In a candid briefing at Abuja’s 2025 Journalists Academy, Nigeria’s Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) disclosed a sobering figure: hundreds of billions of naira have vanished into fraudulent investment outfits and Ponzi schemes in recent years. The latest estimate places total losses at about ₦300.2 billion, underscoring the scale of danger facing everyday Nigerians who seek modest returns on their savings.
AbdulRasheed Dan-Abu, the SEC’s Head of Fintech and Innovation, explained that investigators traced the setback to a string of infamous, now-collapsed ventures that lured households and small investors nationwide. Among the most notable collapses cited were schemes like MMM Nigeria and Nospecto Oil and Gas, which together accounted for tens of billions in losses. Other beleaguered programs—MBA Forex, Chinmark Group, Ovaioza Farm Produce Storage Business, and Famzhi Interbiz Ltd—also feature prominently in the tally, pushing the cumulative impact well beyond the individual cases.
Dan-Abu warned that the ₦300.2 billion figure captures only a portion of the damage. He noted that many victims, especially in rural communities, never report their experiences to regulators or law enforcement, meaning the true scope is likely larger.
To counteract the threat, the SEC is pursuing a holistic enforcement and education strategy. The approach blends rigorous prosecution of illicit operators, aggressive investor-safety campaigns, and deeper collaboration with other government bodies, including the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC), the Nigerian Financial Intelligence Unit (NFIU), and the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN).
Key components of the current crackdown include:
- Securing court orders to shutter unregistered investment outfits and pursue prosecutions against operators.
 - Issuing public alerts that name firms involved in unlawful solicitations to deter would-be investors.
 - Upgrading digital surveillance to monitor and flag suspicious online investment promotions, with particular focus on social media channels.
 
SEC leadership, represented at the event by Mrs. Efe Ebelo on behalf of the Director-General, Agama, highlighted a parallel trend: crypto activity is now part of everyday financial life for many Nigerians. The commission cited that more than 80 million Nigerians are involved in crypto-related activities, a statistic that reflects vast opportunities alongside mounting regulatory and risk considerations in the digital asset space.
Looking ahead, the SEC stressed that investor education remains a cornerstone of its mission. Officials emphasized practical steps citizens can take to verify legitimate opportunities, recognize red flags, and report suspicious schemes promptly. The agency also signaled ongoing enhancements to monitoring tools and cross-agency information sharing to reduce the appeal and profitability of fraudulent ventures.
									 
					