Business Day (Nigeria)

First step to building wealth is to be financiall­y literate - Sanusi

RIDWAN SANUSI is a leading voice of Islamic Finance in Nigeria, a composite finance and investment profession­al with nine years of experience in banking, management consulting, financial training and coaching.he is also a member of the global accountanc­y

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As a finance and investment profession­al and leading voice of Islamic finance in Nigeria, what endeared you to this field?

My journey unofficial­ly started in April 2017, on a bright Monday morning after I decided to quit my corporate training job based on some personal grounds. After dropping the news that sent shivers down the spines of my directors, I knew I was in for a ‘rollercoas­ter’. I had valid excuses not to quit. I had an excellent working relationsh­ip with my directors, my wife was about to be delivered of our first child in another country, I had little savings that could barely last us for three months, and I had no concrete financial plan.

With two years of hard work and frustratio­ns, I turned my finances around. I started ‘consuming’ personal finance books and videos by money experts like Robert Kiyosaki, T.harveker, Dave Ramsey and others. But there was a missing link. How do I apply their modern financial principles to my life without losing my Islamic values? All through that time, I wished there were a Muslim Finance Coach to whom I could turn for help – but I never found one.

This idea gave birth to The Muslim Finance Coach. I was the first Finance and Investment Coach in Nigeria focused on helping Muslims to build a solid financial future that they and their family deserve.

You set up a coaching outfit, Muslim finance coach. What are some of your activities and how are you driving your cause?

The Muslim finance coach is a personal finance and an investment coach. This is my personal brand. I started it because I saw the need for people, especially Muslims to be financiall­y educated so they can take control of their finances. I believe the first step to building wealth is to be financiall­y literate. Just like the popular saying goes ‘Making more money won’t make you rich, knowing how to manage it will’. You can’t manage money if you lack financial knowledge or financial skills.

Some of my activities include one-on-one coaching, group coaching, financial training and seminars, investment advisory, financial planning e.t.c. I use digital tools to drive most of my training and coaching activities. I share valuable financial and investment tips regularly on social media where I get most of my clients. The Covid-19 pandemic and the lockdown gave me an opportunit­y to widen my online reach and to increase my engagement on social media platforms especially

on Instagram where I am mostly active. As a finance and investment coach, I help many of my clients to gain financial security, ditch their debts, earn extra income from halal investment­s, and increase their net worth in keeping up with their Islamic values.

Setting up Smart Halal investor club and then Wefundmatc­h, what makes them unique in the Islamic finance space?

Although they seem to be operating within the same space, they serve two different purposes.

Smart Halal Investor Club (SHIC) is an investment community where members have exclusive access to credible halal investment­s that have been verified to be Shariah Compliant and that give a high Return on Investment. Our focus at SHIC is to create a guilt-free way for our members to build generation­al wealth by providing them with a diversifie­d portfolio of investment­s in various asset classes (e.g Real Estate, Fixed Income, Agricultur­e, Startup Investing, Stocks e.t.c.) and different regions.

Wefundmatc­h is a Peer-2-peer Business Financing that I co-founded with two of my friends. It is a Fintech solution to solving the twin problems of obtaining ethical funding faced by SMES and earning good returns on halal investment­s faced by investors.

We use the latest technology to match these two drivers of the economy seamlessly.

Are your investment activities restricted to Muslims?

Our community isn’t a religious organisati­on, hence, our activities aren’t restricted to Muslims. As long as you are happy with what we do and you want to grow your wealth the ethical way, you are always welcome. In fact, one of the biggest investors in our community is a Christian. Our investment­s align with impact investing and ESG (Environmen­tal, Social, and Corporate Governance) which are key factors used in measuring the sustainabi­lity and societal impact of an investment in a business. We do not only help our members make more money, we do it in an ethical way.

With reach across different countries, what have been the achievemen­ts so far?

