The conversation started casually enough. It ended with Peller dropping a number that has had the internet doing a double take ever since.
The popular Nigerian streamer was on a livestream with content creator SirBalo when the two got into a discussion about money, family, and what it actually means to be broke. It was the kind of honest, unfiltered exchange that livestreams tend to produce, and Peller clearly came ready to talk.
SirBalo opened up about his own financial background, saying he had never experienced being broke in his life. He spoke about his siblings, some based in the United States, others in the United Kingdom, and described them as people who are doing well for themselves. When Peller pushed him on whether they used their own funds to relocate abroad, SirBalo acknowledged it may not have been entirely self-funded but maintained that wherever they started, they are currently standing on their own feet. He also mentioned that his siblings had come through for him financially at various points, sometimes floating him as much as ten or fifteen million naira when he needed it.


The conversation then drifted into territory that got genuinely interesting. SirBalo made the observation that broke is relative, that fifty million naira can be broke for some people, and a hundred million can be broke for others. Peller picked up on that thread immediately and asked SirBalo to name his own broke limit. SirBalo danced around the question without committing to a figure, though he held firm on the fact that he had never actually been in that position.
Then Peller answered for himself, and he did not hesitate.
“I don’t touch my money if it drops below one hundred million naira,” he said. That is the floor. Anything beneath that number and he considers himself in uncomfortable territory. To manage that, he said he sometimes accepts music promotion jobs for as low as three million naira specifically so he does not have to dip into his reserves when his balance gets close to that line.
He also mentioned that he has opened multiple shops for members of his family, offering that as context for how he thinks about money and the people around him.
The clip has been circulating since the livestream ended, and reactions have ranged from admiration to outright disbelief. For some, it is a flex delivered with refreshing candour. For others, the numbers are a reminder of just how wide the gap is between different realities in Nigeria.
Either way, Peller said what he said, and he did not say it quietly.
Watch the video below:

