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FG Opens ₦300bn Sukuk Bond To Fund Infrastructure Projects - Politics - Nairaland i4h4d

FG Opens ₦300bn Sukuk Bond To Fund Infrastructure Projects (6965 Views)

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nlfpmod: 11:46am On May 14
Federal Government of Nigeria Sukuk Offer for Subscription

The Debt Management Office (DMO) has launched a new N300 billion Sovereign Sukuk bond with a promise to sustain its effort to provide funding for road infrastructure in the country.

The agency, while launching the new Sukuk on Monday, said it was determined to narrow the country’s estimated N18 trillion road infrastructure deficits.

The issuance is part of efforts to diversify the government’s funding sources and accelerate the pace of infrastructural development, it stated.

This is even as the Director-General of DMO, Patience Oniha, said the debt-to-GDP ratio remains within an acceptable limit at 50 per cent. It argued that it is within the International Monetary Fund (IMF), the World Bank and the Economic Community of West African States (ECOWAS) stipulation. She said public debt sustainability is not just about the size of the debt, but also about growing revenues and expanding the GDP.

Between 2017 and December 2023, the government raised over N1.09 trillion from six series of Sukuk to invest in the construction or rehabilitation of roads across the country.

So far, over 4,100 kilometres of roads and nine bridges across the six geopolitical zones and the Federal Capital Territory have been either constructed or rehabilitated.

The new N300 billion Sukuk is a seven-year bond due 2032. It is a non-interest, alternative instrument designed in the form of annual rental income. The annual rental income is 19.75 per cent.

DMO, which oversees Nigeria’s government debt issuances and management, said the offer, which opened on Monday with a minimum subscription of N10,000, will close on May 20, 2025.

It is also being offered at N1,000 per unit, subject to a minimum subscription of N10,000 and in multiples of N1,000 thereafter. The rental payment will be made half-yearly, while the bullet repayment will be made on the maturity date.

Oniha referred to recent macroeconomic improvements, including the upgrade of Nigeria’s credit outlook by the global ratings agency, Fitch, adding that the developments are indicative of the progress made in both fiscal and monetary management.

According to her, sustainable development is a journey and not something that happens in one day.

“Current policies are steering the country in the right direction. There’s more transparency now. FX supply has improved, and the rates have become more stable. Some of the measures were difficult at first, but the benefits are beginning to show,” she said.

Oniha said the government recognised the need to issue more Sukuk bonds, given the increasing success and strong investors’ appetite for the alternative non-interest bonds.

According to her, the Sukuk initiative by DMO has been increasingly successful, given the strong level of awareness that has been created. She attributed the success of the Sukuk issuances to the increased confidence from market participants, given that the Sukuk bonds are tied to specific projects that can be tracked.

“Looking ahead, we recognise the need to upscale issuances to include other standalone projects beyond road infrastructure, but more importantly, we are looking to projects that are revenue-generating to service the Sukuk,” Oniha said.

On the N300 billion Series VII Sukuk, Oniha said it was part of approved borrowings by the government to cover budgetary shortfalls and was officially encapsulated in the debt records.

She reassured investors about the structure and sustainability of Nigeria’s debt, noting that the country’s external borrowing was sourced from a diversified pool including multilateral institutions like the World Bank and African Development Bank, bilateral partners such as China, India, and , and commercial markets such as the Eurobond space.

“Over 60 per cent of our external debt is from multilaterals and bilaterals, which offer more favourable than commercial debt,” she said, adding that this diversification reduces the country’s exposure to market shocks and provides stability.

https://guardian.ng/business-services/dmo-unveils-n300b-sukuk-bond-to-narrow-n18tr-road-infrastructure-gap/

4 Likes

PresidObi: 11:47am On May 14
It seems like other lenders that are their "customers" are no longer lending to them ? grin

Borrowing is good, but borrowing to consume or embezzle is bad enough.

11 Likes 1 Share

1Alex: 11:47am On May 14
Too long. Let me summarise for my fellow lazy youths.

The Nigerian government has launched a N300 billion Sukuk bond to raise money for building and fixing roads. It’s a non-interest loan that follows Islamic finance rules.

The bond runs for 7 years, pays 19.75% yearly as rent, and can be bought from N10,000. The offer ends on May 20, 2025.

So far, over 4,100 km of roads and 9 bridges have been built or repaired using previous Sukuk funds. The government says the debt is still manageable and plans to use more Sukuk for other useful projects in the future.

4 Likes 1 Share

Image123(m): 11:53am On May 14
Wailers must wail, it's destiny.

1 Like

wasco24: 11:53am On May 14
grin
AustineE1: 11:53am On May 14
..and the borrowing continues with other formats,pay back 10naira and borrow 100 naira from a different organization.
What happened to the promise made to Nigerians, that as soon as fuel subsidy is removed,we will have enough money to fix our infrastructures and social economic challenges.I they government propagandists,informing Nigerians of having saved over 3 trillion naira in the first three months of subsidy removal. Please I ask,why are we still hellbent on borrowing or is subsidy actually a scam?

8 Likes 2 Shares

gbaskiboy: 11:54am On May 14
Nigeria and debt they are like Siamese twins
id4sho(m): 11:54am On May 14
Worst investment, don't do it 👌💯. Peoples money lost value due to inflation and devaluation 🤷🤦🤐📌

7 Likes

mandysmiles: 11:54am On May 14
The More you look the less you See

4 Likes

omoredia: 11:56am On May 14
Nigeria needs to cut cost on running the govt. Thats the simple solution.

