Tag: DMO

  • $30bn loan: Borrowing remains credible option -DMO

    $30bn loan: Borrowing remains credible option -DMO

    •J.K Randle, others urge caution

    Despite the controversy generated over the federal government’s plan to borrow $30billion to close the funding gap in next year’s budget and beyond, the Debt Management Office (DMO) has said the loan request is a right step in the right direction.
    Addressing members of the Senate Committee on Local and Foreign Debts in Abuja, the Director General of the DMO, Dr Abraham Nwankwo, said “The $30 billion loan will be borrowed over a three-year period, not at once. Drawdown of the loan will be done based on the progress of the work and it is essentially for infrastructure because we don’t have revenue at hand to provide infrastructure.”
    Speaking with The Nation over the weekend, DMO spokesperson, Liman Balarabe said, people are unnecessarily critical about the loan proposal such that they have allowed emotions to becloud their sense of reasoning.
    According to him, “The federal government has already gotten approval for the Euro Bond. These are loans that have been fully negotiated. It is a three years plan. We are getting over $4billion from the Euro Bond part of which has already been captured in the 2016 budget. . We are getting these monies from different sources, including AfDb, Europe from 2016-2018.”
    Citing the DMO’s boss’ response during his meeting with the lawmakers in Abuja, Balarabe said the agency is not foreclosing other options as it is ready to listen to superior arguments on the matter.
    He was however quick to add that all other options have been carefully weighed and borrowing remains the only credible and feasible option at the moment.
    However, the concern of many of those opposed to the loan request is that the federal government should be more circumspect rather than throwing caution to the wind.
    One of those who share this sentiment is Bashorun J. K. Randle, renowned accountant and public commentator.
    In a chat with The Nation at the weekend, he said the country was better off not accepting any loan at this point in time because of the adverse effects attached to it. Waxing philosophical, he said: “Little drops of water make a mighty debt!”
    Raising some posers, JK Randle said there was need for government to come clean on its borrowing plan rather than shroud everything in secrecy.
    “The devil is in the details. Why you need to borrow; the terms and tenor; what you plan to spend it on and of course, your absorptive capacity as well as the means and wherewithal to pay back?” J.K Randle queried.
    Prof. Jonathan Aremu, an economist, who is of the Department of International Economic Relations at the Covenant University, is also on the same page with J.K Randle.
    While not totally opposed to it, the university don, however, wants the necessary precautionary measures to be taken before going for the loan.

    According to him, “The danger about borrowing when you don’t take proper precaution is that the future generations will keep paying. Such kind of borrowing is not sustainable at all. Sustainable development is a development which doesn’t affect future consumption negatively and vice versa,” he stressed.”

  • DMO raises N1.18tr to fund economy

    DMO raises N1.18tr to fund economy

     The Debt Management Office (DMO) says it has raised the entire N1.18 trillion domestic component of the 2016 approved borrowing to fund the economy this fiscal year.

    Addressing members of the Senate Committee on Local and Foreign Debts, the Director General of the DMO, Dr Abraham Nwankwo, said by raising the entire domestic stock, “Nigeria has successfully developed a strong domestic market”.

    On the remaining N635 billion, which is to be borrowed from external sources, he said US$1 billion from the African Development Bank (AfDB), “but AfDB released $600 million”.

    The Ministry of Finance, Nwankwo said, is working to secure the balance but the current economic situation is making the realisation a Herculean task. However, Nwankwo noted, there is some good news because the government “can fall back on domestic borrowing”.

    Nwankwo also told the senators that the “DMO is working to see that the $1 billion Eurobond is mobilised by second quarter of 2017”.

    The DMO boss said the Federal Government was servicing its debt as at when due. According to him, of the N1.161 trillion to be serviced in 2016, the government had serviced N1.09 trillion.

    “Nigeria is in a very strong position to service its debts because of our debt sustainability analysis, which ensures that we make sure that we do not go near threshold of borrowing and to avoid unsustainable debts, so we are operating miles away from the threshold,” Nwankwo said.

    He assured the legislators that “we will build sustainable economy in the next three to five years.”

