The Federal Government has returned to the domestic capital markets with a fresh debt offering, as the Debt Management Office (DMO) on Monday announced the opening of subscriptions for N460 billion worth of Federal Government bond, maintaining the same offer size that characterized its November auction.
The December offering, which mirrors the structure of last month’s issuance, comprises two tranches of previously issued instruments: N230 billion each of the 17.945% FGN August 2030 bond and the 17.95% FGN June 2032 bond—representing five-year and seven-year tenors respectively through their current re-openings.
According to the official circular released by the DMO, the auction has been scheduled for December 15, 2025, with settlement for successful bidders set for December 17, 2025—a tight two-day turnaround that reflects the well-established operational infrastructure of Nigeria’s government securities market.
Sustained Appetite Follows Strong November Performance
The timing of this fresh offering comes on the heels of robust investor demand witnessed during the November 2025 auction, where total bids reached approximately N657 billion—representing a subscription rate exceeding 120% of the offered amount.
Market data from the November exercise revealed a pronounced preference for the longer-dated instrument, with the seven-year FGN June 2032 bond attracting bids totaling N509.392 billion, while the five-year FGN August 2030 paper drew N147.869 billion in subscriptions.
The DMO ultimately allotted N134.799 billion of the shorter tenor at a marginal rate of 15.9%, while the longer-dated security saw total allotments of N448.722 billion at a marginal clearing rate of 16%, plus an additional N6 billion in non-competitive allotments—typically reserved for retail investors and smaller institutional players.
Market-Driven Pricing Mechanism in Play
Unlike primary issuances of new bonds, these re-openings operate under a distinct pricing framework. The DMO has clarified that investors will not bid for coupon rates—which remain fixed at the original issuance levels of 17.945% and 17.95% respectively—but will instead submit yield-to-maturity bids that determine the market price they pay.
This means successful bidders will pay prices that reflect prevailing market conditions and their required returns, in addition to any accrued interest accumulated since the last coupon payment date. This mechanism allows the government to tap existing bond lines without creating new securities, thereby maintaining liquidity and benchmark status for these instruments in the secondary market.
The minimum subscription threshold has been set at N50,001,000, with units priced at N1,000 each and subsequent purchases allowed in multiples of N1,000—parameters designed to accommodate institutional investors while maintaining accessibility for qualified high-net-worth individuals.
Strategic Domestic Borrowing Amid Fiscal Pressures
The continued reliance on domestic bond markets underscores the Federal Government’s strategic pivot toward naira-denominated debt as it seeks to fund persistent budget deficits while managing foreign exchange exposure and external debt service obligations.
By maintaining a consistent monthly auction calendar with substantial offer sizes, the DMO is signaling its commitment to deepening Nigeria’s fixed-income market and providing institutional investors—including pension fund administrators, insurance companies, asset managers, and commercial banks—with regular opportunities to deploy funds into government-guaranteed securities.
The semi-annual interest payment structure offers predictable cash flows, a feature particularly attractive to pension funds and insurance firms with long-term liability matching requirements. Both instruments will be redeemed via bullet repayment at maturity, meaning investors will receive the full principal amount in a single payment on the respective maturity dates.
Market Outlook
With the December auction maintaining identical parameters to November’s offering, market participants will be closely watching whether investor appetite remains as robust, particularly given the slight compression in marginal rates witnessed last month compared to prevailing market yields earlier in the year.
The outcome of the December 15 auction will provide further insight into domestic liquidity conditions, investor risk appetite for sovereign paper, and the effectiveness of the government’s domestic debt mobilization strategy as fiscal year 2025 draws to a close.
The DMO has not indicated whether it plans to sustain this monthly N460 billion offering pace into 2026, though market analysts expect the government’s borrowing requirements to remain elevated given ongoing infrastructure commitments and revenue challenges.
Interested investors are advised to submit their bids through authorized dealer banks and primary dealer/market maker institutions before the auction deadline.
WHAT YOU SHOULD KNOW
The Federal Government is raising N460 billion through bond auctions on December 15, 2025, offering two instruments: a 5-year bond (17.945% coupon) and a 7-year bond (17.95% coupon), with settlement on December 17.
What investors need to know:
– Minimum investment: N50 million
– Strong demand expected, following November’s 120% oversubscription (N657 billion in bids)
– These are re-openings, meaning investors bid on price/yield, not coupon rates
– Interest paid semi-annually; principal repaid at maturity
– Ideal for institutional investors seeking stable, medium-to-long-term returns
The government continues its aggressive domestic borrowing strategy to fund budget deficits while offering attractive yields to investors. November’s marginal rates of 15.9% and 16% suggest competitive returns, though actual December rates will be market-determined.























