…As Total Pension Assets Exceed N20trn
Harboursandport.com:
Lagos - At the
backdrop of exchange rate instability and Naira depreciation, Closed Pension
Fund Administrators, CPFAs, affiliated to International Oil Companies, IOCs, are
moving more of their assets to foreign money market instruments, apparently for
safety.
The National
Pension Commission, PenCom, in its unaudited report on pension funds industry
portfolio for the period ended May 31, 2024 indicated that the CPFAs invested
N107.1 billion during the month, up 10.2 percent from N97.2 billion recorded in
the preceding month of April 2024.
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PenOp President, Umar Mairami |
The CPFAs, according to the PenCom report, also increased their stake in foreign ordinary shares by 9.3 percent to N268.7 billion in May from N245.9 billion in April.
Meanwhile,
total pension fund assets increased by 2.02 per cent to N20.2 trillion in May
2024 from N19.8 trillion recorded in April.
According to
the report, Retirement Savings Account, RSA, registration increased by 0.4 per
cent to 10,351,624 in May from 10,315,034 recorded in April.
The pension
industry has 19 Pension Fund Administrators (PFAs) and five CPFAs while three
of the CPFAs are affiliated to international oil companies namely, Agip CPFA
Limited, Shell Nig. CPFA Ltd, and TotalEnergies EP Nigeria CPFA Limited.
Under
Nigeria’s existing pension law, only the foreign affiliated CPFAs are allowed
to invest offshore while the local PFAs and the other two CPFAs are not
permitted to invest offshore.
But the
Pension Fund Operators Association of Nigeria, PenOp, has called for an
amendment of the Pension Reform Act to allow PFAs invest some of the pension
funds offshore to hedge against inflation and naira devaluation.
According to
PenOp, the move is necessary to guard against old age poverty being triggered
by rising inflation and naira devaluation.
Mr. Dave
Uduanu, a member of PenOp and Managing Director of Access Pensions, stated that
since the economy is not domesticated to rely less on dollars, the safeguard is
to allow some of the pension funds to be invested offshore.
Uduanu said:
“Regarding devaluation, what we need to do as a country is that we need to
domesticate our economy. As we domesticate our economy and rely less on
dollars, we can achieve more sustainable savings and inflation in real terms.
But until we do that, the safeguard we have is to allow some of the pension
funds to be invested offshore.
“The
recommendation is with PenCom now and the Central Bank of Nigeria, CBN, and it
will be good to have the input of the senators and House of Representatives
members to make sure that this sees the light of the day.”
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