    On the proposed $29.9 billion loan, Nwankwo told the senators that “the $30 billion loan will be borrowed over a three-year period, not at once. Drawdown of the loan will be done based on the progress of the work and it is essentially for infrastructure because we don’t have revenue at hand to provide infrastructure.”

    These infrastructure he said, “will help reduce poverty. There must be no leakages, that should be our focus and there must be accountability. Investment of $30 billion should be in infrastructure that can repay itself.”

    Internally, Nwankwo said the DMO had only received overhead allocations up to August  this year “because of recession, so we are making sacrifice.” He also said that of the DMO’s capital expenditure (Capex) for 2016 (N87.3 million), only N33.79 million had been released.

    “We are doing what we can with what we have to support the economy. We have advertised for tender to execute some capital items, hoping that the balance will be released,” he said.

    Senator Shehu Sani, Chairman Senate Committee on Local and Foreign Debts, urged the DMO to rigorously pursue robust and effective debt management measures.

    The committee, the senator, said “is suggesting a holistic review of the Debt Management Office Act to address current challenges of debt management.

    “For example, an accounting officer who borrows money and misapplies such fund should be held accountable. There should be consequences for such misdemeanors,” Sani said.

    On loan terms and conditions, the committee, he said, “will henceforth pay attention to the agreement on terms and conditions for loans obtained by government to forestall a situation where Nigerians are unnecessarily shortchanged”.

    Sani said: “A casual observation of construction sites of projects funded from EXIM Bank of China reveals that only foreigners are the engineers, architects and other professionals. Nigerians are only engaged as unskilled workers. This situation is unacceptable. Such agreement must be in tandem with our laws and should serve our collective interest ultimately.”

    On the timeliness of receiving drawdowns from loans contracted by governments, Sani was shocked “to discover that Lagos State is yet to receive drawdown from the DPO lll the National Assembly approved since December 2015”. “The executive must streamline the process and eliminate unnecessary bottlenecks,” the senator said.

  • DMO, Senate Committee discuss $29.9b loan

    DMO, Senate Committee discuss $29.9b loan

    The  Debt Management Office (DMO) and Senate Committee on Local and Foreign Debts, yesterday, discussed the viability of the $29.9 billion offshore borrowing plan by the Federal Government and the mechanisms in place to ensure proper utilisation of the funds.

    The committee, which was on oversight visit to the DMO office, in Abuja, had during the question and answer session, enquired from the debt office, the state of the country’s debt profile.

    In a statement, the DMO said the visit was in line with legislative tradition and provided committee members the opportunity to interact with the DMO Director-General, his management team and appraise the workplace.

    The committee, led by its Chairman, Senator Shehu Sani, equally discussed how the debt office utilised its funds allocation to achieve its organisational mandate.

    In his welcome address, DMO D-G, Dr. Abraham Nwankwo, on behalf of the management and staff, praised the committee for the visit and expressed appreciation of the support, encouragement and guidance the DMO had always enjoyed from its members.

    Nwankwo said that the DMO’s interactions with the committee had always been fruitful and helped greatly towards realising its objectives.

    In his response, Senator Sani said he was delighted to have visited the DMO and the discussions that followed. “This is the first oversight visit since the committee was inaugurated last year. We commended the D-G and his team for their hard work and diligence and acknowledged their efforts towards achieving a sustainable debt profile for the country,” he said.

    He also thanked the D-G for his clear and precise presentation and assured the DMO of the committee’s continued support towards assisting the government to succeed with its change agenda.

    Also at the meeting were senators Ahmed Sani Yarima, Aliyu Magatakarda Wammako and Joseph Obinna.

  • DMO plans N95b bond auction this week

    •Lists banks for $1b Eurobond sale

    •Overnight lending rate hits 22%

    The Debt Management Office (DMO) plans to sell N95 billion ($301.8 million) of bonds on Thursday, it said at the weekend.

    The debt office said it would sell N35 billion of a bond maturing in 2036, N25 billion of paper maturing in 2026 and N35 billion of debt maturing in 2021, using the Dutch auction system.

