work the same way. Here is what you need to know before choosing one.
An investment app is a mobile or web application that lets you buy, hold, and track financial assets — most commonly stocks and shares — from your smartphone or computer. In Nigeria, investment apps have made it possible for ordinary savers to access the Nigerian stock market without needing to walk into a broker's office or manage paperwork manually.
Most investment apps let you do some combination of the following:
This is the part most investors do not think about enough. When you buy shares through an investment app, what exactly do you own? The answer depends entirely on how the app is structured.
Some apps hold your assets in a collective or nominee arrangement. You see a balance or a position on your screen, but the underlying shares are not registered to you personally. You own a claim on the platform — not direct title to the shares themselves.
Other investment apps — like Shares Saver — ensure that the shares purchased on your behalf are registered directly in your own legal name. Your name appears on the share register. You are the shareholder of record.
The key question to ask about any investment app: are the shares registered in my name, or in the name of the platform or a nominee?
For an investment app operating in Nigeria to legitimately offer stock purchases, share transactions must be executed through regulated stockbrokers licensed to trade on the Nigerian Exchange Group (NGX). The app itself is not necessarily a broker — it may be an administrative layer that coordinates with licensed broker partners.
This is how Shares Saver works: all share purchases are instructed to regulated stockbroker partners, who execute the trade on the NGX and register the shares in your name.
Traditional stockbrokers in Nigeria require clients to open a broker account, manage paperwork, and often make minimum investments that feel large for first-time investors. Investment apps simplify this by handling much of the administrative work and making investing accessible through a regular savings plan.
The most powerful use of an investment app is not short-term trading — it is long-term wealth building through regular contributions. Buying and holding Nigerian stocks over years, collecting dividends, and compounding returns is a proven way to grow wealth. Investment apps that register shares directly in your name are particularly well-suited to this goal, because your ownership record persists independently of the platform.
See how the Shares Saver investment app registers your Nigerian stocks directly in your name.
How Shares Saver Works