Desperate for Funding, Nigeria Prepares to Face Bond Investors
Nume Ekeghe with agency report
The odds are stacked against Nigeria as
it looks to raise debt on the international markets for the first time
in almost three years.
According to Bloomberg, Minister of
Finance Kemi Adeosun is leading a team of officials that will meet bond
investors at London’s five-star Corinthia Hotel on Tuesday at a time
when Africa’s biggest economy is on the verge of a recession, oil
production has fallen to about a three-decade low, and the budget
deficit has swelled to a record. Yields on Nigeria’s existing dollar
debt are almost twice as high as those for Kazakhstan and Colombia, two
other developing-nation oil producers.
While they’re interested in plans to
revive growth, investors said they will also demand to know when and how
the central bank will end capital controls and a currency peg that have
starved the country of dollars and slowed foreign investment to a
trickle.
Tapping the offshore bond market this
year is crucial for Nigeria to fund a budget of N6.1 trillion ($31
billion) meant to stimulate the economy, according to Rand Merchant
Bank.
“They will be under immense scrutiny,” an analyst at RMB, FirstRand Limited’s investment-banking unit, Nema Ramkhelawan-Bhana said from Johannesburg.
“They will be under immense scrutiny,” an analyst at RMB, FirstRand Limited’s investment-banking unit, Nema Ramkhelawan-Bhana said from Johannesburg.
The Eurobond market, which Nigeria may
try to tap for as much as $1 billion, is “an avenue of financing they’re
in desperate need of. It’s going to be a tough week for the finance
ministry,” she said.
Nigeria has sold dollar bonds twice, the last time in mid-2013, when it raised $1 billion of five- and 10-year debt. Yields on its $500 million of securities maturing in July 2023 fell three basis points to 7.5 percent by 12:15 p.m. in London on Monday and have dropped 1.18 percentage points this year. Nigeria’s Eurobonds have gained 8.3 percent in 2016, compared with the average of 9.6 percent for high-yielding emerging-market sovereign dollar-debt tracked by Bloomberg.
Nigeria has sold dollar bonds twice, the last time in mid-2013, when it raised $1 billion of five- and 10-year debt. Yields on its $500 million of securities maturing in July 2023 fell three basis points to 7.5 percent by 12:15 p.m. in London on Monday and have dropped 1.18 percentage points this year. Nigeria’s Eurobonds have gained 8.3 percent in 2016, compared with the average of 9.6 percent for high-yielding emerging-market sovereign dollar-debt tracked by Bloomberg.
Bond investors blame Nigeria’s rigid
foreign-exchange regime for draining reserves, which have fallen to a
more than 10-year low, and hindering the economy, according to Bank of
America Merrill Lynch. The second-biggest U.S. bank by assets says
Nigerian Eurobonds would rally more if the government allowed the naira
to weaken.
Central Bank Governor Godwin Emefiele
has fixed the naira at N197-N199 per dollar since March 2015, even as
other oil exporters from Angola to Kazakhstan have let their currencies
drop. Forward contracts suggest it will fall 39 percent to N277 in three
months and to N324 in a year. The black-market rate has plummeted to
around N355 as the central bank runs out of the foreign-currency that
companies need to import raw materials and equipment.
“Without some kind of exchange-rate reform, we doubt the market would look favorably upon a Eurobond,” a London-based economist at Exotix Partners LLP,Alan Cameron said.
“Without some kind of exchange-rate reform, we doubt the market would look favorably upon a Eurobond,” a London-based economist at Exotix Partners LLP,Alan Cameron said.
“The government’s unwillingness to
adjust is likely to be seen as a major turn-off for many investors, even
if the headline debt ratios are low.”
The economy contracted for the first
time since 2004 in the three months through March, and a recession is
imminent, the central bank said on May 24.
“Feedback from our clients suggests that
the removal of the naira peg would be a positive catalyst for the
dollar bonds,” a London-based economist at Bank of America, Oyin Anubi,
said in an e-mailed response to questions.
“The dramatic slowdown in economic growth combined with uncertainty on foreign exchange and risks to oil production means that this is a difficult time to invest in Nigeria.”
“The dramatic slowdown in economic growth combined with uncertainty on foreign exchange and risks to oil production means that this is a difficult time to invest in Nigeria.”
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