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FG offers N80bn in bond auction for July

The Federal Government of Nigeria has announced an N80 billion bond auction scheduled for July 28, 2025, with settlement expected on July 30, 2025.
The Debt Management Office (DMO) made this announcement in a circular posted on Wednesday.
The circular stated that the bond issuance complied with the Debt Management Office (Establishment) Act, 2003, and the Local Loans (Registered Stock and Securities) Act, CAP. L17, Laws of the Federation of Nigeria 2004.
According to the DMO, the bond issuance was carried out in compliance with the Debt Management Office (Establishment) Act, 2003, and the Local Loans (Registered Stock and Securities) Act, CAP. L17, Laws of the Federation of Nigeria 2004.
The offer comprised two re-openings of previously issued FGN bonds: N20 billion is being offered for the 19.30 per cent FGN APR 2029 bond, which has a five-year tenor, while N60 billion is allocated to the 17.95 per cent FGN June 2032 bond, with a maturity period of seven years.
Each bond unit is priced at N1,000, with a minimum subscription of N5,000 and additional investments in multiples of N1,000, allowing investors to subscribe for up to N50 million.
The interest rate for the bonds would be determined based on the yield-to-maturity bid that clears the total volume offered at auction, as these are re-openings of previously issued bonds.
Interest payments would be made semi-annually, while the principal will be repaid in full through a bullet repayment at the bond’s maturity date.
The July 2025 bond auction is less than the N100 billion offered in June.
The first instrument offered was a five-year reopening bond with a coupon rate of 19.30 per cent, set to mature on April 17, 2029. The bond attracted 30 bids totalling N41.685 billion in subscriptions, signalling strong investor demand.
However, only two bids were successful, with a final allotment of N1.050 billion.
The second instrument, a newly issued seven-year bond carrying a 17.95 per cent coupon rate and maturing on June 25, 2032, garnered 209 bids, with subscriptions amounting to N561.170 billion.
Out of these, 41 bids were accepted, and N98.950 billion was allotted.