    It said results of the auction are expected to be released on the following day. All the bonds on offer are re-openings of previous issues.

    DMO issues sovereign bonds monthly to support the local bond market, create a benchmark for corporate issuance and fund its budget deficit.

    The Federal Government plans to borrow about N900 billion locally to finance part of the N2.2 trillion deficit in its 2016 budget. It is also seeking advisers and book-runners to manage a planned $1 billion Eurobond sale this year.

    The DMO also has a short list of banks to manage its planned $1 billion Eurobond sale, but the government has not made a final decision.

    The Federal Government wants to sell $1 billion in Eurobonds by the end of the year, although no bank has been appointed yet to arrange the issue.

    An insider source, who did not wish to be identified, said the list has been sent to Nigeria’s Bureau of Public Procurement (BPP), after which the finance minister will offer the names to the cabinet for approval. He did not disclose how long the process might take.

    “The names have been picked but it has to go through government process,” he told Reuters. “The issue will happen this year.”

    Nigeria has $500 million of commitments for the planned Eurobond and any decision to increase the size of the offer will depend on pricing, Finance Minister Kemi Adeosun has said.

    The official said Adeosun met with Moody’s Investors Service on Friday to discuss Nigeria’s ratings before the bond sale.

    Moody’s downgraded Nigeria’s sovereign rating to B1 from Ba3 in April, citing risks to government efforts to diversify revenues away from oil, its mainstay.

    Meanwhile, overnight lending rate rose to 22 percent on Friday from 13 per cent last week due to tight liquidity worsened by banks inability to get access to their balances with the regulator, traders said.

    Traders said lenders were demanding as high as 25 percent to place funds on the market overnight and that a technical glitch at the central bank’s system which started last month had not been resolved. “There was no cash flow to the system this week because of no treasury maturity,” one trader said.

    Rates are expected to climb higher next week due to bond auctions being planned, traders said. The central bank plans to sell around 120 billion naira in treasury bills and 95 billion naira in bonds at an auction next week.

  • Loan not a trap, says DMO

    Loan not a trap, says DMO

    The $29.9 billion loan request by the Federal Government is not a trap, Debt Management Office (DMO) Director-General Dr Abraham Nwankwo has said.

    “The first thing to note is that this borrowing is normal. Normal in the sense that over the past 20 years, there is no year we have not borrowed; so, interpreting the proposal submitted to the National Assembly by Mr President for a three-year borrowing programme to be an indirect way of trapping the country does not seem to be logical because Nigeria has always borrowed every year.”

    He stated: “Every year there is a budget and if you check the budgets many years back you will see that we have been borrowing both external and domestic; so there is nothing new about this. Let me also emphasize that since we exited from the Paris and London club debt in 2005-2006 we have always borrowed almost from all these sources we want to borrow from now.”

    “If the $29.9 billion external loan is secured, if we build infrastructure in the next five to seven  years before those loans mature in 15 to 30 years, Nigeria would be in a position to service her debt and turn around the economy.”

    Nwankwo argued that “we cannot as a nation fold our hands and remain where we, are we want to move forward by mobilising resources but if there is a way anybody can propose we mobilise revenue that is enough to cover the infrastructure deficit in the next five to seven years that would be fine, but the important thing is that we need to mobilize revenue from whatever appropriate source to solve the infrastructure deficit to turn around the economy, to exit recession, to make sure that ones and for all we are no more a mono cultural economy.”

    By providing infrastructure, Nwankwo noted that “if the country is exporting five to 10 different products whether there is a shock globally or not Nigeria will be stable and we will not be crying about exchange rate reserve because we are well diversified that is the whole idea and that is what government wants to achieve.”

     

  • DMO to raise N105b in local currency bond today

    The Debt Management Office (DMO) plans to raise N105 billion ($345 million) in local-currency denominated bonds at an auction today.

    The debt office said it will raise N35 billion each from debt maturing in 2021, 2026 and 2036, using the Dutch auction system.

    The DMO fourth quarter calendar showed that it would be raising between N250 billion and N340 billion ($794.91 million to $1.08 billion) in local currency-denominated bonds.

