Nigerians living in the United Kingdom are increasingly embracing property investment as a deliberate route to long-term wealth creation, amid rising living costs in the UK and persistent currency volatility in Nigeria.
The growing interest is expected to dominate discussions in London on Saturday, January 31, as Nigerians and other African professionals gather for a property investment forum focused on sustainable wealth building.
The event, tagged Property Wealth Creation Q&A, will hold in Bromley, London, between 12pm and 3.30pm and is being organised by Property Wealth Corporation through its education and investment platform, Property Wealth.
The session will be hosted by the founder of the firm, Daniel Moses, a UK-based property strategist, who is expected to guide participants on navigating economic uncertainty through structured real estate investments.
According to the organisers, the forum is designed to address concerns among diaspora earners on how to protect their income, hedge against inflation and build assets across borders at a time when the naira continues to weaken.
Moses said earnings in stronger currencies such as the British pound offer unique opportunities for asset growth if channelled into well-planned investments.
“The naira can fail you, but pounds will not fail. The real opportunity for the diaspora is to build wealth internationally and deploy it back into Africa with strategy and long-term vision,” he said.
He explained that discussions at the forum would centre on practical approaches to property ownership in the UK, income-generating property structures, long-term portfolio building and cross-border investment planning.
Moses added that the session would be interactive rather than sales-driven, allowing participants to ask questions and learn from real-life case studies of successful diaspora property investors.
The organisers noted that the forum is coming at a critical period when informed decisions and structured positioning can yield better outcomes than years of speculative or unplanned investments.


