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Treasury Bills In Nigeria - Investment (1833) - Nairaland

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Fixed Deposits Or Treasury Bills, Which Is Better? / Fixed Deposit And Treasury Bill Investments From Abroad / I Need Information On Treasury Bills In Nigeria (2) (3) (4)

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Re: Treasury Bills In Nigeria by Nobody: 7:53am On Mar 30, 2021
emmanuelewumi:



Bonds are secured, LAPO microfinance bank raised N5 billion corporate bond. Bonds are regulated by SEC, can you give an example of a corporate bond that went bad in Nigeria?

There are Trustees to the bonds that makes sure investors interest are protected, they obtain enough collateral securities from the company, they will become signatory to the accounts of the company and directors or nominate directors of the company for the duration of the bond,

Can you give an example of a bank where depositors lost their money and bond holders were secured? Depositors have priority over bond holders. If a bank fails, depositors get paid before bond holders.

The point I am making is that an MFB that bond holders are secure cannot lose its depositors funds. There is no way the bond holders interests in a bank are more protected than depositors’ interests.

If LAPO’s bond holders are secure, then it means its depositors are also secure.
Re: Treasury Bills In Nigeria by emmanuelewumi(m): 7:55am On Mar 30, 2021
Even the transport company that has the franchise for Ikorodu to TBS raised N6 billion in corporate bond paying 14% per annum and they have been consistent. The Trustees got a legally binding agreement from LASG that the franchise will continue for the duration of the 6 year bond
Re: Treasury Bills In Nigeria by Nobody: 7:57am On Mar 30, 2021
emmanuelewumi:
Even the transport company that has the franchise for Ikorodu to TBS raised N6 billion in corporate bond paying 14% per annum and they have been consistent. The Trustees got a legally binding agreement from LASG that the franchise will continue for the duration of the 6 year bond

I was talking about MFBs bonds vs deposits o.
Re: Treasury Bills In Nigeria by emmanuelewumi(m): 8:01am On Mar 30, 2021
Lazyyouth4u:


Can you give an example of a bank where depositors lost their money and bond holders were secured? Depositors have priority over bond holders. If a bank fails, depositors get paid before bond holders.

The point I am making is that an MFB that bond holders are secure cannot lose its depositors funds. There is no way the bond holders interests in a bank are more protected than depositors’ interests.


There are professional advisers to a bond offering, reporting accountant, corporate lawyers, Investment bankers, credit rating agencies, regulatory bodies CBN, NDIC and SEC.

A bank won't go down over night.

Nigeria banks don't raise funds through corporate bonds, equity is the preferred option.

Those who opted for bonds didn't do it in Nigeria, they did Eurobonds on the London Stock Exchange. So it is a very rigorous exercise, maybe just 20% of the banks can raise dollar denominated debt instruments
Re: Treasury Bills In Nigeria by SMJay: 8:03am On Mar 30, 2021
emmanuelewumi:


99.9% of microfinance banks
in Nigeria can't satisfy the stringent requirements of SEC for bond issuance
I agree completely.
Re: Treasury Bills In Nigeria by Nobody: 8:04am On Mar 30, 2021
emmanuelewumi:



There are professional advisers to a bond offering, reporting accountant, corporate lawyers, Investment bankers, credit rating agencies, regulatory bodies CBN, NDIC and SEC.

A bank won't go down over night.

Nigeria banks don't raise funds through corporate bonds, equity is the preferred option.

Those who opted for bonds didn't do it in Nigeria, they did Eurobonds on the London Stock Exchange. So it is a very rigorous exercise, maybe just 20% of the banks can raise dollar denomited debt instruments


Boss, Eurobonds do not have preference over depositors funds in a bank o.
Re: Treasury Bills In Nigeria by SMJay: 8:04am On Mar 30, 2021
Lazyyouth4u:


Can you give an example of a bank where depositors lost their money and bond holders were secured? Depositors have priority over bond holders. If a bank fails, depositors get paid before bond holders.

The point I am making is that an MFB that bond holders are secure cannot lose its depositors funds. There is no way the bond holders interests in a bank are more protected than depositors’ interests.

If LAPO’s bond holders are secure, then it means its depositors are also secure.
If you say before the bank consolidation by Soludo, yes most bond holder get paid before depositors.
Re: Treasury Bills In Nigeria by SMJay: 8:06am On Mar 30, 2021
emmanuelewumi:
Even the transport company that has the franchise for Ikorodu to TBS raised N6 billion in corporate bond paying 14% per annum and they have been consistent. The Trustees got a legally binding agreement from LASG that the franchise will continue for the duration of the 6 year bond
14%?, what the minimum amount for this CORPORATE bond.
Re: Treasury Bills In Nigeria by Nobody: 8:08am On Mar 30, 2021
SMJay:
If you say before the bank consolidation by Soludo, yes most bond holder get paid before depositors.