    The debt office said it would auction between N90 to N120 billion worth of bonds maturing in 2021, N70 to N100 billion in the debt maturing in 2026, and N90 to N120 billion worth in the paper maturing in 2036.

    In its latest issuance calendar, the debt office said the bonds will be re-opened from previously issued debt. The Federal Government had planned to raise between N305 to N395 billion worth of debt in the third quarter but ended up issuing N460 billion worth.

    Nigeria issues sovereign bonds monthly to fund its budget deficit, support the local bond market and create a benchmark for corporate issuance.

    It has estimated that it will borrow around N900 billion from the local debt market this year to fund a budget deficit projected at N2.2 trillion, which has been aggravated by an economic slump as low oil prices slashed government revenues and weakened the naira.

  • DMO to raise N340b via bonds in Q4

    DMO to raise N340b via bonds in Q4

    •Access Bank eyes Eurobond issuance

    The Debt Management Office (DMO) has said it would be raising between N250 billion and N340 billion ($794.91 million to $1.08 billion) in local currency-denominated bonds in the fourth quarter.

    The debt office said it would auction between N90 to N120 billion worth of bonds maturing in 2021; N70 to N100 billion in the debt maturing in 2026 and N90 to N120 billion worth in the paper maturing in 2036.

    In its latest issuance calendar, it said the bonds would be re-opened from previously issued debt. The Federal Government had planned to raise between N305 to N395 billion worth of debt in the third quarter, but ended up issuing N460 billion worth.

    Nigeria issues sovereign bonds monthly to fund its budget deficit, support the local bond market and create a benchmark for corporate issuance. It said it would borrow about N900 billion locally to finance part of the 2.2 trillion naira deficits in its 2016 budget.

    Meanwhile, Access Bank Plc is set to issue the first Eurobond from Nigeria in almost two years after choosing banks to arrange a new deal. The fund would be used for working capital, lending to investment-grade names, especially customers with interest in export.

    The Tier-1 lender will meet investors in the United States (US) and Europe from today till October 3 and plans to sell five-year debt, according to Chief Executive Officer Herbert Wigwe.

    Barclays Plc, Citigroup Inc. and JPMorgan Chase & Co. will arrange the deal, he said. “It would be for working capital, for lending to investment-grade names, including Nigerian companies seeking to expand their exports,” Wigwe, told Bloomberg. He did not say how much Access Bank intended to raise.

  • DMO praises Access Bank on PDMM’s achievement

    The Debt Management Office (DMO) has commended Access Bank Plc for emerging as the most outstanding Primary Dealer Market Makers (PDMM) during the first half of 2016.

    In a statement released by the DMO office, the bank emerged most outstanding PPDM in first half of this year in terms of fulfillment of the performance assessment criteria for primary and secondary markets stipulated in the General Rules and Regulations Governing the PDMM system in Federal Government of Nigeria Securities.

    The commendation was giving to the Bank for its outstanding contribution to the continued growth and development of the Federal Government of Nigeria (FGN) Bond Market especially even under a difficult operating economic environment.

    Commenting on the commendation letter, Access Bank Group Treasurer, Oladapo Olagunju, said: “Our bond dealers are widely respected by participants in the market and this recognition by DMO is a confirmation of the leadership position that the Bank commands in the financial markets. This is the first time that DMO will be publicly commending a bank and we feel highly honoured to be the first recipient of this accolade.  We believe this is a testament to the bank’s continued push towards becoming the World’s Most Respected African Bank.”

  • DMO to sell N120b bonds tomorrow

    DMO to sell N120b bonds tomorrow

    The Debt Management Office (DMO) yesterday said it would raise N120 billion worth of bonds tomorrow.

    The office said in its July “Bond Circular’’ posted on its website that the bonds had maturity dates of five, 10 and 20 years.

    The office said N40 billion worth of bond each would be sold in the three categories.

    It stated that each of the categories would mature in July 2021, January 2026 and March 2036.

