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Ezekiel Adole
Ezekiel Adole
Asked: March 28, 20262026-03-28T12:17:45+00:00 2026-03-28T12:17:45+00:00In: Stock Market Investing

COMPOUNDING IN SHARES OF COMPANY

Does compounding apply to shares especially if the company pays dividends yearly and you are not getting any dividends because you probably don’t have CSCS account?

iking ferry
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  1. Ochoyoda
    Ochoyoda Contributor
    2026-03-28T13:09:20+00:00Added an answer on March 28, 2026 at 1:09 pm

    Yes — compounding absolutely applies to shares, but there's an important detail in your situation regarding dividends and CSCS. Let me break it down clearly. 1. How Compounding Works in Shares Compounding in shares happens when: You receive dividends Then reinvest those dividends to buy more sharesRead more

    Yes — compounding absolutely applies to shares, but there’s an important detail in your situation regarding dividends and CSCS. Let me break it down clearly.

    1. How Compounding Works in Shares

    Compounding in shares happens when:

    You receive dividends

    Then reinvest those dividends to buy more shares

    Those new shares also generate dividends

    Over time, your money grows faster and faster

    Example:

    Year 1

    You buy ₦100,000 of shares → Dividend ₦8,000

    Year 2

    You reinvest ₦8,000 → Now you own ₦108,000 worth of shares

    Dividend becomes ₦8,640

    Year 3

    Reinvest again → More shares → Bigger dividend

    This is compounding in shares 📈

    2. Now Your Situation (No CSCS Account)

    If you don’t have a CSCS account / e-dividend setup:

    Your dividends are still paid

    But they stay with the registrar

    You don’t receive the money

    So you cannot reinvest

    Therefore compounding stops ❌

    This is very important.

    You’re technically earning dividends, but you’re not compounding because you’re not reinvesting.

    3. Two Types of Compounding in Shares

    Even without dividends, shares can still compound in two ways:

    1. Price Compounding

    If company grows:

    Share price increases

    Your investment grows automatically

    Example:

    Buy MTN at ₦200

    After 5 years → ₦350

    That’s compounding through capital appreciation 📈

    2. Dividend Compounding (Powerful One)

    Receive dividends

    Reinvest dividends

    Buy more shares

    More dividends

    This is stronger compounding 💪

    4. What You Should Do Now (Very Important)

    To activate compounding:

    You should:

    Open CSCS account (if you don’t have one)

    Fill e-dividend mandate form

    Link bank account

    Start receiving dividends automatically

    After that:

    Reinvest dividends

    Let compounding work

    5. Why This Matters (Long-Term Impact)

    Without compounding:

    ₦100,000 → maybe ₦300,000

    With compounding:

    ₦100,000 → ₦700,000+ (over time)

    Compounding is the real secret of stock market wealth.

    My Honest Advice (Based on Your Investment Journey)

    Since you’ve already:

    Bought MTN shares

    Invested in bonds

    Using Bamboo

    You’re already on the right path 👍

    Now your next smart move: 👉 Fix dividend collection (CSCS / e-dividend)

    This unlocks true compounding.

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    • Ezekiel Adole
      Ezekiel Adole
      2026-03-28T14:52:48+00:00Replied to answer on March 28, 2026 at 2:52 pm

      Thanks so much.

      Thanks so much.

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  2. Edith Ejenavwo
    Edith Ejenavwo Beginner
    2026-03-29T06:03:19+00:00Added an answer on March 29, 2026 at 6:03 am

    Compounding applies to shares. The Law of Compounding states that capital gains and dividends generate their own additional returns over time when reinvested. It is imperative to know that compounding does not only apply to dividends, it also applies to capital gains. So even if you are not receivinRead more

    Compounding applies to shares.

    The Law of Compounding states that capital gains and dividends generate their own additional returns over time when reinvested.

    It is imperative to know that compounding does not only apply to dividends, it also applies to capital gains.

    So even if you are not receiving dividends, you can also compound your capital gains by reinvesting it to generate additional returns.

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