You’ve often taught us to think like a bank that banks don’t let money sleep; they invest it in government bonds and other assets to keep it working. My question is this: if we’re to think like banks, and banks operate through investment logic, then what about the platforms or institutions they invest through? How do these investment bodies think, and where exactly is their profit generated from? I understand that FG bonds are basically loans to the government, but beyond that what drives returns in other types of investments that banks or large institutions engage in? And taking it further, if banks think like investors, and investors think like institutions how can we, as individuals, begin to think like the investment institutions themselves? What mindset or framework do they operate with that allows them to stay ahead of both banks and the market? I’m asking to understand the real chain of value creation, from individual to bank to institution and how we can position our thinking to climb that ladder consciously.
This is a very deep question, and the answer becomes clear when you understand how value is created at each level of the financial system. Let me explain. At the basic level, individuals earn money from their work or business. The challenge for most people is that this money sits idle or is not manaRead more
This is a very deep question, and the answer becomes clear when you understand how value is created at each level of the financial system.
Let me explain.
At the basic level, individuals earn money from their work or business. The challenge for most people is that this money sits idle or is not managed properly. When individuals save or invest, they are basically giving their money to institutions to manage.
Banks and investment institutions do not let money sleep. They take deposits and invest in assets like government bonds, corporate bonds, money market instruments, stocks, and sometimes structured investments. Their profit comes from the difference between what they earn on investments and what they pay to customers.
Now, beyond banks, investment institutions like asset managers and fund managers think differently. Their main job is to allocate capital efficiently. They study risks, returns, timing, and market conditions before deciding where to place money. Their profit comes from management fees, performance, and sometimes spreads or investment gains depending on the structure.
Let me simplify the chain of value creation.
Individuals create value through work and business.
Banks create value by collecting idle money and lending or investing it.
Investment institutions create value by professionally allocating large pools of capital into different assets.
Government creates value by using borrowed funds to build infrastructure and support the economy.
Companies create value by using capital to grow revenue and profits.
For Example:
Imagine Mama Ngozi sells tomatoes. At the end of the day, she has money.
If she keeps it idle, it loses value over time. If she puts it in a trusted saving system, that money is pooled together with others and used to support bigger activities like lending or investment.
so… In return, she earns a share of the returns.
Now here is the deeper secret many people miss.
Investment institutions are not just looking for returns. They are managing risk first, then returns.
They diversify across assets, time horizons, and economic cycles. They also think in terms of probability, not certainty. They understand that not every investment will win, but the overall portfolio must win over time.
Another important secret is that institutions operate with discipline, not emotion. They follow structured processes, data, and long term strategies. They do not chase hype. They position capital where the risk reward is favorable, and they constantly rebalance.
So how can an individual think like an institution?
First, stop thinking like a trader chasing quick profit.
Start thinking like a capital allocator. Ask where your money is best positioned for growth over time.
Second, understand risk before return. Do not invest in what you do not understand.
Third, diversify instead of concentrating everything in one place.
Fourth, think long term. Institutions are not trying to double money overnight. They build consistent growth over time.
Fifth, build knowledge continuously. The more you understand how money flows, the better your decisions become.
Because… Wealth is not only about how much money you have, but how well you understand where money should go and why.
If you think like an investor, you protect capital.
See lessIf you think like an institution, you allocate capital wisely.
If you combine both, you move from being a saver to becoming a strategic participant in the financial system.
thanks sir, you expound this perfectly and to my understanding
thanks sir, you expound this perfectly and to my understanding
See lessMoney in the financial system moves in a chain. Individuals earn money, banks collect and manage that money, and investment institutions allocate it into assets like government bonds, stocks, and other instruments. Banks make money by using the deposits they collect to invest or lend at a higher retRead more
Money in the financial system moves in a chain. Individuals earn money, banks collect and manage that money, and investment institutions allocate it into assets like government bonds, stocks, and other instruments.
Banks make money by using the deposits they collect to invest or lend at a higher return than what they pay to customers. Investment institutions make money by managing large pools of capital and earning from fees and the returns they generate from those investments.
The real source of profit across the system is simple. It comes from putting money into productive use where it can grow over time.
See lessthanks sir, you expound this perfectly and to my understanding
thanks sir, you expound this perfectly and to my understanding
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