    The DMO added that the 10-year and 20-year categories had different coupon rate of 12.5 per cent and 12.4 per cent.

    It said the bonds to be auctioned on July 13 were all re-opening bonds and the settlement date would be July 15.

  • Path to economic recovery, by DMO Chief

    Path to economic recovery, by DMO Chief

    Debt Management Office (DMO) Director-General Dr. Abraham Nwankwo has painted a rosy economic future anchored on diversification and enhanced revenue from taxation. According to him, in three to five years, Nigerians will feel the impact of the present administration’s policies on manufacturing, agriculture, entertainment and mining, among others, because they will strengthen the naira and improve foreign reserves, writes COLLINS NWEZE.

    The naira and foreign reserves are the worst hit in the wake of Nigeria’s dwinding revenue because of the crash in crude oil prices. The naira has shot up from 215 to 350 against the dollar in the last 16 months in the parallel market; the reserves have continued on their downward slide from over $36 billion to $26.5 billion within the same period.

    As worrisome as these indicators may be, Debt Management Office (DMO) Director-General Dr. Abraham Nwankwo described them as temporary setbacks that will be overcome when the government’s policy on diversification of the economy begins to crystalise.

    At an interactive session with reporters in Lagos last weekend, Nwankwo said the government’s efforts at revitalising other sectors of the economy, such as agriculture, solid minerals and manufacturing, among others, will impact on the economy in the next three to five years.

    He said when the economy is diversified, Nigeria’s growth will not be determined by the prices of crude oil.

    The DMO boss said much revenue would be derived from taxation, adding that the country’s low comparative tax revenue to the Gross Domestic Product (GDP) ratio, currently at about seven per cent against the 18 per cent average in most developing countries, will improve following efficient production.

    He said through taxes, government can secure the fund to finance major developmental projects that will impact on the people’s lives.

    Nwankwo is optimistic that, despite the challenges, Nigeria’s dream of becoming one of the best 20 economies in the world by year 2020 is still realistic.

    “The target of getting the country to rank among the 20 leading economies in the world by 2020 is still being pursued. The crash in crude oil prices should not in any way derail that target. When you are running a race and something trips you and you fall, you have to wake up, and continue the journey. Also, even if oil is the base for economic growth and development, it was an inappropriate base for growth. But luckily for the country, there are alternatives in agriculture,” he said.

    The DMO chief said the country has been unable to exploit up to 25 per cent of opportunities in agriculture.

    He said: “We need to achieve internal food security and have the opportunity to export agro-based products in processed form. Imagine the variety of food stuff  from savannah to the deserts, all the various legumes, roots and others that can be grown from these environments. If we effectively exploit agriculture, if and as we are making progress in agriculture, firstly, the major consumer of our forex like agro-based raw materials, rice, fish, poultry, wheat, will be taken care of and government will save billions of dollars from these imports.

    “We have the capacity to produce theses products and even export to other countries. Based on the pronouncements of the agriculture minister based on the vision of President Buhari, in three to four years, we will be self-sufficient in poultry, rice production. We are on the right path to be self-sufficient in food, and enormous forex will be saved from agriculture production alone. Reserves will rise, and the local currency will be stronger. That is the essence of the growing economy.

    “You can see that in the manufacturing sector, some factories are operating below capacity. But with the ongoing implementation of President Muhammadu Buhari’s policy on diversification of the economy and revatilising the power infrastructure, the sector will pick up and create more jobs for the people.”

     

    Road to diversification

    President Buhari had in his democracy day broadcast on May 29, said the economic misfortune facing the country due to low crude oil prices has equally provided it with an opportunity to restructure the economy and diversify.

    “We are in the process of promoting agriculture, livestock, exploiting our solid mineral resources and expanding our industrial and manufacturing base. That way, we will import less and make the social investments necessary to allow us to produce a large and skilled workforce. Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) will offer more fiscal incentives for business that prove capable of manufacturing products that are internationally competitive. We remain committed to reforming the regulatory framework, for investors by improving the ease of doing business in Nigeria,” he told Nigerians.

