Tag: Pension Fund Operators Association of Nigeria (PenOp)

  • ‘Building long term security in retirement not quick fix’

    ‘Building long term security in retirement not quick fix’

    • Mirrors life of a retiree without pension

    Pension Fund Operators Association of Nigeria (PenOp) has said building long term security in retirement is not quick fix as it mirrors life of a retiree without pension.

    While identifying the two faces of retirement, PenOp considered the story of two hypothetical retirees, both of whom left service with N20 million.

    According to PenOp, Madam Okeke for instance decided to withdraw everything and invest in a family business. For a while, it seemed promising. But within three years, inflation, currency depreciation, and unforeseen costs left her with nothing. By her early seventies, she had become dependent on relatives for basic needs.

    Her colleague, Mr. Ade, opted to remain under the CPS.

     His monthly pension was modest but consistent. Each month, without fail, his payment arrived. At 80, he still enjoys independence, secure in the knowledge that his pension will not dry up.

    Both individuals worked hard; both sought security. But their choices determined whether retirement meant stability or vulnerability.

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    Stating why structure matters, the operators said some critics argue that restricting lump-sum withdrawals treats retirees like children.

    PenOp said: “In reality, the principle is protective, not paternalistic. Across the world, pension systems are structured to spread income across retirement years because experience shows that without safeguards, many retirees exhaust savings too quickly. Family obligations, health crises, or speculative investments often erode lump sums, leaving individuals vulnerable at the exact stage of life when they are least able to recover financially.

    “The Contributory Pension Scheme (CPS)  prevents this outcome by ensuring that pensions last as long as life itself. For retirees who live beyond expectations, payments continue through programmed withdrawals or annuities arranged with insurance companies. The notion that payments “end” at 75 is a misconception; in truth, actuarial science only uses life expectancy as a guide for planning, not a cut-off point.

    “Few issues stir as much passion as pensions. After all, retirement is not some distant concept; it is the very moment when decades of work are meant to translate into dignity, stability, and peace of mind. For Nigerian workers, the CPS is the system designed to ensure that this promise is kept.

    Yet, as public debates grow louder, it is important to separate emotion from fact, and quick fixes from sustainable solutions.

    “At the heart of the pension conversation lies a simple question: should retirees be allowed to withdraw their savings in full, or should access remain structured? The former offers instant gratification; the latter seeks to protect long-term security. The choice is not trivial—it is one that determines whether our elders live their final years in comfort or in poverty”, the operators said.

    The Hidden Risks of “Take-It-All”

    The operators further said: “Imagine that a retiree with N20 million saved up over a career. It may seem logical to withdraw the entire sum and invest it independently. Some might argue that by chasing attractive interest rates or putting the money into a family business, higher returns can be secured. But this perspective often ignores three hard realities.

    “The first is longevity risk—the possibility of outliving one’s savings. A lump sum might look substantial at 60, but what happens if life stretches to 85 or 90? Of which many are praying for. The CPS is deliberately structured to provide income for life, ensuring that retirees do not face destitution in their later years.

    “The second is market volatility. Treasury bill yields and bond rates do not remain at 15 elevated levels (double digits) indefinitely. They fluctuate sometimes falling to single digits. A retiree who counts on fixed high returns may quickly discover that returns are unpredictable and insufficient, especially during downturns.

    “The third is investment risk. Stories abound of pensioners who withdraw funds to finance ventures that collapse under inflationary pressures or poor management. The intention may be noble, but the outcome is often tragic: savings vanish, while bills remain”.

    Building Trust in the System

    Trust is the lifeblood of any pension system, said PenOp.

    “Workers must believe that their savings are safe and that administrators are acting in their best interests. Under Nigerian CPS, pension assets are not even held by the Pension Fund Administrators (PFAs). Instead, they are kept with independent Pension Fund Custodians under the strict oversight of the National Pension Commission (PenCom). This three-tiered structure: Saver, Administrator, Custodian provides layers of security that safeguard against mismanagement.

    “Since the scheme’s inception in 2004, pension assets have grown to over ₦24 trillion. These funds are invested in government securities, infrastructure, corporate bonds, and housing, supporting not just individual retirees but also the broader Nigerian economy. PFAs earn regulated fees among the lowest in Africa while all investment returns accrue to contributors. Far from exploiting workers, the system has built a sustainable pool of capital that benefits both retirees and national development.

    The Temptation of Oversimplification

    PenOp maintained that it is easy to believe that giving retirees unrestricted access to their funds is the “fair” solution.

    “But pensions are not simple savings accounts. They are insurance against the twin uncertainties of longevity and economic shocks. Psychologists call it the Dunning-Kruger effect: when complex issues are oversimplified by those who do not fully understand them. In the pension context, what looks like empowerment today may translate into widespread elderly poverty tomorrow”.

    The Real Struggle

    Ultimately, the true enemy is not the pension structure it is poverty, PenOp noted.

    “A nation that fails to protect its elders condemns itself to cycles of dependency and despair. Justice in pensions is not about short-term payouts but about ensuring that workers who devoted decades to the economy are not left helpless in their later years.

    “The CPS was designed precisely for this: to move Nigeria away from the inefficiencies and corruption of the old Defined Benefit Scheme, and toward a sustainable system that outlasts political and economic turbulence”.

    A Call for Balance

    PenOp submitted that: “Nigeria must pursue a balanced path one that recognizes retirees’ genuine frustrations while preserving the safeguards that protect them. Quick fixes may win applause in the moment, but true dignity in retirement comes from careful, compassionate, and sustainable reform. Our elders deserve nothing less”, the operators stressed.

  • Pension Fund investment in REITs falls to N20b

    Pension Fund investment in REITs falls to N20b

    The Pension Fund Operators Association of Nigeria (PenOp) has revealed a significant decline in investments in Real Estate Investment Trusts (REITs) over the past five years, highlighting a shift towards direct real estate investments.

    According to an analysis shared on its official Instagram page, PenOp reported that investments in REITs fell from N239.28 billion in 2020 to just N20.06 billion by the end of 2024. The lowest point was in 2022, when investments dropped to N14.14 billion, down from N153.52 billion in 2021. While there was a slight recovery in 2023 to N21.04 billion, the decline resumed in 2024.

    PenOp attributed the gradual decline to the limited availability of REITs in the Nigerian market. However, the association noted that active pension funds have shifted focus to investing in real estate through private equity funds, while closed pension funds have continued to invest directly in real estate.

    In 2024, direct real estate investments by pension funds reached N273.06 billion, a significant increase from N245.34 billion in 2023. Five years earlier, in 2019, direct investment stood at just N5.13 billion, underscoring the rapid growth in this segment.

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    Combined, pension fund investments in the real estate sector through REITs and direct investments totaled N293.12 billion in 2024, representing a 10.04 percent increase from the N266.38 billion recorded in 2023.

    In the statement, PenOp emphasized the importance of real estate investments in pension fund portfolios, describing them as a hedge against long-term inflation and a source of long-term capital for developers.

    While active pension funds are restricted from directly investing in real estate by regulations, they are permitted to invest in REITs. Closed pension fund administrators and those managing defined benefit schemes, however, are allowed to engage in direct real estate investments. As of Monday, three REITs were listed on the Nigerian Exchange (NGX).