Finance
DMO bond offer attracts investors, realised almost twice bond size on offer

Debt Management said it raised N243.7 billion at a bond auction almost twice the amount it had initially put on offer for subscription, as local funds and foreign investors sambaed to take advantage of the higher returns.
Nigeria’s borrowing costs have fallen from as high as 18 percent a few months ago as inflation has slowed, helping the government raise money to cover a gap in its budget.
The Debt Management Office (DMO) had offered N135 billion worth of bonds maturing in 2021, 2027 and 2037, on offer. However, total investor demand stood at N394.8 billion, prompting the debt office to increase the size of the offer. The DMO paid 15.98 percent for the 2021 bond, 15.90 per cent for the 2027 issue and 15.92 percent for the 2037 debt.
Investors bought more of the benchmark 20-year bond at the auction betting that the inflation outlook in the West African country is improving, traders said. In August inflation slipped for the seventh month running, to 16.01 percent. A lawmaker in a motion on Tuesday said Nigeria needs to lower its interest rates and cut domestic debt to stimulate lending for private sector investment, which would help boost economic growth. But the central bank has said loosening its policy now would worsen inflation and drive bond yields into negative territory, which could lead to capital flight and hurt the currency. It kept its main interest rate on hold at 14 percent on Tuesday.

Nigeria’s economy grew in the second quarter, climbing out of recession as oil revenues rose, but the pace of growth was slow, suggesting the recovery remains fragile. Federal Government plans to borrow both locally and from offshore sources to help fund its budget deficit, which has widened due to lower oil prices slashing government revenues and weakening the Naira currency.
Earlier, the debt office said Nigeria’s debut 100 billion Naira sovereign sukuk issue launched last week was more than 5.8 percent oversubscribed, suggesting it may tap this demand more to help narrow the budget gap.
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