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  3. How Investment Apps Work in Nigeria — What Happens When You Buy Shares
Investment App Basics

How Investment Apps Work in Nigeria — What Happens When You Buy Shares

From tapping "buy" to owning a share: here is what actually happens behind the scenes when you use an investment app in Nigeria.

5 April 2026·6 min read

When you tap "buy" on a Nigerian investment app, it looks simple. But a sequence of regulated steps happens between your instruction and your name appearing on the share register. Understanding this process helps you evaluate investment apps more carefully — and appreciate why the differences between platforms matter.

Step 1: You Place an Order

You select a company, enter an amount or number of shares, and confirm the purchase in the app. At this point your instruction has been recorded by the platform — but no shares have been bought yet.

Step 2: The Platform Instructs a Stockbroker

A legitimate Nigerian investment app does not execute trades directly. It passes your order to a licensed stockbroker — a firm authorised to trade on the Nigerian Exchange Group (NGX). In the case of Shares Saver, this instruction goes to one of our regulated stockbroker partners.

This is a critical compliance step. Any investment app in Nigeria that executes trades without routing them through a licensed NGX broker is operating outside the regulatory framework.

Step 3: The Broker Executes on the Exchange

The broker places your order on the Nigerian Exchange (NGX) at the current market price. The order is matched with a seller. The trade is confirmed and a trade note is generated.

Step 4: Settlement

After execution, the trade enters the settlement process. The Nigerian Exchange operates on a standard settlement cycle. During this period, ownership of the shares is formally transferred.

Step 5: Registration

After settlement, the shares must be registered. This is where investment apps diverge significantly:

  • Some apps register shares in the name of a nominee company or collective pool. You have a claim on the pool, but the shares are not in your name.
  • Some apps — like Shares Saver — register the shares directly in your own legal name with the relevant registrar or broker. You are the named shareholder of record.

Step 6: Your App Portfolio Updates

Once registration is complete, your portfolio in the app reflects the new shareholding. With Shares Saver, this also means the official register held with the broker and registrar shows your name.

Why This Process Matters for Nigerian Investors

Nigerian investors should understand that the app interface is just a front end. What matters is the structure beneath it: who holds your shares, whose name is on the register, and which regulated entities are involved. The Shares Saver process ensures that your shares end up in your name — not in a platform's books.

See the full Shares Saver process from savings plan to registered share ownership.

How It Works — Step by Step

Related pages on Shares Saver

How It WorksOur Broker Partners

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