7 Likes 1 Share

correctguy101(m): 11:57am On May 14
There's no way I'm doing this...
omoredia: 11:57am On May 14
Funding for boko haram and fulani terrorists. Don't use ur money to fund evil

3 Likes 1 Share

correctguy101(m): 11:58am On May 14
omoredia:
Nigeria needs to cut cost on running the govt. Thats the simple solution.

For where?

They'd rather lavish on themselves but tell the masses plus the wereys foolishly ing them that the country is poor...
cjudy(m): 12:00pm On May 14
Another avenue to divert funds
stealmatic(m): 12:01pm On May 14
AustineE1:
..and the borrowing continues with other formats,pay back 10naira and borrow 100 naira from a different organization.
What happened to the promise made to Nigerians, that as soon as fuel subsidy is removed,we will have enough money to fix our infrastructures and social economic challenges.I they government propagandists,informing Nigerians of having saved over 3 trillion naira in the first three of subsidy removal. Please I ask,why are we still hellbent in borrowing or is subsidy actually a scam?

school u no go,work u no learn,now to ready and comprehend na wahala,u c ur life

2 Likes

ewosk: 12:02pm On May 14
What is the yearly inflation rate?
Chetas81(m): 12:05pm On May 14
correctguy101:


For where?

They'd rather lavish on themselves but tell the masses plus the wereys foolishly ing them that the country is poor...
they remain wéré forever

1 Like

Nijaforward: 12:06pm On May 14
They paid SUKUK loan of 100M and get back a loan of 300M….😂😂😂

3 Likes

saintmm(m): 12:07pm On May 14
Financial advisor in the house, is it a good investment instrument?
Please answer with explanation
Thanks
iwaeda: 12:09pm On May 14
Borrowing to loot for 2027 elections. grin grin grin grin grin

2 Likes

opalu: 12:12pm On May 14
Hmmm using Islamic bond to fund projects in secular Nation

1 Like

osazsky(m): 12:19pm On May 14
Wrong investment..I won't put my money here

1 Like

Ijaya123: 12:33pm On May 14
gbaskiboy:
Nigeria and debt they are like Siamese twins

Mention one country in the world that is not in debt.

1 Like

DMerciful(m): 12:45pm On May 14
Another borrowing!

The more you look, the less you see!

1 Like

dododawa1: 12:47pm On May 14
NIGERIANS LIVES ON LOAN NOWADAYS,



SALARAY LOAN


OPAY LOAN

SKUNK LOAN


APC continue your good works

1 Like

Xwizard: 12:50pm On May 14
Lord
anonimi: 1:44pm On May 14
Image123:
Wailers must wail, it's destiny.

Looters must loot, it is their destiny while pretending to be paragons of prudent management and incorruptible saints.

Why is ebilokan doing like those CBEX scammers by paying $100 million to take a fresh loan of $300 million despite removing subsidy, devaluing the Naira, increasing taxes etc

socialmediaman:
The 2018 Rating by Transparency International placed Nigeria at 148th position out of 180 countries. Nigeria was improving over the years under the previous government, until Buhari got elected as president, things became worse.

There is a difference between fact and fiction. We need to face facts, Buhari is worse than GEJ when it comes to fighting corruption, at least that’s what the facts prove.

Most of us believed there was corruption under Goodluck Jonathan’s Government. I agree with those who did, there was corruption, but not as bad as it is today under Mohammadu Buhari.

In 2012, Nigeria was placed at 139th position, In 2014, Nigeria gained 3 steps and was placed at 136th position. Under Buhari, Nigeria has lost many positions down to 148th.

There’s no further proof needed that corruption has worsened under Buhari’s government compared to previous years.

http://saharareporters.com/2018/02/21/transparency-international-ranks-nigeria-148th-worlds-least-corrupt-country

2 Likes 2 Shares

Gboss247(m): 1:56pm On May 14
id4sho:
Worst investment, don't do it 👌💯. People money due to inflation and devaluation 🤷🤦🤐📌
More reasons why I hate fixed income instruments, they always deliver below the inflation rate.

1 Like

Gboss247(m): 1:56pm On May 14
omoredia:
Nigeria needs to cut cost on running the govt. Thats the simple solution.
The simple solution starts with INEC
VEE2010(m): 2:25pm On May 14
This is a great opportunity for those who understand and have the means to invest for a long term...
Imagine: the interest on N500,000,000 over 7 years, plus the principal, is approximately N1,191,250,000.
Huge right? The reason the rich keep getting richer? That's just N500 million in ive investment income.
That's about N98 million in interest per year, or about N8.2 million per month.
Imagine if one individual could create such an opportunity on 4 platforms which is just about 2b

1 Like

descarado: 2:29pm On May 14
Which right thinking person uses bonds to fund infrastructure?


This man will use any avenue to borrow.
Show what you did with the money borrowed?
Road. Useless projects that attracts zero investment opportunities.

By next year, he will borrow and start sharing money for vote buying. They are still cooking up the name they will call it. Trado money has come and gone.

Nigerians deserve them.

1 Like

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