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Optiva Capital Restates Commitment to Building Wealth, Opportunity, Legacy across Africa
Oluchi Chibuzor
As Africa’s economic landscape continues to evolve, Optiva Capital Partners is redefining what it means to be an investment immigration company. Beyond providing global mobility solutions, the firm is expanding its impact through healthcare, women empowerment, wealth retention, and support for Africa’s creative economy.
Speaking during an interactive session with business editors, Chairman of Optiva Capital Partners, Franklin Nechi, said the company’s vision is anchored on a simple principle: commercial success must create broader societal value.
“At Optiva, we do not see profit and purpose as competing priorities. They reinforce each other,” he said. “Businesses that create access, opportunity and agency will define Africa’s future.” Nechi explained that Optiva’s commitment to social impact is reflected in its investments in healthcare infrastructure and maternal care. According to him, wealth cannot be separated from health. Wealth without health is meaningless. If a family loses a mother or child to a preventable condition, no amount of financial success can compensate for that loss.”
The company’s healthcare interventions have focused on improving access to quality medical services, particularly for women and children, helping to strengthen health outcomes and build trust within underserved communities.
A key pillar of Optiva’s growth strategy is women empowerment. More than 70 percent of the company’s workforce are women, many occupying leadership positions.
“It was intentional, but not for optics. It was for performance,” Nechi noted. “Women play a central role in investment decisions, family wealth planning, education and healthcare spending across Africa. Any company that ignores this reality is ignoring one of the continent’s most important economic shifts.”
Through its International Women’s Day initiatives and support for women-focused empowerment programmes, Optiva seeks to increase visibility, capability and access to opportunities for women entrepreneurs and professionals.
The company is also investing in Africa’s rapidly growing creative economy. Nechi described sectors such as music, film, fashion and entertainment as powerful drivers of economic growth and global influence.
“The creative economy is one of Africa’s strongest exports. It creates jobs, attracts investment and enables young Africans to earn globally while building wealth locally.”
According to him, Optiva supports creatives by helping them access global markets, secure mobility opportunities and structure assets that allow them to retain and multiply the value they create.
Looking ahead, Nechi believes the future belongs to Africans who combine mobility, strategic investment and long-term planning. “Africans who embrace global access control their mobility. Those who embrace smart investment control their capital. Those who plan strategically control their legacy.”







