Fed Govt may hike Diaspora bond to $250m
The Federal Government may more
than double the size of a planned $100 million Diaspora bond to
encourage nationals living outside the country to fund projects back
home.
Bloomberg said the Debt Management
Office (DMO) is set to ask lawmakers within two to three weeks for a
possible increase to between $200 million and $250 million, Director
General Abraham Nwankwo said. The amount will be set before June.
“There are possibilities that we could
go for more,” Nwankwo said. “The market is telling us, ‘look why are you
just going for $100 million since it’s Diaspora focused? Suppose they
want to invest more in the Nigerian economy, won’t you frustrate them?’”
Nigeria returned to international debt
markets for the first time in two years in July, issuing $1 billion in
Eurobonds to fund power projects in an economy set to grow 6.7 per cent
this year, according to the World Bank. When the Diaspora bond was
announced in August, the DMO said the funds would be used to finance
capital projects.
The Federal Government doesn’t have
plans this year to sell another conventional Eurobond until the Diaspora
issuance and an N80 billion ($502 million) offering of global
depositary receipts planned for the first half are complete, Nwankwo
said.
Nigeria’s outstanding public debt stock
was N8.3 trillion by last September 30, with external borrowing
accounting for 1.3 trillion of the amount, according to the agency.
The yield on Nigeria’s $500 million in
Eurobonds due July 2023 declined seven basis points, or 0.07 percentage
point this month to 5.85 percent. The debt office established a desk
seven months ago to look into a possible federal government sale of
Islamic debt, or sukuk, said Nwankwo.
Nigeria’s capital-markets regulator
approved rules for selling bonds that comply with Shariah law in
February last year. Also, Osun State, an inland region in Nigeria’s
southwest, issued the nation’s first sukuk, selling N10 billion in
September at a coupon of 14.75 per cent.
“The sukuk is an area we want to go into
to diversify the sources of funding,” Nwankwo said. “It’s most unlikely
we issue federal government sukuk in 2014, but I believe in 2014 we
will have been able to organize ourselves to have a framework and a
strategy of what we want to do with sukuk and related instruments.”
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