REFILE-Nigeria has no plans to go to international debt market this year

Published 25/10/2019, 22:25
REFILE-Nigeria has no plans to go to international debt market this year

(Refiling to add dropped word in headline)

By Chijioke Ohuocha

ABUJA, Oct 25 (Reuters) - Nigeria has no plans to tap the

international debt market this year due to the time constraints

before the end of its budget cycle, the head of the government's

debt office told Reuters on Friday.

The West African country had its last eurobond sale in

November, its sixth outing where it raised $2.86 billion.

Foreign borrowing had been set at 824.82 billion naira ($2.7

billion) for the government's 2019 budget.

"We will only raise the new domestic borrowing of 802.82

billion naira as provided in the 2019 appropriation act. We

won't be in the international capital market in 2019," said

Patience Oniha, director general of the government debt agency

known as DMO.

Oniha said the country's 2019 budget had only six months for

implementation, due to the late passage of the bill. The

government aimed to start its budget implementation for 2020 in

January, she told Reuters in an email.

The DMO had said in June that the government wanted to first

access cheap funding from multilateral and bilateral lenders and

then raise any balance from commercial sources, possibly

including security issuance such as eurobonds. Nigeria, which emerged from recession in 2017, has borrowed

abroad and at home over the past three years to help finance its

budgets and fund infrastructure projects, but debt service costs

are also rising.

The government approved a three-year plan in 2016 to borrow

more from abroad. It wants 40% of its loans to come from

offshore sources to lower borrowing costs and help fund

record-high budgets.

Earlier this month, President Muhammadu Buhari presented a

record 10.33 trillion-naira ($33.8 billion) budget for 2020 to

parliament, which he expects to be partly financed via foreign

borrowing plus the proceeds of privatisation. = 306.95 naira)

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