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REMINDER: FGN Ijara Sukuk Bond auction closes on 2nd June 2020

Sukuk bond 

The Debt Management Office (DMO), on behalf of the Federal Government, has reminded the general public that the offer for subscription to the N150 billion FGN Ijara Sukuk Bond will close on Tuesday June 2nd, 2020.

The offer for subscription was announced some days ago by the DMO, as Nairametrics reported. Below are the details of the offering.

The Auction: N150, 000,000,000 – Rental Rate of 11.20% per annum IJORA SUKUK FGN JUNE 2027 (7-Yr Opening)

Arranger: FBNQuest Mechant Bank Limited and Lotus Financial Services Limited.

Opening Date: May 21, 2020

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Closing Date: June 2, 2020

Settlement Date: June 9, 2020

Summary of the Offer

Instrument Type: Ijarah (Lease) Sukuk

Issuer: FGN Roads Sukuk Company 1 Plc. on behalf of the Federal Government of Nigeria.

Units of Sale: N1,000 per unit subject to a minimum Subscription of N10,000 and in multiples of N1,000 thereafter.

Rental Payment: Payable Half Yearly.

Redemption: Bullet repayment on the date of maturity

Use of Proceeds: Proceeds will be used solely for the construction and rehabilitation of key roads across the six geopolitical zones of the country.

(READ MORE: FG impounds aircraft for illegal flight operations)

About Sukuk bonds  

Sukuk is derived from the word Sakk, which can be translated to mean legal instrument, deed, and cheque. Sakk can also mean to strike a deal on a paper document.

The origin of Sukuk dates to 7th century AD, where the first Sukuk transaction took place in Damascus, Syria in the Great Mosque of Damascus (Umayyad Mosque).

Since Islam prohibits usury – collecting interest from your loans – interest-based bonds are banned in Muslim nations.

READ ALSO: How N400 billion ecological funding can save Nigeria’s coastline

Difference between Sukuk and regular bonds

Sukuk indicates ownership of an asset. The assets that back Sukuk are compliant with Shariah. In other words, such assets adhere to the Islamic prohibitions on gambling, alcohol, tobacco, narcotics, and adult entertainment products and services.

Sukuk notes pay a fixed percentage return as a profit-sharing percentage of the underlying assets’ revenues.

Regular bonds, on the other hand, pay a fixed rate of return as interest (coupon) semi-annually or annually. 

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