Good day sir. My name is Ajayi Elijah Oyewumi. I’m one of your followers on Facebook. Sir, please, I have #64k assets value on my afrinvestor, #50k net assets value on my stanbic ibtc Ethical fund and #320k on my palmpay fixed savings with the return of #57,600 on 31 March 2027 (maturity date). I’m a masters student, department of business administration and also a plumber but the income is not stable. I’m learning data analysis but I don’t have laptop to practice what I’m learning. What is your advice for me on this?
Thank you as I’m looking forward to hearing from you.
Based on the numbers you've shared, I would seriously consider buying a laptop, but I would not break all of your investments to do it. Here's why. Your Current Position Afrinvest investment: ₦64,000 Stanbic IBTC Ethical Fund: ₦50,000 PalmPay fixed savings: ₦320,000 (matures March 31, 2027) Total asRead more
Based on the numbers you’ve shared, I would seriously consider buying a laptop, but I would not break all of your investments to do it.
See lessHere’s why.
Your Current Position
Afrinvest investment: ₦64,000
Stanbic IBTC Ethical Fund: ₦50,000
PalmPay fixed savings: ₦320,000 (matures March 31, 2027)
Total assets: approximately ₦434,000
You are:
A Master’s student in Business Administration.
Learning data analysis.
A plumber with irregular income.
Interested in building long-term wealth and professional skills.
A laptop is not consumption in your case. It is a productive asset.
Buying a laptop to watch movies is an expense. Buying a laptop to practice Excel, Power BI, SQL, Python, and build a portfolio is an investment in your earning power.
The Key Question
Can the laptop increase your future income more than the returns from your current investments?
In my view, yes.
Your Stanbic Ethical Fund and PalmPay savings are likely earning somewhere around 15–25% annually depending on market conditions.
But if a laptop helps you:
Complete your data analysis training,
Build projects,
Apply for internships,
Get freelance work,
Improve your employability,
the return could be far higher than the investment returns.
What I Would Avoid
I would not liquidate everything.
You mentioned your income is unstable.
Maintaining some emergency savings is important.
A Practical Approach
If you can get a decent used laptop for ₦150,000–₦220,000:
Option 1 (Preferred)
Leave the PalmPay fixed savings untouched.
Use the ₦64k Afrinvest investment.
Use the ₦50k Stanbic Ethical Fund.
Add ₦40k–₦100k from current cash flow or other available funds.
This preserves your largest savings position.
Option 2 If a better laptop requires more money:
Withdraw part of the PalmPay savings only if there is no severe penalty.
Still keep at least 50–60% of your total assets invested.
What Laptop Spec Should You Target?
For data analysis, you do not need a high-end machine.
Look for:
Intel Core i5 (8th generation or newer) or Ryzen 5
8GB RAM minimum (16GB preferred)
SSD storage (256GB or 512GB)
Good battery health
Popular used business laptops include:
Dell Latitude 7490
HP EliteBook 840 G5
Lenovo ThinkPad T480
These are commonly used for Excel, Power BI, SQL, Python, and general analytics work.
My Recommendation
If I were in your situation, I would:
Buy a reasonably priced used laptop.
Keep the PalmPay fixed savings intact if possible.
Use the smaller investments first.
Continue investing after purchasing the laptop.
Treat the laptop as part of your career-development budget.
A Master’s degree plus practical data-analysis skills can open more opportunities than an extra year of returns on ₦114,000 invested in funds.
In your case, the laptop is not competing with your investments—it is an asset that can help you earn more and invest more later.