    Already, the first steps along the path of self-sufficiency in rice, wheat and sugar – big users of Nigeria’s scarce foreign exchange – have been taken.

    For instance, the Labour Intensive Farming Enterprise will boost the economy and ensure inclusive growth in long neglected communities. Special intervention funds through the Bank of Agriculture will provide targeted support.

    Also, the Solid Minerals Minister the minister has produced a roadmap where we will work closely with the World Bank and major international investors to ensure through best practices and due diligence that we choose the right partners. Illegal mining remains a problem and we have set up a special security team to protect our assets. Special measures will be in place to protect miners in their work environment.

    The National Economic Team under the Presidency chaired and managed by the Vice President Prof Yemi Osinbajo which also has the Finance Minster, Mrs. Kemi Adeosun as member. The DMO’s Director-General, Dr. Abraham Nwankwo, is also a member of the team. Other members are Ministers of Budget; Trade and Investment; and Information. The team is expected to guide the government to achieve the desired result.

     

    Eurobond sale coming

    Beyond the need to diversify the economy, Dr. Nwankwo also said Nigeria may still access the Eurobond or sovereign sukuk market for more cash. He said Nigeria is working out details for issuing a debut sovereign sukuk this year and may also sell a Eurobond.

    He hinted that Nigeria had yet to determine the size of a potential sukuk deal and was working with the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC), the Central Bank of Nigeria and the stock exchange to build capacity.

    Besides, Nigeria’s low debt to Gross Domestic Product (GDP) ratio means the country can borrow more to fund budget, infrastructure and other essential projects that will stimulate the economy and create jobs for the citizenry.

    Nigeria, reeling from the plunge in vital oil revenues, has set up a government committee to advice on the amount to be raised from the Islamic bond sale, the timing and jurisdiction of issue, either domestic or foreign.

    “We are definitely going to issue a sukuk this year. We may also likely issue a Eurobond this year. We are working hard to put together the entire necessary framework,” Nwankwo told Reuters on the sideline of a media briefing.

     

    Budget and infrastructure funding

    The DMO boss said the N1.84 trillion deficits in the N6.06 trillion budget for 2016, will be used sorely for capital projects funding. He said this is the only time that such huge amount is allocated and specified for capital projects. “This is the first time that the budget specified that all borrowed funds will be for capital expenditure. The sharing of internal and international borrowing is almost 50/50. We have been borrowing locally, but we have to take advantage of the relatively low cost of funds externally. We do not want to borrow too much from the domestic economy, so that we do not crowd-out the domestic environment,” he said.

    He said that given the challenges the economy is going through, much depends on what the media reports. “The media is critical, because what the media tells the international community will determine investment flows into the country. It is our responsibility to continue working hard to ensure the resilience our economy is exhibiting is sustained, until we achieve the turnaround that will come with diversification,” Nwankwo said.

    He said achieving self-sufficiency in power will enable government generate more income; companies will be able to pay more taxes, thereby helping government diversify its revenue bases.

    “It is possible that in the next five to seven years, the whole picture of Nigeria will be a complete turnaround because of government’s economy diversification plan. The difference between Nigerian and other countries facing similar economic challenges is that those countries do not have the same opportunities we have in Nigeria. Nigeria is near 100 per cent idle capacity, meaning the flexibility to grow the economy is high,” he said.

    He urged Nigerians not to be depressed because of drop in crude oil prices. “We have no reason to be depressed just because crude oil price is down. We have to see the varieties of opportunities available for the country to grow the economy based on a well-diversified and sustainable manner. We as responsible stakeholders in the economy, should emphasise these opportunities,” he said.

    “Indeed in other countries, the major source of revenue is taxation. Taxation should also be explored. Government should be able to sustain itself with taxation revenues. Now with the better tax compliance, and effective sanctions for defaulters, we have a room to boost public revenue from taxation,” Dr. Nwankwo stated.

    Finance Correspondents Association Chairman, Babajide Komolafe, praised the efforts being made by the DMO to support government’s diversification effort. He said the role of DMO in economic development cannot be over emphasised. He said that FICAN will continue to support the DMO to achieve its goals within the economy.