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PenCom Raises Equity Investment Limits for Pension Funds to Tackle Asset Shortages

PenCom Raises Equity Investment Limits for Pension Funds to Tackle Asset Shortages

PenCom’s decision to lift equity investment limits signals a deliberate shift to push Nigeria’s pension funds deeper into the capital market at a time when traditional asset classes are offering diminishing flexibility.

Nigeria’s National Pension Commission (PenCom) has moved to widen the investment scope of pension fund managers by raising the allowable limits for investments in ordinary shares across several Retirement Savings Account (RSA) fund categories, in a regulatory adjustment aimed at easing mounting allocation constraints within the pension system.

The changes were announced in an addendum released on Monday, February 9, 2026, to the Revised Regulation on Investment of Pension Fund Assets issued in September 2025. They take immediate effect and apply to all licensed Pension Fund Administrators (PFAs) and custodians.

At the core of the revision is a recalibration of Section 9 of the regulation, which now permits higher equity exposure across multiple RSA fund classes. Under the new limits, RSA Fund I can invest up to 35% in ordinary shares, up from 30%. RSA Fund II’s ceiling rises to 33% from 25%, while RSA Fund III increases to 15% from 10%. The cap for RSA Fund VI (Active) has also been raised to 33% from 25%.

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PenCom said the move was prompted by practical difficulties encountered since the 2025 overhaul of pension investment rules. According to the Commission, the revised framework, while designed to improve risk management and diversification, exposed structural gaps in Nigeria’s investable asset universe—most notably a shortage of qualifying alternative investment instruments.

As a result, many PFAs have struggled to fully deploy funds within the prescribed limits for alternative assets, leading to underutilization of allowable investment thresholds and a buildup of excess liquidity across the pension system. By expanding the room for equity investments, PenCom said it is offering fund managers greater flexibility to optimize asset allocation without compromising diversification principles.

The adjustment also reflects a broader strategic rethink by the regulator as pension assets continue to grow rapidly. Total pension fund assets exceeded N26 trillion as of October 2025, making the industry one of the largest sources of long-term capital in the Nigerian financial system. With inflationary pressures eroding real returns on fixed-income instruments, regulators and fund managers alike have been under pressure to improve portfolio yields.

Market participants say the revised limits could have meaningful implications for the Nigerian Exchange (NGX), particularly at a time when domestic institutional participation is critical to market depth and stability.

Mr. Blakey Ijezie, founder of Okwudili Ijezie & Co., described the policy shift as timely, noting that pension funds remain a dominant force in Nigeria’s capital markets. He said higher equity limits would likely translate into stronger and more stable domestic demand for shares, especially from long-term investors less prone to speculative trading.

Tajudeen Olayinka, chief executive of Wyoming Capital Partners, said even incremental adjustments to pension asset allocation rules can have outsized effects on liquidity and valuation support. According to him, the expanded equity headroom could influence trading volumes and price discovery on the NGX over the coming quarters, particularly if PFAs rebalance portfolios to take advantage of the new limits.

Beyond equities, the move also underscores unresolved challenges in Nigeria’s alternative investment space. In September 2025, PenCom raised allowable allocations to private equity funds and introduced stricter qualifying criteria, a step meant to protect contributors while encouraging long-term investment in productive sectors. However, the limited pipeline of compliant alternative assets has slowed uptake, forcing regulators to revisit other parts of the investment framework.

PenCom said its latest revision should be seen as part of a longer-term effort to rebalance pension portfolios away from heavy reliance on government securities. In recent years, the regulator has gradually reduced permissible exposure to traditional fixed-income instruments while increasing limits for equities, infrastructure, and private capital, with the aim of boosting returns and expanding the developmental impact of pension funds.

For PFAs, the higher equity caps provide room to adjust strategies in response to market conditions, especially in a high-interest-rate environment where volatility and inflation complicate portfolio management. The changes may channel more long-term capital into listed companies, reinforcing the role of pension funds as anchors of domestic investment in the broader economy.

Some analysts note that the adjustment delivering its intended impact will depend on how quickly fund managers respond and whether parallel efforts to deepen Nigeria’s alternative asset market gain traction. However, PenCom, by this move, is signaling a willingness to fine-tune regulation in response to market realities, rather than leaving pension assets trapped by rigid rules in a system still short of investable options.

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