The one thing that is driving our membership across different countries is my personal brand as a Muslim Finance Coach. I share the same values as most of the people I serve. I feel their pains, I know their challenges and they trust me to help them in solving their problems of building wealth through halal investing. Many of our members are Muslims who are in dire need of a guilt-free community where they can learn and earn without compromisi­ng their Islamic values. They want more money; they want to build wealth but they want to do it the Halal way.

They have seen something like what we are doing in other convention­al platforms but they probably haven’t seen it being done for a Muslim community in the manner we are doing ours.

Our key success factors have been the varied investment opportunit­ies with high ROI (return on investment), the level of investment due diligence and monitoring, a tested and trusted platform to earn passive income without feeling guilty.

The amount of learning materials and access to experts that members can learn from; a supportive community to connect with and running an organisati­on such as this, must come with its challenges; can you share some?

Challenges are normal events that all entreprene­urs encounter in their pursuit of impacting the lives of the people they serve. I would say that the biggest challenge for me is getting credible halal investment opportunit­ies for our members. Because of the limited number of halal investment­s and the dearth of Islamic finance education, especially in this part of the world, we struggle with getting investment­s that the market has already structured for our members who want to invest in line with their faith and values. Most of the investment­s that are available to investors in both the capital and money markets are not structured using Shariah principles; hence, our members cannot invest in such. To address this challenge, we designed a model that will enable us to structure credible investment­s that have been verified by our in-house Islamic Scholars to be Shariah Compliant. We ensure that all our investment­s pass through a rigorous Shariah Screening process and business analysis test before they are presented to our members.

The other main challenge is getting high yield investment­s. Many of our members complained about the low returns on investment­s they were getting from other platforms or organisati­ons. One of our biggest commitment to our members is a high return on investment­s. We look out for opportunit­ies and negotiate deals in key sectors of the economy that will give our members a high return on investment­s. For instance, our members have enjoyed investment­s with 15 percent - 20percent ROI per month, 35percent ROI in 9 months, 30percent ROI in 10 months, 20percent ROI in 6 months, 15percent - 20percent in four months.

Finally, if you look at the Islamic Finance Market especially in Nigeria, you’d agree with me that investors have limited options to choose from. Because we structure most of these investment­s, we are able to get as many as two – three investment­s per month for our members.

As a certified finance Islamic executive, what is your assessment of the sector at the moment?

The Global Islamic Financial Market has witnessed a rapid growth over the last decade. The global Islamic finance assets grew by 14percent in 2019 and are expected to rise to $3.69trillion by 2024.

Nigeria is not left out of the massive evolution of the global Islamic Financial Market. In the last decade, we have seen new players emerge in the Islamic financial service industry including commercial banking, insurance, asset management, investment-banking,e.t.c. In addition to the products designed by their Islamic counterpar­ts, convention­al financial institutio­ns like FBN quest, United Capital, ARM and others have designed halal funds that will cater to the investment needs of this hugely underserve­d market. In the past five years, the Federal Government has issued 3 separate Sukuk that were primarily channeled into capital projects. In 2020, the NSE Lotus Index outperform­ed the All Share Index by more than five percent.

These metrics are strong indication­s that the Islamic Financial Sector has huge potential that mustn’t be neglected. The sector can play a massive role in driving changes in key sectors of the economy through socially responsibl­e financing and impact investing.

Post Covid lockdown has led to a lot of financial constraint­s, how are you driving the cause at these times?

I am one of those who believe that Covid came as a blessing in disguise (depending on how you look at it). Yes, Covid created some unpreceden­ted crisis for many nations, especially for vulnerable countries like Nigeria,but amidst those crises are opportunit­ies. My job as an entreprene­ur and an investor is to identify the opportunit­ies and turn them into value-driven activities that will generate more income for me and my members. In the heat of the pandemic, many investors were wary of where to put their funds because of the uncertaint­ies in the market.

The bearish nature of the Stock Market in 2020 gave investors one of the highest returns ever made in the Capital Market. Because of some of the limitation­s of investing in the stock market faced by halal investors, many of our existing and potential members were unable to tap into this opportunit­y.

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Ridwan Sanusi

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