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    MarketForces Africa » MarketForces News » How SEC Can Achieve 20m Investors’ Target

    How SEC Can Achieve 20m Investors’ Target

    Ogochukwu NdubuisiBy Ogochukwu NdubuisiFebruary 22, 2026 News No Comments3 Mins Read
    How SEC Can Achieve 20m Investors’ Target
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    How SEC Can Achieve 20m Investors’ Target

    Prof. Uche Uwaleke, the President of the Capital Market Academics of Nigeria (CMAN), says aggressive investors’ education and strong enforcement against infractions will help the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) achieve its 2026 targets.

    SEC on Feb. 20 inaugurated a liquidity working group targeting no fewer than 20 million new investors into the market.

    Speaking to News men  in Abuja on Sunday, Uwaleke said the target was realisable but required a coordinated ecosystem approach involving regulators, exchanges, fintech firms, banks, universities, and market operators.

    He said financial literacy campaigns must also be institutionalised, not episodic. The expert said SEC had inaugurated a curriculum review committee, as part of its broader strategy to expand retail participation, promoting capital market studies in Nigerian universities.

    He said embedding capital market literacy within tertiary institutions was a sustainable way to build a new generation of informed investors.

    Uwaleke said SEC and market operators must incentivise product innovation tailored to small-ticket investors, including micro-investment products.

    “I also think collaboration with fintech firms should be scaled up to ensure seamless onboarding and real-time access to market data.

    ”Trust is fundamental. It is a no brainer that strong enforcement against market infractions and improved corporate governance standards will reinforce confidence and attract long-term participation. ”If the 20 million target is realised, the impact on the market would be transformative,” he said.

    Uwaleke said the country had a population exceeding 200 million, with a rapidly growing young and tech-savvy demographic, yet, at less than one million, the number of active capital market investors remained a small fraction of that population.

    He said when compared with South Africa, where a significantly smaller population supported a deeper and more liquid market, the scale of our untapped potential were visible.

    Uwaleke said a broader investor base would significantly enhance liquidity, reduce volatility driven by concentration risk, and improve price discovery.

    The president said it would also increase turnover ratios, make it easier for issuers to raise long-term capital, and strengthen the capital market’s contribution to Gross Domestic Product.

    ”More importantly, it would position the Nigerian market to compete more effectively with peers such as South Africa in terms of depth and resilience,” he said.

    Uwaleke said with stronger retail participation complementing institutional flows, Nigeria’s capital market could function as a robust engine for infrastructure financing, industrial expansion, and job creation #How SEC Can Achieve 20m Investors’ Target#


    Exchange Rate: Oil, FX to Remain Closely Linked – Analysts

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    Ogochukwu Ndubuisi
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    Ogochukwu Ndubuisi is an editorial content strategist and financial news writer at MarketForces Africa, covering a broad range of topics including Nigeria's equity markets, infrastructure development, energy, government policy, corporate finance, and digital economy.With over 2,400 published articles on MarketForces Africa, Ogochi brings depth and consistency to the publication's daily news coverage.Her reporting spans Nigerian Exchange Group market movements, Lagos State infrastructure projects, and federal government economic policies, oil and gas developments, and emerging sectors shaping Nigeria's economic landscape.She also covers Africa-wide stories, including East African market indices, continental investment trends, and cross-border economic developments.Ogochi works closely with MarketForces Africa's editorial and corporate communications teams to deliver accurate, timely, and well-researched content to the publication's professional readership.Ogochukwu Ndubuisi is based in Lagos, Nigeria.

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