Nigeria’s pension industry has notched another milestone, with total assets under management climbing to a record N31.32 trillion as of May 31, 2026, according to unaudited figures released by the National Pension Commission (PenCom) on June 29.
The new figure represents a 1.23 percent rise from the N30.94 trillion posted in April, adding roughly N384.98 billion to the pot in a single month. More striking is the year-on-year trajectory: assets have surged 29.5 percent from N24.18 trillion in May 2025, a pace of expansion that has held firm even as the broader economy continues to wrestle with inflation, currency pressures, and tight liquidity.
The numbers tell a story of an industry that has, for now, decoupled its growth narrative from the wider macroeconomic gloom. Contributors’ savings keep flowing in, fund managers keep finding yield, and the compounding effect of both has pushed the industry past the N31 trillion mark for the first time.
Unsurprisingly, the conservative instincts of pension fund administrators remain firmly intact. Federal government securities continue to dominate the asset mix, accounting for N17.48 trillion, well over half of the entire pool.
Within that bucket, federal government bonds held to maturity make up the lion’s share at N13.48 trillion, followed by Treasury bills at N1.13 trillion, state government securities at N361.53 billion, and Sukuk bonds at N77.64 billion.
Analysts would read this as a reflection of two things: a regulatory and fiduciary culture that prizes capital preservation, and the simple arithmetic that elevated yields on government paper have made it an attractive place to park retirement savings even without venturing into riskier assets.
Money market instruments added another N3.01 trillion to the mix, while mutual funds contributed a comparatively modest N271 billion.
May’s figure caps a months-long upward march. Assets stood at N29.52 trillion in March, having grown only marginally from N29.43 trillion in February, a period marked by tight liquidity and what PenCom described as ongoing portfolio adjustments. The pace then picked up to April’s N30.94 trillion and now to May’s record.
Rewind further to January, when assets touched N28.04 trillion, a 2.11 percent rise from December 2025’s N27.46 trillion, and 22.64 percent above the January 2025 figure of N22.86 trillion.
The acceleration in the year-on-year growth rate, from roughly 22.6 percent in January to nearly 29.5 percent by May, suggests the industry’s momentum has been building rather than plateauing.
Perhaps the more consequential shift, however, lies beneath the headline asset figure: PFAs are increasingly willing to chase returns in the stock market. Separate PenCom data shows that pension fund holdings in domestic ordinary shares jumped to N5.46 trillion by the end of the first quarter of 2026, up from N3.96 trillion at the close of 2025, a 38.09 percent year-to-date increase.
That kind of reallocation, away from the comfort of fixed income and toward equities, marks one of the more aggressive portfolio shifts the industry has seen in recent years. It points to growing confidence among fund managers in the resilience of Nigerian equities and a deliberate strategy to diversify beyond the bond-heavy positioning that has long defined the sector.
Whether that equity bet pays off will depend heavily on how the Nigerian Exchange performs through the rest of the year. Still, for now, the dual story is one of a pension industry that is both growing in scale and evolving in sophistication, even as the contributors whose savings underpin it continue to navigate a difficult cost-of-living environment.
WHAT YOU SHOULD KNOW
Nigeria’s pension assets hit a record N31.32 trillion in May 2026, growing 29.5% year-on-year despite economic headwinds. While government securities still anchor over half the portfolio, PFAs are increasingly shifting funds into equities, up 38% year-to-date, signaling growing confidence in diversifying retirement savings beyond safe, fixed-income assets.