Sorry sir, please what are you talking about?
Re: Treasury Bills In Nigeria by emmanuelewumi(m): 8:10am On Mar 30, 2021
Lazyyouth4u:


Boss, Eurobonds do not have preference over depositors funds in a bank o.


That is why less than 20% of them will qualify for it

Any bank that can raise Eurobond is a strong bank


Zenith bank has equity of over N1 Trillion or about $2 billion. There financial ratios are also top notch, raising $400 Eurobond should not be a problem.

But a bank like Unity Bank with a negative equity of over N200 billion can't try that. I don't understand why CBN is allowing that bank to continue in business

3 Likes

Re: Treasury Bills In Nigeria by emmanuelewumi(m): 8:11am On Mar 30, 2021
SMJay:
14%?, what the minimum amount for this CORPORATE bond.


Most corporate bonds will require a minimum of N5 million,
Re: Treasury Bills In Nigeria by emmanuelewumi(m): 8:12am On Mar 30, 2021
emmanuelewumi:
Even the transport company that has the franchise for Ikorodu to TBS raised N6 billion in corporate bond paying 14% per annum and they have been consistent. The Trustees got a legally binding agreement from LASG that the franchise will continue for the duration of the 6 year bond


Primero Transport is the name of the company
Re: Treasury Bills In Nigeria by SMJay: 8:12am On Mar 30, 2021
emmanuelewumi:



That is why less than 20% of them will qualify for it

Any bank that can raise Eurobond is a strong bank


Zenith bank has equity of over N1 Trillion or about $2 billion. There financial ratios are also top notch, raising $400 Eurobond should not be a problem.

But a bank like Unity Bank with a negative equity of over N200 billion can't try that. I don't understand why CBN is allowing that bank to continue in business
Unity bank is not a strong bank.
Re: Treasury Bills In Nigeria by SMJay: 8:13am On Mar 30, 2021
emmanuelewumi:



Most corporate bonds will require a minimum of N5 million,
shocked
emmanuelewumi:



Most corporate bonds will require a minimum of N5 million,
Re: Treasury Bills In Nigeria by Nobody: 8:18am On Mar 30, 2021
emmanuelewumi:



That is why less than 20% of them will qualify for it

Any bank that can raise Eurobond is a strong bank


Zenith bank has equity of over N1 Trillion or about $2 billion. There financial ratios are also top notch, raising $400 Eurobond should not be a problem.

But a bank like Unity Bank with a negative equity of over N200 billion can't try that. I don't understand why CBN is allowing that bank to continue in business

Any MFB that can issue bonds is not a weak MFB. That’s my point wink

If LAPO is able to issue BBB rated bonds that you say are secure, there is no way your deposits there are not safe.

If LAPO should go under, the bond holders will never receive their money before depositors.
Re: Treasury Bills In Nigeria by emmanuelewumi(m): 8:21am On Mar 30, 2021
Lazyyouth4u:


Any MFB that can issue bonds is not a weak MFB. That’s my point wink

If LAPO is able to issue BBB rated bonds that you say are secure, there is no way your deposits there are not safe.

If LAPO should go under, the bond holders will never receive their money before depositors.


I equally wrote that 99.9% of microfinance banks can't satisfy SEC stringent requirements for bond issuance

1 Like

Re: Treasury Bills In Nigeria by Nobody: 8:22am On Mar 30, 2021
emmanuelewumi:



There are professional advisers to a bond offering, reporting accountant, corporate lawyers, Investment bankers, credit rating agencies, regulatory bodies CBN, NDIC and SEC.

A bank won't go down over night.

Nigeria banks don't raise funds through corporate bonds, equity is the preferred option.

Those who opted for bonds didn't do it in Nigeria, they did Eurobonds on the London Stock Exchange. So it is a very rigorous exercise, maybe just 20% of the banks can raise dollar denominated debt instruments


My oga, all these you have written have nothing to do with the point I made o.

I said if an MFB’s bonds are secure, why would the deposits not be?
Re: Treasury Bills In Nigeria by emmanuelewumi(m): 8:23am On Mar 30, 2021
SMJay:
Unity bank is not a strong bank.


