Finance
DMO raises N160bn bonds
Nigeria’s Debt Management DMO, said it has raised N160 billion bonds at its second debt auction this year at yields lower than the inflation rate. The DMO had initially wanted to raise N110 billion at the auction but increased the offer due to demand. Total demand stood at N337.03 billion as at Wednesday’s auction, higher than N235.05 billion at its previous sale.
Annual inflation in Nigeria climbed to high of 18.72 percent in January, its 12th straight monthly rise. The trend was worsened by dollar shortages, which triggered its first recession in 25 years.

The government is also facing funding challenges brought on by the low price of oil. It expects the budget deficit to widen to N2.36 trillion in 2017 as it tries to spend its way of out of the recession. More than half of the deficit will be funded through local borrowings, the government has said.
DMO said it raised N70 billion of the paper maturing in 2036 at 16.77 percent, lower than 16.99 percent same instrument fetched at the previous auction and paid 16.61 percent for the N30 billion raised in the paper maturing in 2026 compared to 16.99 percent at the previous auction. It issued N60 billion in the note maturing in 2021 at 16.55 percent against 16.89 percent at the previous auction.
-
News1 day agoCardoso formally receives Central Bank of the Year Award
-
Economy1 day agoNigeria’s Digital Boom needs nuclear power partnerships for long-term success
-
Uncategorized1 day ago
June 12 Democracy Day declaration not enough, as citizens wallow in pain – ActionAid, FG declares Friday public holiday
-
Finance3 hours agoElon Musk becomes world’s first trillionaire as SpaceX shares soar on stock market debut
-
Oil and Gas1 day agoNNPC is house of thieves, fraud; Kyari must be arrested dead or alive to account for N210 trillion—Oshiomhole
-
Oil and Gas1 day agoDangote Refinery seeks $1bn private placement ahead of planned listing
-
Stock Market3 hours agoFG to raise N4trn bond to settle electricity debt
-
News1 day agoMiddle East Conflict sends global growth to lowest rate since COVID-19, WBG to Provide up to $100bn for Affected countries over 15 Months—WBG
