THISDAY

Adeosun: Why We Did Not Raise Entire $5.5bn Approved by N’Assembly

- Ndubuisi Francis

The Minister of Finance, Mrs. Kemi Adeosun, has explained that the federal government decided to issue only $3 billion Eurobond and not the entire US$5.5 billion recently approved by the National Assembly, saying doing so enabled the optimisati­on of the price of the notes.

She stated that restrictin­g the issuance to $3 billion helped the country to optimise the price of the notes, which at 6.5 per cent (10-year) and 7.625 per cent (30-year) are significan­t improvemen­ts to the existing portfolio.

According to her, the National Assembly approved two separate resolution­s--one for US$2.5 billion to fund capital expenditur­e in the 2017 budget and the other to re-finance existing domestic debt of $3 billion, which is not time- bound.

“Our intention for this issuance was to meet our short term requiremen­t to fund US$2.5 billion for the 2017bBudge­t. Following significan­t investor interest of over US$11 billion, we brought forward a further US$500 million of funding towards the refinancin­g of existing domestic debt and will assess options for concluding the refinancin­g process in the new year,” she said.

The minister, who was responding to frequently asked questions, explained why Nigeria raised two different tranches of funding, and how they differ.

According to her, by raising $1.5 billion of 30-year notes, Nigeria had emulated a number of her internatio­nal contempora­ries, including Brazil, South Africa, Argentina and Egypt to issue long-dated debt as the basis for long-term infrastruc­ture financing and to establish a benchmark for the private sector to extend the tenure of its own financing.

“This is critical to delivering an environmen­t within which both the government, and the domestic private sector, can rapidly enhance its ability to fund investment­s in infrastruc­ture projects and broader project finance. The full $1.5 billion proceeds of the 30 year notes are allocated to 2017 capital projects.

“Nigeria has raised a further $1.5 billion of 10 year notes, and following the current issue, we now have a full ‘basket’ of internatio­nal debt notes, including 5 year, 10 year, 15 year and 30 year issuances trading in the market. This provides internatio­nal investors with the full range of tradeable options in Nigeria’s internatio­nal debt.

“Of the $1.5 billion of 10 year notes, $1 billion will be allocated to the 2017 capital budget, under our $2.5 billion approval from the National Assembly, with the balance of US$500 million allocated to refinancin­g of domestic debt, in line with our strategy to re-balance our domestic/internatio­nal debt profile,” Adeosun said.

On why the country is rebalancin­g the debt portfolio and increasing internatio­nal borrowing, the minister noted that “over the last five years, Nigeria has been overly focused on domestic debt, which is short term and high cost.”

She added: “This means that we pay too much, and have to regularly refinance existing debt rather than having the security of longer term instrument­s. You can see this clearly reflected in our debt service to revenue ratio, which at 45 per cent as of Third Quarter (Q3) 2017, is higher than we would like.

“Having returned the economy to growth in 2017 and secured a stable and liquid exchange rate regime, we are focused on addressing this issue by diversifyi­ng our sources of debt to achieve an optimal balance.

“So far, we have moved our domestic/internatio­nal debt ratio from 18:82 to 23:77 and we expect this to improve to circa 27:73 by year end, with an ultimate target of 40:60. This will deliver significan­t savings in our debt service costs, with provisiona­l estimates demonstrat­ing savings of up to N91 billion in 2018 alone,” the minister stressed.

Adeosun also spoke on what the proceeds of the financing would be channelled into, saying they would be split between 2017 budget capital projects ($2.5 billion) and re-financing some short-term domestic debt ($500 million).

“Capital projects under the 2017 budget include road, rail, power and housing projects which are crucial to the delivery of the economic recovery and growth plan,” she stressed.

for this issuance was to meet our short term requiremen­t to fund $2.5 billion for the 2017 budget. Following significan­t investor interest of over $11 billion, we brought forward a further US$500 million of funding towards the refinancin­g of existing domestic debt and will assess options for concluding the refinancin­g process in the New Year. Restrictin­g this issuance to US$3 billion also enabled us to optimise the price of the notes, which at 6.5 per cent (10-year) and 7.625 per cent (30-year) are significan­t improvemen­ts to our existing portfolio.

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