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Nigeria Considers Selling Naira-Denominated Bonds Next Year

Nigeria Considers Selling Naira-Denominated Bonds Next Year

(Bloomberg) --

Nigeria is considering selling naira-denominated bonds abroad next year to fund infrastructure projects, Finance Minister Zainab Ahmed said.

Africa’s biggest oil producer faces a significant increase in financing needs as it struggles to boost revenue required to fund increased spending on infrastructure. Almost 60% of Nigerians don’t pay tax and the state only collected 58% of its revenue target in the first half of this year.

The so-called Jollof bonds, named after a popular West African rice dish, will help shield the government from foreign-exchange risks, Ahmed said. The sale would follow similar offerings by nations such as India, she said.

Nigeria Considers Selling Naira-Denominated Bonds Next Year

“India has done Masala bonds,” Ahmed said in an interview Thursday in Abuja, the capital, referring to offshore rupee-debt sales. “What it does is protect us from exchange-rate differentials.”

Ahmed said the government plans to hold meetings with investors to gauge the level of interest in international markets, including meetings during a summit in the U.K. in January. It’s also considering a green-bond offering next year, she said.

The Jollof debt may struggle to sell with pressure building on the naira.

Nigeria’s central bank has stepped up intervention in the foreign-exchange market and restricted U.S. dollars for imports of dozens of products to keep the naira from weakening, after a series of devaluations that began in 2015.

“Investors are watching foreign reserves, the fact that they have been falling, and that in itself is a concern,” said Yvonne Mhango, Sub-Saharan Africa economist at Renaissance Capital in Johannesburg. “The interest rate must be attractive enough to compensate for any currency risk.”

Since August, Nigeria’s gross foreign reserves have fallen by $4 billion to $40.5 billion, according to central bank data.

In earlier comments at a conference in Abuja, Ahmed said concerns about Nigeria’s debt sustainability stem from low levels of public revenue and not the size of the debt load. Although Nigeria’s debt-to-GDP ratio is relatively low at 23.4%, debt interests consume about half of government revenue.

Nigeria is steering clear of external debt markets this year after issuing a record $10.7 billion of international bonds in 2018.

To contact the reporter on this story: Alonso Soto in Abuja at asoto54@bloomberg.net

To contact the editors responsible for this story: Antony Sguazzin at asguazzin@bloomberg.net, Paul Richardson, Alastair Reed

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