FG to start bond roadshow, seek loan from World Bank

FG to start bond roadshow, seek loan from World Bank

- Nigeria will soon meet investors before a Eurobond sale

- The federal government plans to apply for a $1 billion loan from the World Bank

- This will happen once the Senate approve this year’s budget

Nigeria will soon meet investors before a Eurobond sale as the federal government plans to apply for a $1 billion loan from the World Bank.

FG to start bond roadshow, seek loan from World Bank
Finance minister, Mrs Kemi Adeosun

According to Bloomberg, the process will commence as soon as the Nigerian Senate approve this year’s budget.

“We are about to embark on the roadshow for the dollar bond”, Mrs Kemi Adeosun told Bloomberg.

READ ALSO: Buhari's promise: We'll ensure that Nigeria doesn't return to lazy and dangerous dependence on crude oil

Adeosun had previously told the Nigerian media that the federal government wants to raise $1 billion in what would be Nigeria’s first Eurobond since 2013.

The government hired Citigroup Inc. and Standard Chartered Bank Plc to organize the roadshow in the United States and London from Friday, February 3.

The notes and the World Bank loan will help plug a fiscal deficit forecast by the government to be 2.36 trillion naira ($7.5 billion) this year, Adeosun said separately to reporters.

FG to start bond roadshow, seek loan from World Bank
A Bloomberg graph explaining the Nigeria's Eurobond plans

Nigeria sought about $4.5 billion of external funding last year, but only managed to borrow $600 million from the African Development Bank, which will be used for power generation, roads, railways and ports.

The government has struggled to obtain more financing as foreign investors and the IMF have criticized its currency policies, which they say have left the naira overvalued and led to a severe shortage of the foreign-exchange businesses need to import raw materials and equipment.

READ ALSO: S&P downgrades Nigeria in new ratings

The yield on Nigeria’s $500 million Eurobond due in July 2023 snapped six days of increases to decline by 1 basis point, to 6.89 percent, by 8:41 a.m. in London.

Source: Legit.ng

Online view pixel