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NAICOM Urges All Governors To Domesticate Compulsory Insurance Laws

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By Sola Alabadan

The Commissioner for Insurance and Chief Executive of the National Insurance Commission, Mr. Olusegun Omosehin has called on the governors of the 36 states of the federation to domesticate the laws on compulsory insurances, just as the Lagos State has done, as part of efforts to deepen insurance penetration in Nigeria.
Omosehin made this call on Friday during a courtesy visit to the Director General of the Nigeria Governors’ Forum, Dr. Abdulateef Shittu in Abuja.
He said that the fragmented approach in dealing with the states needs to be centralised and have all the states come on board, especially with respect to third party motor insurance and also to prevent revenue loss for the states in terms of IGR.
He added that there is also need for awareness creation across the states on the value of insurance.
Omosehin thanked the DG for the warm welcome and briefed the secretariat on the core mandate of NAICOM, which is supervising, regulating and developing the insurance sector in Nigeria and by so doing, it considers how the culture of insurance can be deepened by getting the Nation as a whole to comply with some of the compulsory Insurances as provided in our Law.
He noted that at the federal level this is being driven by federal agencies, but at the states level, the commission needs some high level of cooperation and collaboration.
He stated that the key reason the commission was at the NGF secretariat is to discuss how a coordinated approach can be adopted in working with the states and that the collaboration must start from engaging the NGF secretariat as policy hub for the state Governors. Omosehin, who was appointed recently, said the commission has been trying to see how it can address some of the issues differently from the way it has been handled in the past in order to achieve a better result.
He mentioned that the commission chose to start with the NGF, where NAICOM could have an engagement with the secretariat and share ideas.
The Director General while welcoming the management of NAICOM informed them that the NGF has transformed into a policy hub for the state governors and is serving as the technical and administrative arm of the forum.
He thanked the CFI and expressed optimism on the issue, saying now that the commission has reached out, he believed that the partnership can bring a lot of positivity on deepen insurance penetration in the country.
The NGF Secretariat and NAICOM agreed that a concept note should be submitted for their review and since a delivery room assessment has already been conducted, a joint committee was set to deliver on the assignment at hand.

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PenCom Bars Operators From Engaging Service Providers Not Complying With Pension Act

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By Sola Alabadan

The National Pension Commission (PenCom) has barred all Licensed Pension Fund Operators (LPFOs), comprising Pension Fund Administrators (PFAs) and Pension Fund Custodians (PFCs) from transacting with service providers and vendors that do not remit pensions for their employees as evidenced by a Pension Clearance Certificate issued by the commission.
The pension operators have been given a grace period of six months to comply with this new directive aimed at expanding coverage of the Contributory Pension Scheme (CPS) in Nigeria,
Section 2 of the Pension Reform Act 2014 mandates all employers in the public and private sectors, including Federal, State, and Local Governments, to participate in the Contributory Pension Scheme and remit pension contributions no later than seven working days after salary payments.
However, PenCom lamented that in spite of the continuous engagement and enforcement measures, a significant number of employers remain non-compliant with this legal obligation.
This development made PenCom intensified its regulatory actions by appointing Recovery Agents to audit defaulters, recover outstanding contributions, and enforce sanctions.

To further strengthen enforcement, improve compliance, and broaden pension coverage, the commission directed all pension operators to ensure that any vendor or service provider they engage presents a valid Pension Clearance Certificate (PCC) issued by the Commission as a condition for entering into or renewing Service Level or Technical Agreements.

The pension operators are also mandated to ensure that investments are made only with companies and financial institutions that require PCCs from their own vendors and service providers.

Every Counterparty is required to execute a Compliance Attestation, confirming that it enforces the PCC requirement across its vendor network, and this attestation must be updated annually and included in the pension operator’s investment documentation.

Besides, counterparties are to submit valid PCCs from their own vendors/service providers before engaging in any investment transaction with the pension operators, including those involving commercial papers, bond issuances, and bank placements.

PenCom further directed the pension operators to integrate these requirements into their internal policies, vendor selection processes, due diligence procedures, governance, and investment risk assessment frameworks.

Based on the new directive, the Parent Companies, Subsidiaries, Holding Companies and Institutional Shareholders of pension operators are required to possess valid Pension Clearance Certificate and ensure that every vendor and service provider engaged by them complies with the requirement of the PCC as a precondition for entering into any Service Level or Technical Agreement. The requirement for compliance attestation is also applicable to the categories.

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Sanlam, Allianz Merger Expected In Nigeria

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Sanlam and Allianz have sparked speculation in Nigeria’s insurance industry following a wave of coordinated digital communication activities indicating an imminent completion of the expected merger of the operations in Africa’s largest economy.
The firms, which have already merged operations in 27 African countries, including Ghana and Rwanda, under the SanlamAllianz banner, are now widely believed to be ramping up their alliance in Nigeria as the next significant step in their partnership.
Recent posts on both companies’ digital platforms featuring their logos side-by-side and joint thematic messaging have drawn attention across financial and business circles. The coordinated activity mirrors pre-merger patterns observed in other African markets where their collaboration was subsequently formalised.
In 2022, Sanlam and Allianz announced the formation of a strategic joint venture covering 27 African markets. The move was intended to combine Sanlam’s local market depth with Allianz’s global scale and technical expertise, creating a formidable pan-African financial services entity with ambitions to lead in life and general insurance, asset management, and health insurance.
The partnership has taken concrete shape in countries like Ghana, where existing operations have been unified and rebranded under the SanlamAllianz name. The goal has been to offer more relevant, inclusive, and tech-forward financial solutions for individuals and businesses in these markets.
Nigeria is the continent’s most populous nation and its largest economy, yet despite recent progress, its insurance penetration remains under 1%. In 2023, the industry crossed the ₦1 trillion gross written premium mark for the first time, indicating untapped potential and growing consumer interest in financial protection.
Given these dynamics, analysts say Nigeria is a natural next step in the SanlamAllianz expansion journey. The presence of both logos in coordinated messaging has been read as a signal of intent. Both brands already operate in Nigeria, and a merger of local operations would represent a formidable alliance and substantial consolidation.
Market observers believe such a move could raise the bar in Nigeria’s insurance industry, fostering more robust competition, improved product design, and greater consumer trust in formal financial services. It would also align with both firms’ broader objective of promoting financial inclusion and building long-term resilience across African economies.
At a time when several global brands are reassessing their African strategies, Sanlam and Allianz’s continued commitment affirms their vote of confidence in Nigeria’s long-term prospects. This potential merger could not only reshape the insurance landscape but will also evidently become a significant catalyst and signal to the global investment community that Nigeria remains a viable and valuable market.

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Ghana’s Delegation In Nigeria To Marine Cargo Sector

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Commissioner for Insurance, Olusegun Omosehin received delegates from Ghana's Marine Cargo Technical Committee on a study tour of Nigeria's marine cargo sector at his office in Abuja recently. The delegation was led by Mr. Fred Asiedu-Darteh of Ghana Shippers' Authority.

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