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  1. Asked: May 11, 2026In: INVESTING & WEALTH BUILDING

    Is Zedcrest Equity Fund a Good Mutual Fund Investment for Beginners in Nigeria?

    Ochoyoda
    Best Answer
    Ochoyoda Intermediate
    Added an answer on May 11, 2026 at 7:14 am

    Your thinking is reasonable. For a beginner who wants exposure to long-term wealth creation, an equity fund like the Zedcrest Wealth equity fund is not a bad place to start at all — especially if you do not yet want to pick individual stocks yourself. But there are some important things you should uRead more

    Your thinking is reasonable. For a beginner who wants exposure to long-term wealth creation, an equity fund like the Zedcrest Wealth equity fund is not a bad place to start at all — especially if you do not yet want to pick individual stocks yourself.
    But there are some important things you should understand before focusing too much on the “109.4% return” figure.
    Here’s the key thing:
    A high-performing equity fund is attractive, but past performance is not guaranteed future performance.
    The Zedcrest Equity Fund has genuinely been among the stronger-performing Nigerian equity funds recently according to several market rankings.
    Zedcrest itself is also a SEC-regulated investment manager in Nigeria, which is important because regulation matters heavily in mutual funds
    What I personally think about funds like this:
    The good side
    Professional fund managers handle stock selection.
    You gain exposure to strong NGX companies without researching every stock yourself.
    Equity funds historically outperform fixed income over long periods.
    Nigeria’s equity market has been very strong recently, especially banking and industrial stocks.
    If you are young, equity exposure makes sense because you have time on your side.
    For someone like you who is still learning investing, an equity fund can actually be safer psychologically than buying random individual stocks.
    The risk side (very important)
    That same 109% return can also reverse sharply.
    Equity funds are volatile.
    A fund can:
    gain 80% one year,
    then fall 20–40% another period,
    then recover later.
    Many beginners enter after seeing high returns, then panic during corrections and withdraw at losses.
    That is why your investment horizon matters more than the recent return figure.
    If your mindset is:
    “I need this money soon.”
    Then equity funds may frustrate you.
    But if your mindset is:
    “I am building wealth gradually for 3–5+ years.”
    Then equity funds become much more reasonable.
    About the 90-day holding period
    The “90 days” usually means they discourage very short-term withdrawals or may apply conditions for early redemption.
    But realistically, equity investing should not be viewed as a 90-day investment anyway.
    Equity funds are better treated as:
    medium-term: 3+ years
    ideal: 5–10 years
    That is how compounding works best.
    What I would advise a beginner
    Do not put all your money into equity funds immediately.
    A balanced beginner approach in Nigeria could look like this:
    50–70% in safer instruments:
    money market fund
    treasury bills
    fixed income fund
    30–50% in equity exposure:
    equity mutual fund
    selected stocks
    This helps you sleep better during market downturns.
    For example: If you have ₦100,000:
    ₦60k MMF/T-bills
    ₦40k equity fund
    Then increase equity exposure gradually as your knowledge and emotional tolerance improve.
    One thing I like about your approach
    You are researching before investing.
    That alone already separates you from many people who invest purely because of hype or screenshots of returns.
    The biggest mistake beginners make is chasing:
    “highest return” instead of understanding:
    risk,
    fund strategy,
    time horizon,
    and consistency.
    Even globally, many actively managed funds perform very well for some years and then underperform later. That is why diversification matters.
    So overall:
    The fund itself is not a red flag from what is publicly available.
    Zedcrest appears legitimate and regulated.
    The returns are impressive.
    But you should enter with long-term expectations and proper risk allocation — not because of the 109% headline alone.
    A disciplined investor with moderate returns usually does better long-term than someone constantly chasing the hottest fund every few months.

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