spot_img
spot_imgspot_img
October 24, 2025 - 7:45 PM

Foreign Investors Bolster Nigerian Eurobonds’ February Surge

—

Nigeria’s Eurobond market ended February on a high note, indicating continued confidence among international investors.

The Debt Management Office (DMO) reports that the average yield on Nigerian Eurobonds closed at 8.80%, down 41 basis points from 9.21% at the start of February, indicating robust investor demand.

Nigeria led the area in the Sub-Saharan African Eurobond market, where rates decreased by 27 basis points to an average of 8.4 percent.

According to Afrinvest analysts, this was due to the region’s sustained appeal despite strengthening macroeconomic conditions and declining interest rate pivots. 

“Kenyan bonds led gains, with yields falling 49 basis points following the announcement of plans to implement a centralized bond reporting system. The Nigerian Eurobond followed suit,” it said in its monthly report.

Nigeria to issue its first Eurobond following a two-year hiatus

Even if there were some sell-offs last week, which caused a tiny uptick to 8.80 percent from 8.79 percent the week before, this monthly gain still happened.

According to CSL analysts, major economic data releases, geopolitical worries, and global risk-off trends all significantly impact the yield decline.

In a letter to investors, CSL analysts stated, “In the U.S., Q4 GDP growth came in at 2.3 percent, in line with expectations, while jobless claims unexpectedly rose to 242 thousand (vs. 222 thousand forecast), fuelling concerns over labour market softness.”

Nigerian Eurobonds were among the emerging market assets that saw cautious trading due to these developments.

Ivory Coast rose in rates across all bond tenors with significant sell-offs, similar to Nigeria.

Nonetheless, nations like South Africa and Kenya followed the optimistic trajectory.

Investor interest was demonstrated by the 0.44 percent yield drop on Kenya’s 2028 bond and the 0.06 percent yield drop on Kenya’s 2048 bond.

The yields on the 2038 Eurobond issued by the Benin Republic and the 2041 Eurobond issued by South Africa also decreased.

According to Afrinvest analysts, the market will do well in the future due to significant liquidity inflows from coupon payments of N642.6 billion and maturities of N562.5 billion.

“Additionally, a dovish interest rate outlook should reinforce the bullish bias. The chase for yield is anticipated to be a major theme for long-term offshore interest in the SSA market,” it stated.

 

0 0 votes
Article Rating
Subscribe
Notify of
0 Comments
Oldest
Newest Most Voted
Inline Feedbacks
View all comments

Share post:

Subscribe

Latest News

More like this
Related

Jonathan Never Told Me He’s Running for President in 2027- Wike

The Minister of the Federal Capital Territory (FCT), Nyesom...

Anambra Guber: INEC Team Arrives Anambra, Evaluates Preparedness Ahead of Mock Accreditation Exercise

A four-member delegation from the Independent National Electoral Commission...

Church Must Not Slaughter Spirituality on The Altar of Money- Catholic Prelate Ezeokafor

The Catholic Bishop of Awka Diocese, Anambra state, Most...
Join us on
For more updates, columns, opinions, etc.
WhatsApp
0
Would love your thoughts, please comment.x
()
x