I’ve been reading a lot of write-ups about money investment and different platforms for investment. Being medically inclined, I seem to be a stark novice on business and financial education.
Now I want to start investing money monthly (#15000 and #10000 respectively) for emergency funds and long term (say 20 years) wealth building goal. The only platform I seem conversant with is Cowrywise but I still don’t know how to go about the investment in the app.
So I need a guide as to:
1. What platform that is best to actually use if Cowrywise isn’t so okay
2. A proper understanding of money market mutual funds, treasury bills, ETFs, and others.
I really need to broaden my horizon beyond the medical profession
You're already doing something many professionals delay for years: realizing that earning income and building wealth are two different skills. With ₦10,000–₦15,000 monthly, your focus should not be finding the "best investment" immediately. Your first goal is building a simple system that you can maRead more
You’re already doing something many professionals delay for years: realizing that earning income and building wealth are two different skills.
See lessWith ₦10,000–₦15,000 monthly, your focus should not be finding the “best investment” immediately. Your first goal is building a simple system that you can maintain for 20 years.
Step 1: Separate Your Goals
You mentioned two goals:
Goal A: Emergency Fund
This is money for:
Medical emergencies
Job loss
Family emergencies
Unexpected expenses
This money should be:
Safe
Easily accessible
Not exposed to stock market fluctuations
Suitable options:
Money Market Mutual Funds
High-yield savings products
Treasury Bills (for larger amounts)
Goal B: Long-Term Wealth Building (20 Years)
This money is for:
Retirement
Financial independence
Future family goals
This money can tolerate market ups and downs because you have a long time horizon.
Suitable options:
Stock mutual funds
ETFs
Nigerian equities
International equities
Step 2: How I Would Allocate ₦15,000 Monthly
If you invest ₦15,000 monthly:
First 12–24 Months
₦10,000 → Emergency Fund
₦5,000 → Long-term investments
Build an emergency fund equal to at least 3–6 months of expenses.
After achieving that:
Thereafter
₦3,000 → Emergency Fund maintenance
₦12,000 → Long-term investments
Step 3: Understanding the Main Investment Options
Money Market Mutual Fund (Best for Emergency Fund)
A money market fund pools money from many investors and invests in:
Treasury Bills
Commercial Papers
Bank deposits
Short-term government securities
Benefits:
Low risk
Daily interest accrual
Relatively easy withdrawals
Examples include funds from:
ARM Investment Managers
Stanbic IBTC Asset Management
Meristem Wealth Management
Typical annual returns often move with interest-rate conditions and are generally higher than ordinary savings accounts, though they are not guaranteed.
Treasury Bills (T-Bills)
Treasury Bills are short-term loans to the Nigerian government through the Central Bank of Nigeria.
Think of it this way:
You lend the government money today.
The government pays you back later with interest.
Pros:
Very low risk
Backed by government
Cons:
Fixed tenure
Less flexible than money market funds
For small monthly investors, money market funds are usually more convenient.
Stocks (Shares)
When you buy shares, you become a part-owner of a company.
Examples:
Dangote Cement Plc
BUA Cement Plc
Guaranty Trust Holding Company Plc
Advantages:
Capital appreciation
Dividends
Potential inflation-beating returns
Risks:
Prices fluctuate
Can decline significantly in some years
Because you are looking at 20 years, stocks become very attractive.
ETFs (Exchange Traded Funds)
An ETF is essentially a basket of investments.
Instead of buying 20 stocks individually, one ETF may already hold all 20.
Benefits:
Diversification
Lower risk than owning a single stock
Easy to buy and sell
Example:
An S&P 500 ETF owns shares in hundreds of major U.S. companies.
When those companies grow, the ETF grows.
For long-term wealth building, ETFs are among the simplest and most effective tools available.
Step 4: Which Platform Should You Use?
Cowrywise
Pros:
Beginner-friendly
Automated savings
Access to mutual funds
Easy recurring investments
For someone starting from scratch, Cowrywise is actually a very good choice.
Other Nigerian Platforms
Cowrywise
Bamboo
Trove
Risevest
InvestNaija
For your current level:
Start emergency savings in Cowrywise money market funds.
Learn investment basics.
Later open Bamboo or another brokerage platform for stock and ETF investing.
Step 5: A Simple Beginner Plan
Month 1
Open Cowrywise.
Create:
Emergency Fund Goal
Long-Term Wealth Goal
Emergency Fund
Invest:
₦10,000 monthly
Choose:
Money Market Fund
Long-Term Goal
Invest:
₦5,000 monthly
Choose:
A diversified equity fund or stock fund available on the platform.
What Can ₦15,000 Monthly Become in 20 Years?
Assuming a 12% average annual return:
A monthly investment of ₦15,000 for 20 years could grow to roughly ₦15–18 million.
At 15% average annual return, the value could exceed ₦22 million.
The exact outcome depends on future returns, inflation, and consistency, but the key driver is not the starting amount—it’s investing every month without interruption.
My suggested starting structure
Goal
Monthly Amount
Emergency Fund (Money Market Fund)
₦10,000
Long-Term Investment (Equity Fund/ETF)
₦5,000
Total
₦15,000
As your income increases, increase the monthly contribution before looking for more sophisticated investments.
Given your medical background, think of investing the same way you think of preventive medicine: consistent small actions over decades usually produce better outcomes than occasional dramatic interventions.