Tag: NSIA

  • FG adds another $550m To SWF

    FG adds another $550m To SWF

    The Federal Government has added an additional $550 million to the Sovereign Wealth Funds managed by the Nigerian Sovereign Investment Authority (NSIA).

    This represents an increase of over 50 per cent to the $1 billion funding which the NSIA got at inception.

    The Coordinating Minister for the Economy and Minister of Finance, Dr Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala, made the announcement on Monday afternoon at a media briefing in Abuja along with Mr. Uche Orji, MD/CEO of NSIA.

    Okonjo-Iweala noted that this shows that the investment which the country is making in the NSIA is increasing and its benefits will bear good fruit for the country.

    “There is still work to be done but we are on the right track.

    “The additional funds were derived from the $1 billion Eurobond which the country successfully floated last year, proceeds of which were set aside for financing power infrastructure.

    $200 million out of the $550 million for the NSIA will go into the Infrastructural Fund of the NSIA to finance gas to power investments with the private sector. The objective is to generate catalytic funding for gas to power infrastructure which will leverage on available funds to boost the development of the power sector and improvement of power supply,” she said.

     

  • NSIA lifts agric fund with $10m

    NSIA lifts agric fund with $10m

    Nigeria Sovereign Investment Authority (NSIA), through its Nigeria Infrastructure Fund, is commiting $10 million to the Fund for Agricultural Financing in Nigeria (FAFIN).

    The deal is being done alongside the Federal Ministry of Agriculture and Rural Development (FMARD) and KfW, the German government-owned development bank, its Chief Executive Officer Uche Orji has said.

    According to a statement, the Fund is an innovative initiative, designed to transform the agriculture finance landscape in the country. With a $100 million target, FAFIN will provide tailored equity and debt capital and technical support solutions to commercially-viable small and medium-sized enterprises (SMEs) and intermediaries across the country’s agricultural value chain.

    The Fund will be dedicated to catalysing an agriculture-led inclusive economic growth in through enhanced agricultural productivity, value-added processing and market linkages. The $100 million target will be reached through further contributions from private sector investors.

    According to NSIA, its participation in this initiative is a firm demonstration of its agriculture strategy as one core area of focus alongside power, housing, healthcare and motorways, among others. Through this strategic decision, the NSIA hopes to support the realisation of government’s Agriculture Transformation Agenda and facilitate national food security.

    Orji said: ”Agriculture is a sector of strategic  importance to the NSIA and an area we see opportunities for significant growth and profit through the facilitation of the enhancement of Nigeria’s  critical agriculture infrastructure.”

  • Fashola, NSIA differ on SWF

    Fashola, NSIA differ on SWF

    Lagos State Governor, Babatunde Fashola has criticised the establishment of the Sovereign Wealth Fund (SWF) under the management of Nigeria Sovereign Investment Authority (NSIA).

    But the Managing Director/Chief Executive Officer of NSIA, Uche Orji, said its creation is to serve as a vehicle to attract Foreign Direct Investment (FDI).

    Fashola, who spoke yesterday when he received members of the NSIA, led by its Chairman, Mahey Rasheed, said rather than saving money, the funds should have been released to the states to develop their infrastructure.

    He said: “As far as this matter is concerned, I have since made my decision known. I disagreed because they are fundamental constitutional issues,” adding that no matter the attractiveness of the concept like NSIA, Nigerians must learn to ask the real questions.

    Orji told The Nation that the NSIA is a legal entity, saying, not everybody is happy with every law, “but when it is passed, we have to implement it.

    He said the SWF ought to have come into existence 30 years ago, arguing that other countries, like Abu Dhabi that caught the vision in the mid 1970s, are the better for it today.

    Orji said he has nothing against the on-going debates about whether Nigeria should continue borrowing, embark on savings, or invest, stressing that “our role is to manage what we have been given.”

    He explained that whether the NSIA deploys the funds internally, or externally, “investment serves as a confident quotient, no matter how small”.

    Earlier, Rasheed said they were in the State House to present the shareholders certificate to the governor and to solicit his support.

    He said the funds belong to all the components of the federation, adding that the objective was to invest and return proceeds of investments to the Federal Government’s coffer.

    He said the act establishing NSIA has since been passed by the National Assembly and signed by President Jonathan.

  • NSIA chief frets over costly stocks

    Chief Executive Officer, Nigerian Sovereign Investment Authority (NSIA), Mr Uche Orji said he was worried about rising stock prices as he prepares to hand over the next tranche of the fund’s $1 billion of holdings to external fund managers.

    The Authority is seeking returns of 400 basis points above U.S. CPI in its $325 million future generations fund, one of three such pools created to manage the $1 billion, and plans to be fully invested by the middle of next year. It will weigh investments in about eight asset classes from private equity to developed and emerging-market stocks even as some securities gained on signs the global economic recovery is taking hold.

