On June 25, Fiona Ahimie will take the oath as the 14th president and chairman of the Chartered Institute of Stockbrokers (CIS), stepping into a role no woman had occupied in the Institute’s 34-year history. The milestone is notable, but it is only a small part of a much longer story, one written over years inside Nigeria’s capital market, not outside it.
Ahimie belongs to a generation of professionals shaped by the trading floor, where the market is not studied from a distance but felt in real time. Her early days at Standard Bank Nigeria as a sales trader placed her in that environment: fast-moving, unforgiving, and precise. It was there she learned to read the pulse of the market, balancing client expectations with the constant shifts in price and sentiment.
She carried that grounding with her across several institutions, building experience that cut across the breadth of Nigeria’s financial system. At Lead Capital, African Alliance Securities Nigeria, and Stanbic IBTC Stockbrokers, she refined her understanding of how capital moves and how investors respond to opportunity and risk. By the time she took on the role of head of sales trading at FBNQuest Capital, she had moved beyond execution into a space where local insight met international flows.
Her transition to FBNQuest Securities in 2016 marked a shift from participation to leadership. As head of equities brokerage, she was tasked with more than keeping pace with the market, she had to reposition the business within it. Client relationships deepened, transactions increased, and within a relatively short time, the firm moved into the top tier of Nigeria’s securities league table. The momentum carried her into the role of managing director and chief executive, where she oversaw strategy during a period when the market itself was adjusting to new realities.
She now leads First Securities Brokers Limited, a subsidiary of First Holdco Plc, maintaining a close connection to the daily workings of the market even as her responsibilities expand.
Her journey within the Chartered Institute of Stockbrokers followed a similarly deliberate path. She served first as second vice president, then as first vice president, working within the structure before rising to lead it. By the time the council vote brought her to the presidency, she had already spent years observing and shaping the Institute’s direction from within.
Her reach extends beyond CIS as she serves on the audit committee of the National Association of Securities Dealers and sits on corporate boards, including Purple Money Microfinance Bank. At Lagos Business School, she contributes to developing the next generation of business leaders.
Her academic record reflects the same steady progression: an MBA from Lagos Business School, executive education at IESE Business School in Spain, and professional qualifications as both a chartered stockbroker and a chartered accountant.
For Ahimie, the conversation around her emergence is often framed in terms she does not entirely accept. She has long argued that performance in the market is not defined by gender. Results, she insists, come down to judgment, discipline, and the ability to stay grounded under pressure.
She describes her approach as “gender-blind,” a way of working that focuses on competence rather than category. It has meant adapting to environments where men dominate, building professional relationships without drawing unnecessary lines, and staying focused on outcomes.
That focus, she acknowledges, has been supported by stability outside the workplace. A strong support system at home has allowed her to meet the demands of her career fully, an advantage she is careful not to take for granted.
When she speaks to younger professionals, her tone shifts from reflective to direct. There is little room for abstraction in her advice. Build capacity. Stay authentic. Keep improving and importantly, bring others along.
She is equally clear about ambition. It does not thrive on wishful thinking but requires preparation, the right qualifications, and a willingness to step forward when opportunities appear. Waiting, in her view, is a costly habit.
She also challenges a tendency among professionals,the reluctance to speak about their own contributions. In a field where visibility shapes advancement, she believes impact should not be hidden. When work delivers results, it should be acknowledged.
Her predecessor, Oluropo Dada, has pointed to her record as the basis for confidence in her leadership, describing her as equipped with the experience and clarity needed to guide the Institute through its next phase.
That phase comes at a time when Nigeria’s equities market is drawing renewed interest. Valuations are strengthening, participation is increasing, and expectations are rising alongside them. The role of the Chartered Institute of Stockbrokers which includes setting standards, reinforcing professionalism, and sustaining investor confidence, has become even more critical.
Ahimie steps into that responsibility with the advantage of familiarity. She has worked the market from multiple angles, from execution to strategy to governance and there is little about its workings that is theoretical to her.
Her rise does not read like a sudden leap but better understood as a steady climb, one shaped by experience, tested in practice, and confirmed over time.
In that sense, her story mirrors the market she now helps to guide: evolving, resilient, and driven by those who understand it from the inside.