PenCom Announces Recapitalisation to โBolsterโ Pension Industry Stability and Trust
The National pension Commissionโฃ (PenCom) is implementingโ significant recapitalisation reforms for Pension Fund Administrators (PFAs) and pension Fund Custodiansโค (PFCs) aimed at strengthening the โคnigerian pension industry, protecting contributor savings, and maintaining public trust. The โreforms were highlighted during recent events focused on customer service โand industry stability.
According to pencom officials, the move is โa crucial step in ensuring the long-term health โand โคresilience of the pension system.”Institutionalisation and governance reforms together are necessary to protect contributors’ savings and sustain public trust,” stated aโ PenCom representative. “This is aโค reminder โฃthat behind every regulation and every reform is a human story of individuals who have entrusted their future โขtoโฃ the โฃpension system. Our duty is to ensure we justify that trust through efficiency, โtransparency, and responsiveness to those we serve.”
PenCom Director-General, โOloworaran, assured stakeholders that the Commission will continue toโ prioritize service excellence through โข”digital innovation, stronger compliance mechanisms, and โขimproved customer dialog.”
The need for customer-centricโ reforms was also emphasized by Mrs. By the danger of Kincodee, Head of Operations at SERVICOM, represented by Mr. Duruba Sesugh, who commended PenCom’s focus onโฃ service delivery and citizen-focused initiatives. Akinbodewa noted โขthat โthe theme of this year’s โคcustomer Service Week, “mission Possible,” โreflects the determinationโ and teamwork needed to improveโ customer service across Nigeria’s public institutions, โขadding that “determination, โฃcollaboration, andโ data-driven decisions are key to achieving service excellence and maintaining the trust of โpension contributors.”
The recapitalisation comes โas Nigeria’s total pension assets continue โto โgrow. As โคof August 2025, โฃpension assets โคsurpassed N25 trillion, reaching N25.89 trillion, โhaving first crossed โtheโข N25โ trillionโข mark in July 2025. โ between June and August 2025, pension funds grew by โapproximately N1.26 trillion โค(5.14 per โcent), reflecting increased employer compliance and improved investment returns within โtheโ regulatedโข pension space.
Under theโฃ new directive, the minimumโ capital requirement for โฃpfas โขhas been increased toโข N20 โขbillion, while PFCs must now hold a minimum capital of N25 billion. PenCom has also โintroduced a tiered โclassification system for PFAs based on Assets โขunder โManagement (AUM):
* Category A: PFAs managing N500 billion and above willโค requireโ a minimum capital of N20โข billion plus one per cent of AUM exceeding N500 โฃbillion.
* Category B: โค PFAs with โขAUM below N500 billion must raiseโ their capital to N20 billion.
* โข Category C: Special-purpose PFAs,โฃ including NPF Pensionsโ Limited (N30 billion minimum) and the Nigerianโ University โPensionโ Management Company Limited โค(N20 billion minimum), have specific capital requirements.
New entrantsโฃ to the industryโข will also be required to meet a minimum capital requirement of N20 billion,โฃ effective instantly. โFor PFCs, the minimum capital has been revised toโฃ N25 billion plus 0.1 per centโข of assets underโค custody – a significantโ increase from the previous N2 billion requirement set in 2004.
PenCom hasโข set a deadline โคof December 31, 2026, for operators to meet the new capital thresholds.โ The Commission believes this recapitalisation โeffort will create a more resilient pension industry,better equipped to protect โคcontributors’ funds and expandโฃ pension coverageโ throughout โNigeria.