The Board of the African Development Bank (AfDB) has approved a $15-million investment package to the Infrastructure Credit Guarantee Company (InfraCredit) to support infrastructure financing through the domestic debt capital markets in Nigeria.
The Bank revealed this in a statement signed on Friday by its Chief Communications Officer, Communication and External Relations Department, Chawki Chahed.
The investment package to InfraCredit comprises a subordinated loan of $10 million and a risk sharing facility of up to $5 million.
According to the AfDB, this intervention will promote local currency infrastructure financing and further development of the domestic capital market.
The InfraCredit is a specialised infrastructure credit guarantee company, established to enhance local currency debt instruments – mainly bonds, to finance eligible infrastructure projects in Nigeria.
This is intended to uplift the credit rating of such bonds, allowing institutional investors to include them in their portfolios.
InfraCredit was founded by the Nigerian Sovereign Investment Authority (NSIA) in collaboration with GuarantCo (part of the Private Infrastructure Development Group).
These initial investors have been joined by the Africa Finance Corporation (AFC) and KfW, the German Development Bank.
The AfDB said its investment in InfraCredit will catalyse local institutional investor funds, including pension funds, into financing long-term infrastructure projects through the local bond markets.
The Bank stated that InfraCredit’s operations will catalyse infrastructure investments in critical sectors, including renewable energy, housing, transportation, agricultural infrastructure, and telecommunications, which are critical for Nigeria’s economic development.
These objectives also align with the AfDB’s ‘High 5 agenda’.
Meanwhile, the statement quoted Stefan Nalletamby, the Bank’s Director of the Financial Sector Development, as saying: “The Bank’s support will strengthen the capital base of InfraCredit, underpinning the expansion of the Company’s core business of guaranteeing of bonds issued to fund infrastructure projects.
“This adds to the Bank’s existing initiatives to mobilise domestic institutional savings and stimulate non-sovereign local debt capital market development in Nigeria.
“This ultimately helps to increase private sector financing for critical infrastructure projects in key sectors, including energy, agriculture, water, health and education, through local capital markets”.
According to the Bank, the transaction will also result in the leverage and enhancement of the scope and impact of the Bank’s interventions alongside private sector financing, especially from pension funds as well as from co-investment partners.
AfDB also revealed that InfraCredit aims to support up to $1.25 billion in infrastructure financing over the next few years, by involving the private sector in infrastructure financing, essential to Nigeria’s economic resilience.
MM/GIK/APA