Chamwe KairaÂ
Namibia Asset Management (NAM) reported growth in key financial indicators for the year ended 30 September 2025, reflecting steady performance in a difficult economic period.
Operating profit increased to N$16.1 million from N$13.7 million the previous year.
Fund management earnings rose to N$10.7 million, compared to N$9.4 million in 2024.
Total comprehensive income reached N$12.4 million.
Shareholders also saw stronger returns. Basic and headline earnings per share increased to 7.89 cents from 6.99 cents in 2024.
Net asset value per share improved to 21.48 cents.
NAM’s assets under management grew by 9.9% to N$22.2 billion.
The company said the expansion came from disciplined investment strategies and favourable market movements.
The board declared an ordinary dividend of 6 cents per share, unchanged from last year.
The dividend will be paid on 12 December 2025. The last day to trade is 28 November, with the record date set for 5 December.
NAM said it remains cautiously optimistic. It noted that geopolitical tensions, uneven global growth and domestic pressures still affect operations, but it sees opportunities in Namibia’s oil and gas sector, regional trade and ongoing reforms.
The company said its long-term strength lies in delivering investment performance and maintaining high-quality client service in a changing global and technological environment.
With a strong research base, a disciplined approach and a long track record, NAM believes it is positioned to continue offering solid risk-adjusted returns and value for clients and shareholders.
Namibia Asset Management was founded in April 1996 as a subsidiary of Namibian Harvest Investments Limited (NHI).
The NHI board later refocused the business solely on asset management, closing all non-core operations.
On 29 May 2006, NHI changed its name to Namibia Asset Management Limited to reflect its new structure.
NAM is now the largest independent Namibian-owned asset manager with experience across local, regional and international markets.
Caption
Namibia Asset Management (NAM) CEO, Tarah Shaanika.
