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SEC engages over 500 firms in radical push for investor protection
Nigeria’s Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) says it has engaged more than 500 firms as part of a broad effort to align financial technology innovation with investor protection in the country’s capital market.
The disclosure was made by SEC Director-General Emomotimi Agama during the Commission’s inaugural Regulator/FinTech Clinic held with FinTech operators, regulators, and other market stakeholders.
The SEC said the clinic is a strategic platform to discuss emerging digital financial products and the regulatory frameworks required to govern them effectively as Nigeria’s digital finance ecosystem expands rapidly through technology-driven financial service providers.
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According to the Commission, Nigeria’s growing FinTech ecosystem has improved financial inclusion and widened access to investment opportunities, but innovation must operate within regulatory boundaries that safeguard investors and maintain market integrity.
What they are saying
Nigeria’s capital market regulator says the rapid rise of financial technology has created opportunities for innovation but also introduced regulatory risks, including the growth of unregistered investment platforms.
For this reason, the Commission said it has engaged more than 500 firms to understand their business models and the products they are bringing into the market.
The Commission noted that such engagements are essential to designing regulatory structures that encourage innovation while strengthening investor protection.
More insights
The Commission said the FinTech Clinic will serve as a platform to clarify regulatory expectations under the recently enacted Investments and Securities Act 2025, which expands SEC’s powers to regulate digital investment platforms and products.
According to the regulator, the engagement will help FinTech companies understand their compliance obligations while enabling the Commission to monitor emerging technologies more effectively.
Agama explained that the SEC’s core mandate—protecting investors, ensuring fair and transparent markets, and facilitating capital formation—remains compatible with technological innovation when supported by responsive regulation.
What you should know
Nigeria’s FinTech sector has expanded significantly in recent years, driven by mobile technology, digital payments, and online investment platforms targeting retail investors.
In 2021, the SEC rolled out crowdfunding rules designed to support capital raising for small businesses while maintaining strong investor safeguards.
Regulators at the clinic emphasized that technology-driven financial innovation must be supported by robust governance frameworks to sustain investor confidence.
Agama also stressed that the FinTech Clinic is intended as a constructive engagement platform rather than a compliance enforcement exercise, encouraging operators to view regulatory dialogue as an opportunity to strengthen their business models and ensure alignment with capital market rules.
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