    Orji told Bloomberg he’s working with Cambridge Associates LLC on filtering possible managers for the future fund after tapping former employers Goldman Sachs and UBS AG (UBSN), along with Credit Suisse Group AG (CSGN), to help manage a separate $200 million fixed income fund. That accounts for about 20 percent of the fund’s total portfolio and will start reporting performance next month.

    Borrowing costs are soaring from record lows reached in January as speculation deepens that the Fed will curtail its so-called quantitative easing as soon as this month, signaling an end to cheap money that propped up asset prices.

    “A lot of asset classes are richly valued frankly. There’s still a lot I’m not comfortable with in developed market equities. I’m not going to try and be a hero and catch a falling knife with people’s money,” Orji said.

    The wealth fund was signed into law in May 2011 by President Goodluck Jonathan and started last October to invest savings made from the difference between budgeted oil prices and actual market prices. A third pool is mandated to invest $325 million in infrastructure, with a further $150 million that can be allocated to any of the three investment groups, Orji said.

    The infrastructure fund will invest in Nigeria and be internally managed because of a lack of local managers and is considering about 15 projects, said Orji. It’s targeting returns of 500 basis points above U.S. inflation and will probably announce “a couple” of investments by year’s end, he said.

    The Dow Jones Industrial Average index has gained each year since 2009 and with Europe’s economy showing signs of recovery equity values may be set to rise further amid the possible paring of stimulus by the US Federal Reserve, said Orji. Fed policy makers were “broadly comfortable” with Chairman Ben S. Bernanke’s plan to start cutting bond purchases later this year if the economy improves, minutes of their July meeting showed.

    “Nobody knows what tapering is,” Orji said in London. “I don’t think anybody has seen this level of quantitative easing in history so we don’t even know how the market is going to act.”

    Jonathan’s government is in talks with Nigeria’s state governors on future transfers and savings after the latter protested allocations to the wealth fund, Finance Minister Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala said July 2. The Nigerian federal government plans to step up contributions toward year’s-end and is targeting $5 billion for the wealth fund in the “medium-term,” she said.

    Such an increase would put it on a par with Angola, Africa’s second largest oil producer, which announced a $5 billion sovereign wealth fund in October. That’s headed by Chairman Jose Filomeno dos Santos, the son of Angolan president Jose Eduardo dos Santos.

    Growing the fund beyond the initial $1 billion “will not be easy and straightforward frankly, especially if you think that a country of 160 million people have competing needs for spending and you’re here fighting your corner,” said Orji.

     

     

    Nigeria saves oil revenue above the benchmark budgeted price in the excess crude account, which held $5 billion Okonjo-Iweala said in May, down from $9.2 billion in January. It relies on crude exports for about 95 percent of its foreign-currency earnings and about 80 percent of government revenue.

    “The dispute with governors over the scale and the mandate of the SWF has been ongoing since Jonathan’s election and is unlikely to reach a resolution soon,” said Alan Cameron, a Nigeria-focused economist at FCMB Group Plc in London. The start of campaigning for elections in 2015 “will only make these disagreements more difficult to resolve,” he said.

    The Nigerian Stock Exchange All-Share Ind has advanced 30 percent this year. The measure declined 0.1 percent at the 2:30 p.m. close of trading in Lagos, the commercial capital.

    Orji, who said he has personal relationships with other sovereign wealth funds from his time as an investment banker in Europe and the U.S., hopes to attract other sovereign wealth funds, such as those in the Middle East, to coinvest in Nigeria.

    “We see ourselves as a conduit,” said Orji. “This is Nigeria, we deliver good returns, the pleasure is all theirs.”

     

  • FG unveils pension funds managers

    FG unveils pension funds managers

    The Minister of Finance, Dr. Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala, said on Thursday that the Nigeria Sovereign Investment Authority (NSIA) would help to manage the pension funds, to enhance investment in infrastructure in the country.

    Okonjo-Iweala made the remark in Abuja, at the official announcement of the sovereign wealth fund for investment.

    “One of the benefits of having this sovereign wealth fund is not just for the organisations that want to co-invest, but they will also help us work along with our pension funds.

    “They are designing at the moment; a mechanism that would enable us to manage our pension funds, to invest in infrastructure development.

    According to her, it has to be done very carefully, to earn returns.

    “If this is achieved, the nation’s pension funds would be managed in a protected way,” the News Agency of Nigeria quoted the minister as saying at the forum.

    Okonjo-Iweala said the one billion dollars for the Nigeria Sovereign Wealth Fund had been allocated to three key areas of Future Generations, Nigerian Infrastructure and Stabilisation Funds.

    She said that 200 million dollars had been allocated to the stabilisation fund, while 325 million dollars were allocated to infrastructure development and future generations funds, respectively.

    The minister added that the balance of the funds would be decided according to the law.