Daily Trust

Debt service gulps 70% of dollar outflow in Q1

FX reserve rebounds, gains $262m

- By Sunday Michael Ogwu

Nigeria spent about 70% of its dollar payments to service external debts between January and March 2024.

According to data from the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN), out of the $1.61 billion in total outflows made during this period, a substantia­l amount of $1.12 billion was expended on servicing external debt.

This figure represents a huge rise from 49% in Q1 2023, highlighti­ng the growing burden of external debt on the nation’s finances.

A monthly breakdown of the debt service payments reveals that the nation started 2024 with a significan­t debt servicing obligation of $560.52 million in January.

This sum exceeded the entire debt servicing expenditur­e of January 2023 ($112.35 million) by nearly five times.

In February 2024, the debt servicing payments were moderated but remained substantia­l at $283.22 million.

March 2024 continued the trend but at a lower figure, with the country expending $276.17 million on debt servicing, representi­ng a far less decrease from March 2023’s $400.47 billion.

Recall that Nigeria’s foreign exchange (FX) reserves recently hit a onemonth dip streak. The CBN governor, Yemi Cardoso, said the decreasing reserves were primarily due to debt repayments and other standard financial obligation­s, rather than efforts to defend the naira.

FX reserve rebounds, gains $262m

Following several weeks of a downward trend, Nigeria’s foreign exchange reserves have witnessed a marginal resurgence of about $262 million over 19 days.

The CBN latest figures reveal a cautious upward adjustment, with reserves inching up to $32.369 billion as of May 7, 2024, from a one-month dip of $32.107 billion.

The reserves experience­d a steady decline from $34.45 billion on March 18th, largely due to the interplay of dwindling oil prices, debt service costs, and other obligation­s of the CBN.

 ?? ?? From left: Group Head, Business Banking, First City Monument Bank (FCMB), Mr George Ogbonnaya; Divisional
Head, Transactio­n Banking, Mrs Rolayo Akhigbe; Vice President for Agricultur­e, Human and Social Developmen­t, African Developmen­t Bank (AfDB), Dr Beth Dunford; Divisional Head, Corporate Banking, FCMB, Mrs Ronke Jibodu and Acting Coordinato­r of AfDB’s Affirmativ­e Finance Action for Women in Africa (AFAWA) Initiative, Melissa Basque-Roux, during a meeting between officials of FCMB and AfDB in Lagos recently
From left: Group Head, Business Banking, First City Monument Bank (FCMB), Mr George Ogbonnaya; Divisional Head, Transactio­n Banking, Mrs Rolayo Akhigbe; Vice President for Agricultur­e, Human and Social Developmen­t, African Developmen­t Bank (AfDB), Dr Beth Dunford; Divisional Head, Corporate Banking, FCMB, Mrs Ronke Jibodu and Acting Coordinato­r of AfDB’s Affirmativ­e Finance Action for Women in Africa (AFAWA) Initiative, Melissa Basque-Roux, during a meeting between officials of FCMB and AfDB in Lagos recently

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