Africa Prudential Plc recorded a 38.35 per cent rise in revenue, reaching N7.19 billion for the year ended December 31, 2025, up from N5.19 billion in 2024. The increase was confirmed during the firm's 13th Annual General Meeting, held virtually on Thursday. Profit After Tax climbed to N2.72 billion from N1.81 billion the previous year, while shareholders' funds grew to N12.73 billion from N10.84 billion. Total assets expanded by 20.27 per cent to N41.91 billion, compared to N34.85 billion in 2024.

Chairman Mrs Christabel Onyejekwe attributed the performance to disciplined execution and strong corporate governance, despite inflation and exchange rate volatility. She emphasized the company's resilience and institutional strength. Managing Director Dr Catherine Nwosu highlighted the shift toward digital transformation, including the launch of Sabivest, a digital investment platform succeeding Invearn. The platform allows investors to manage portfolios in one place, with improved access and transparency. A new Know-Your-Customer service line was also introduced to boost compliance.

Nwosu noted that Greenpole, Sabivest, and APEMs platforms are gaining traction, enhancing client experience and revenue. Africa Prudential paid out 98 per cent of profits as dividends. Gross debt securities stood at N32.14 billion, reflecting strong investment capacity. The company maintains diversified revenue streams and robust internal controls.

💡 NaijaBuzz Take

Dr Catherine Nwosu's push for digital platforms like Sabivest shows Africa Prudential is adapting where many financial firms still lag. For Nigerian investors, this means easier, more transparent access to capital market tools without relying on traditional bottlenecks. If executed well, the shift could set a benchmark in a sector often slow to innovate. This isn't just growth—it's a quiet reshaping of shareholder engagement.