Please advise me.
I’m considering two investment options but I’m a bit confused on which one is better.
I want to start saving 20k monthly for about 10-15yrs for my child’s education.
My confusion is that I don’t know which option to choose between MMF and Naira savings on bamboo.
MMF offers 16.83% while Naira savings on bamboo pegged theirs at 16.25% interest with auto rollover option.
Does MMF interest fluctuate and does it offer auto reinvestment option?
Which option is better?
For your specific goal—saving ₦20,000 monthly for 10–15 years for your child's education—I would lean toward a Money Market Fund (MMF) over Bamboo Naira Savings, even though the current quoted rates are very close. Key difference Factor Money Market Fund (MMF) Bamboo Naira Savings Current yield VariRead more
For your specific goal—saving ₦20,000 monthly for 10–15 years for your child’s education—I would lean toward a Money Market Fund (MMF) over Bamboo Naira Savings, even though the current quoted rates are very close.
See lessKey difference
Factor
Money Market Fund (MMF)
Bamboo Naira Savings
Current yield
Varies with market rates
Fixed for the chosen tenor
Return stability
Fluctuates over time
Locked when you create a savings plan
Compounding
Usually automatic (NAV growth/reinvestment)
Auto-rollover available at maturity
Liquidity
Generally easier access
Early liquidation may reduce earnings
Long-term flexibility
Excellent for regular monthly contributions
Better suited for fixed-term savings goals
Bamboo’s Naira Savings product allows automatic rollover and can lock in a rate for a specific tenor. Early liquidation may attract a penalty on earned interest.
Money Market Funds invest in Treasury Bills, commercial papers, certificates of deposit and similar short-term instruments. Their yields move up and down as interest rates in the market change.
Does MMF interest fluctuate?
Yes.
An MMF offering 16.83% today is not guaranteeing 16.83% for the next 10–15 years. If interest rates fall, the yield can decline; if rates rise, the yield can increase. Returns depend on prevailing money-market conditions.
Does MMF automatically reinvest?
Generally, yes.
Most Nigerian MMFs are open-ended funds where income is reflected in the fund’s unit price (NAV) or periodically reinvested unless you redeem. This effectively creates compounding without you needing to manually reinvest every distribution. The exact mechanism depends on the fund manager.
Which would I choose?
Since you’ve previously mentioned that your daughter was born in May 2025 and you’re specifically building an education fund over a long horizon, I would rank the options as follows:
MMF for ongoing monthly contributions.
Bamboo Naira Savings for money you want to lock for a specific period.
Over time, consider gradually adding an equity fund component once the education fund becomes sizeable and your risk tolerance allows it.
The biggest advantage of the MMF here is flexibility. You can keep adding ₦20,000 every month without creating new locked savings plans, and your money remains relatively accessible if circumstances change.
One more thing
For a 10–15 year education goal, the bigger risk is not whether you earn 16.83% or 16.25%. The difference between those two rates is very small. The bigger risk is that both are naira-denominated investments and may struggle to outpace education-cost inflation over such a long period.
A practical approach could be:
Keep the foundation in an MMF.
As the fund grows, allocate part of future contributions to growth-oriented investments (such as equity funds) to improve the chances of beating inflation over the long term.
Between the two options you listed today, I would choose the MMF, assuming it is a reputable SEC-regulated fund with a good track record and low redemption friction. The extra flexibility is worth more than the small 0.58% difference in quoted yield.