If I have #50,000 to invest, where should I invest it , for example, should I buy shares, if yes what type of shares should I buy
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With ₦50,000 as a beginner, I would focus less on "finding the best stock" and more on building a solid investment process. Step 1: Keep some liquidity Before investing, make sure you have some emergency cash available. If ₦50,000 is all the money you have, don't put 100% into shares. A simple allocRead more
With ₦50,000 as a beginner, I would focus less on “finding the best stock” and more on building a solid investment process.
See lessStep 1: Keep some liquidity
Before investing, make sure you have some emergency cash available. If ₦50,000 is all the money you have, don’t put 100% into shares.
A simple allocation could be:
₦20,000–₦25,000 in a Money Market Fund
₦25,000–₦30,000 in shares or an ETF
This gives you both stability and growth potential.
Step 2: Prefer diversification over stock picking
For a beginner, an ETF is often safer than trying to pick individual winners.
Consider:
Vetiva Griffin 30 ETF
It tracks a basket of major Nigerian companies, so you are not relying on the fortunes of a single business.
Step 3: If buying individual shares
Focus on quality companies with:
Consistent profits
Regular dividends
Strong market position
Long operating history
Examples on the Nigerian Exchange include:
GTCO
Zenith Bank
Presco
Seplat Energy
Nestlé Nigeria
That does not mean they will always rise, but they are generally stronger businesses than speculative penny stocks.
A sample ₦50,000 beginner portfolio
Option A (balanced):
₦25,000 Money Market Fund
₦25,000 ETF
Option B (growth-oriented):
₦20,000 Money Market Fund
₦15,000 GTCO
₦15,000 Zenith Bank
Option C (very simple):
Invest the entire ₦50,000 in a Money Market Fund while you continue learning, then add monthly contributions and start buying shares later.
Most important
The biggest determinant of your future wealth is unlikely to be what you do with this first ₦50,000.
Suppose you invest ₦50,000 today and then add ₦20,000 every month for the next 10 years. The monthly investing will matter far more than the initial ₦50,000.
So focus on:
Investing regularly.
Reinvesting dividends.
Avoiding “hot tips” and speculative stocks.
Building ownership of productive assets over time.
Given what you’ve shared in previous conversations, you’re already learning about Money Market Funds, FGN Savings Bonds, ETFs, and shares. For a beginner in Nigeria, that combination is generally a much stronger foundation than chasing the latest IPO or trying to find the next stock that will double overnight.