Nigeria to look for $3.5bn in emergency loans

Government is seeking to spend its way out of an economic crisis triggered by a collapse in oil prices

President Muhammadu Buhari’s (pictured) government is seeking to spend its way out of an economic crisis triggered by a collapse in oil. (Photograph: Tiksa Negeri/Reuters)
President Muhammadu Buhari’s (pictured) government is seeking to spend its way out of an economic crisis triggered by a collapse in oil. (Photograph: Tiksa Negeri/Reuters)

Nigeria's government is in talks for concessionary loans worth $3.5 billion from the World Bank and African Development Bank to help finance a planned record budget this year, Finance Minister Kemi Adeosun said.

While discussions are going on, a formal request hasn't yet been made to the World Bank for $2.5 billion and the AfDB for $1 billion, Adeosun said on Sunday. The government plans to tie them to specific capital projects, she said. A request hasn't been made for assistance from the International Monetary Fund. President Muhammadu Buhari's government is seeking to spend its way out of an economic crisis triggered by a collapse in oil prices.

Nigeria is Africa’s biggest oil producer and relies on crude for almost all its exports and two-thirds of government revenue. Buhari has proposed boosting this year’s budget to a record 6.1 trillion naira ($30.7 billion). Adeosun said on Jan. 21 that authorities will borrow about $5 billion in external debt from multilateral agencies and the Eurobond market to plug record budget gap of 3 trillion naira.

Lawmakers in Nigeria’s parliament will begin deliberations this week on the 2016 spending plan, Adeosun said on Sunday. Authorities will begin non-deal roadshow meetings with investors to sound out a potential sale of $1 billion of Eurobonds in February, she said.

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Nigeria has issued dollar bonds twice, most recently in 2013. Crude oil prices have dropped about 46 percent since June last year and were trading as low as $35.14 a barrel in London on Monday.

Bloomberg