IMF Warns Nigeria of Risks Surrounding Planned $5 billion Loan From First Abu Dhabi Bank

IMF Nigeria
The International Monetary Fund (IMF) on Tuesday warned of risks surrounding Nigeria’s plan to borrow up to $5 billion ​through a derivatives agreement with First Abu Dhabi Bank, saying such transactions are ‌often opaque and complex.
The Senate in April gave its approval to the agreement, joining other Africa borrowers like Senegal and Angola who have tapped similar arrangements over the past year.
“Our ​view is that the transactions in these types of structures carry ​risks. Usually they are opaque so the terms are not always ⁠very transparent when we reviewed these instruments across countries,” Christian Ebeke, IMF mission ​chief in Nigeria told reporters.
Ebeke said Nigeria could instead issue eurobonds to finance ​its deficits or other means to raise funding, including on concessional terms. Nigeria intends to use proceeds from the total return swap, or TRS, to refinance expensive debt and pay for infrastructure.
In ​its latest Article IV review, the Fund praised Nigeria’s sweeping reforms, saying they ​had strengthened economic stability and investor confidence, but warned that the benefits had yet to ‌reach ⁠millions of citizens and could be undermined by global shocks, including the Middle East conflict.

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