Citibank has sold $1.1bn Eurobounds to three banks in the country as at June 31, 2014, the bank’s country head, Mr. Omar Hafeez, has said.Hafeez told Reuters that Citi was the largest arranger of Eurobonds in Nigeria and had sold $500m for Zenith Bank, $400m for Access Bank and $200m for Diamond Bank in the first half of the year.
According to him, FCMB last week mandated Citi and Standard Chartered Bank to raise Eurobonds expected more to follow.
“The demand for long-term dollars is increasing in Nigeria as industries such as oil and gas and power develop,” he said, adding that the demand could not be met locally.
He said banks were tapping Eurobonds to bolster their capital bases and also to finance bigticket deals in the oil and gas and newly privatised power sectors. Elections next year could become a worry if they affect the naira exchange rate to the dollar and interest rates.
“I think we could expect a certain amount of volatility preelection but have I seen people sitting on the fence? Not really,” he said. “Commercial realities determine the strategies, so it’s really not elections per say, it’s what elections will do to the FX, interest rate market.” The central bank governor has said he will work to maintain a stable exchange rate and will not lower interest rates before 2015.
He said Nigeria was Citibank’s biggest operation across sub-Saharan Africa and that it was expanding its footprint to bank more local firms, especially as multinational oil firms divest from the oil industry to domestic companies.
He explained that security in the country has not deterred foreign investors from buying its assets, citing $1.1bn worth of Eurobonds it had traded for three local lenders so far this year.
He said that any spread of attacks further south or to the commercial hub of Lagos could start to put even established investors off.
A violent Islamist insurgency in Nigeria has killed hundreds this year, with the abduction of more than 200 schoolgirls by Boko Haram making world headlines in April and overshadowing the country’s rise to overtake South Africa as the continent’s top economy.
The country also faces polls in 2015 that are likely to be the most closely fought since the end of military rule in 1999, with many fearing political violence and rampant spending on patronage, as usually happens in election cycles.
“The investment community is very well informed … Nigeria is a loan market and financial investors have been tapping into treasury bills and bonds for a very long time,” Hafeez said.
“The way the market looks at Boko Haram … it’s still relatively restricted in terms of geographic presence … but an increase (of attacks) to anywhere in the major centres will have consequences,” he said.
The country is growing as an investment destination, attracting capital equity and debt investors, but security and political risks cloud its outlook.Hafeez said Nigeria was witnessing an increase in both foreign direct investments and portfolio flows.
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Reporting by Babatunde Akinsola in Lagos, Nigeria.



