close
Thursday, April 15, 2021

DMO lists N150 billion FG bonds for auction

It also assured that the bonds were backed by the full faith and credit of the federal government and charged upon Nigeria’s general assets.

• April 14, 2021
Naira Notes
Naira Notes (Photo Credit: Peoples Gazette/Ahmed Oluwasanjo)

The Debt Management Office (DMO) announced the auctioning of three federal government bonds of N150 billion at N1,000 per unit.

This was announced on Wednesday.

Details obtained from DMO’s website showed that the three bonds were valued at N50 billion each, with interest rates of 16.29 per cent; 12.50 per cent, and 9.80 per cent, respectively.

It listed the auction date as April 21, while the settlement date is April 23.

“Minimum units for sale are N50,001 thousand and in multiples of N1,000 thereafter.

“For re-openings of previously issued bonds, successful bidders will pay a price corresponding to the yield-to-maturity bid that clears the volume being auctioned plus any accrued interest rate on the instrument,” the DMO stated.

It explained that interest rates would be paid “semi-annually,” with bullet repayment on the maturity date.

The office said that the bonds qualify as securities in which trustees can invest under the Trustee Investment Act.

“It also qualifies as government securities within the meaning of Company Income Tax Act and Personal Income Tax Act for tax exemption for pension funds and other investors.

“It is listed on the Nigerian Stock Exchange and FMDQ OTC Securities Exchange,” the DMO explained.

The DMO added that all federal government bonds qualified as liquid assets to calculate the liquidity ratio for banks.

It also assured that the bonds were backed by the full faith and credit of the federal government and charged upon Nigeria’s general assets.

It urged interested investors to contact designated banks. 

(NAN)

More from Peoples Gazette

Kristalina Georgieva

World

Cryptocurrencies, other digital money can facilitate remittances: IMF

“First, new forms of money must remain trustworthy. They must protect consumers, be safe and anchored in sound legal frameworks and support financial integrity.”

CBN Governor Godwin Emefiele and President Muhammadu Buhari

Economy

Why Nigeria’s debts keep increasing under Buhari: DMO

The total public debt as of December 31, 2020, released by the DMO is N32.915 trillion.

Timipre Sylva (Credit: @NNPCGroup)

Economy

Retrenchment: Looming strike threatens Chevron’s 140,000 bpd output

Mr Sylva had scheduled a meeting with the union’s leadership for Thursday (today) to find a lasting solution to the industrial disharmony.

Anti-Corruption

OECD, AfDB to tackle corruption, bribery in Nigerian businesses

“In case of fraud or corruption suspected with companies or persons, the Bureau of Integrity and Anti-Corruption of the bank initiates an investigation of allegations.”

Economy

Audit Regulations 2020: FRC yet to fix grey areas

Mr Anyahara pledged the council’s commitment to ensuring transparency, responsibility, accountability, and fairness without fear or favour.

Anti-Corruption

Nigeria’s illegal cash evacuated to UAE, China, Lebanon: BDCs

“Licenced BDCs sub-sector is commanding N1 trillion annual turnover in the economy.”