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Olumide AdesinaSince a full economic recovery this year is off the table,
Nairametrics interviewed some investment experts, entrepreneurs, and
corporate heads, on the assets they would invest N500,000 in. The
responses varied from buying gold to investing in mutual funds or
starting a business.
The world economy is projected to fall by 4.4% in 2020, an upward
guide from an earlier predicted rate of -4.9% made in June. The IMF
projected that social distancing due to the COVID-19 pandemic will
linger till 2021, but the transmission of the virus will plunge globally
by the end of 2022.
Temitope Busari, CFA
With fixed income yields at the current levels, my N500k in today’s
market will go into a dividend-paying stock or alternative investments.
- Depending on whether or not I can afford to risk some capital and
barring timing constraints, I would buy a stock that offers periodic
cashflow in form of dividends.
- For alternative investments, I would explore high-yielding fixed deposits in the on-lending space.
Michael Nwakalor, Macroeconomist at CardinalStone Research
- The yields in the fixed income markets are currently on the low and
producing negative real returns, the equities market provides a viable
alternative to earn a total return above inflation.
- I like stocks in the banking sector, as a number of them remain
undervalued by fundamental metrics. Several names are on the course to
post near double-digit dividend returns by the year-end. A portfolio
that includes the following counters – GUARANTY, STANBIC, ETI, FBNH, and
ZENITH, should provide adequate exposure to the sector as well.
Adaobi Okonkwo, Currency Trader of a leading Tier 1 Bank
- With a few things to invest in, the most reliable investment that
comes to mind is a mutual fund. The fixed income and money markets are
currently experiencing a downturn; hence, investing in them could reduce
my income spread.
- However, with a mutual fund, my portfolio of investment in the
capital markets is determined by the fund managers with a decent return
on investments certainly above the risk-free rate. Gold is a commodity
that would yield a good ROI within a specified time frame if I wanted to
invest by myself.
Silas OZOYA, President/CEO, SUBA Capital
Though quite a small capital, it might not do much if you want to
play the long-term investment game. However, it can set the ball
rolling.
- I would invest it in a high yield investment platform that pays at least 5% returns monthly to cover running costs.
- Put the money in a fixed deposit and leverage it as collateral to
take a debt fund, with a 6 – 12 months moratorium from a commercial bank
for a possible expansion of a profitable business. This way, you gain
on the debt and still have your N500,000 intact.
Ugonna Thelma Ohiri-Anyanwu, CFA
With a gift of N500,000, my risk appetite and drive for higher returns,
- I would invest 50% of the funds (N250,000) on dollar and Eurobonds.
This is mainly because of my future needs for FX and also as the need to
hedge my currency risk.
- I would invest 25% of the balance (N125,000) in Ethereum, which would give me a steady cash flow with medium risk.
- The balance of N125,000 would be invested in Value company shares with low P/E and also stable dividend payments.
The overall investment portfolio allows for diversification, stable
cash flow in both local and FX currency, and currency hedge. These would
provide a solid mix between ownership of materially underpriced assets
and high dividend-yielding assets.
Bottom line
Amid the rising COVID-19 caseloads prevailing globally, the financial
experts interviewed above showed significant diversity on the assets
they would invest in, coupled with their different appetite for taking
risk reflected on their preferred choices made amid a blurry global
economy era.
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