It used to be Bank of the North. Northern State governments are the majority shareholders of the bank

1 Like

Re: Treasury Bills In Nigeria by Nobody: 8:23am On Mar 30, 2021
emmanuelewumi:



I equally wrote that 99.9% of microfinance banks can't satisfy SEC stringent requirements for bond issuance

Okay. My point was that any MFB that has bonds which you say are very secured cannot have deposits that are also not secure wink
Re: Treasury Bills In Nigeria by emmanuelewumi(m): 8:25am On Mar 30, 2021
Lazyyouth4u:


My oga, all these you have written have nothing to do with the point I made o.

I said if an MFB’s bonds are secure, why would the deposits not be?


Do business with the few ones that can successfully raise bonds, which is about 0.5% of the players
Re: Treasury Bills In Nigeria by afroxyz: 8:26am On Mar 30, 2021
Lazyyouth4u:


Can you give an example of a bank where depositors lost their money and bond holders were secured? Depositors have priority over bond holders. If a bank fails, depositors get paid before bond holders.

The point I am making is that an MFB that bond holders are secure cannot lose its depositors funds. There is no way the bond holders interests in a bank are more protected than depositors’ interests.

If LAPO’s bond holders are secure, then it means its depositors are also secure.

Debtors always get paid first
Re: Treasury Bills In Nigeria by afroxyz: 8:27am On Mar 30, 2021
emmanuelewumi:



That is why less than 20% of them will qualify for it

Any bank that can raise Eurobond is a strong bank


Zenith bank has equity of over N1 Trillion or about $2 billion. There financial ratios are also top notch, raising $400 Eurobond should not be a problem.

But a bank like Unity Bank with a negative equity of over N200 billion can't try that. I don't understand why CBN is allowing that bank to continue in business

You know why na. The northern connection
Re: Treasury Bills In Nigeria by afroxyz: 8:31am On Mar 30, 2021
ojesymsym:
Congrats, I hear you have now graduated to Senior Youth.

Anyways, the guys on the US stock thread tend to complain of many juicy stocks not being listed. In any case still help me look those 2 foreign firms if it is convenient for you.

Most of the stocks they are complaining about are penny stocks which are extremely volatile.
Re: Treasury Bills In Nigeria by Nobody: 8:33am On Mar 30, 2021
afroxyz:


Debtors Creditors always get paid first

I’m guessing you meant creditor undecided. A depositor is a creditor/lender na. When you deposit money in a bank, you are lending the bank your money.

So a bond holder and a depositor are both lenders/creditors of a bank.

1 Like

Re: Treasury Bills In Nigeria by emmanuelewumi(m): 9:25am On Mar 30, 2021
Lazyyouth4u:


I’m guessing you meant creditor undecided. A depositor is a creditor/lender na. When you deposit money in a bank, you are lending the bank your money.

So a bond holder and a depositor are both lenders/creditors of a bank.


Bonds are more secured

You have N10 Million in a money market fund and N10 million in a fixed deposit, the fund in the money market fund is more secured

1 Like

Re: Treasury Bills In Nigeria by maishai: 9:28am On Mar 30, 2021
I need a bond that can pay me @ least 15% per annum for the next 9 years..........



Hopefully a bond thread will be opened, I read in a lot of annual report companies paying off bonds and the least coupon they pay is 13%.


That are never advertised
Re: Treasury Bills In Nigeria by Nobody: 9:40am On Mar 30, 2021
emmanuelewumi:



Bonds are more secured

You have N10 Million in a money market fund and N10 million in a fixed deposit, the fund in the money market fund is more secured

The bolded has got absolutely nothing to do with a bank’s capital structure.

Bonds issued by banks are not more secured than depositors funds. I don’t know where you are getting this from.
Re: Treasury Bills In Nigeria by Nobody: 9:49am On Mar 30, 2021
Lazyyouth4u:


I’m guessing you meant creditor undecided. A depositor is a creditor/lender na. When you deposit money in a bank, you are lending the bank your money.

So a bond holder and a depositor are both lenders/creditors of a bank.
When a bank closes shop.The bond holders are paid first.They are seen like preference share holders while depositors are paid last after ndic/recovery must have come into the matter.They are more like ordinary share holders.Unlless it has changed
Re: Treasury Bills In Nigeria by Nobody: 9:58am On Mar 30, 2021
Lazyyouth4u:


The bolded has got absolutely nothing to do with a bank’s capital structure.

Bonds issued by banks are not more secured than depositors funds. I don’t know where you are getting this from.
The cooperate bonds can hardly fail while the bank as a company can fail.The bond failure is a big dent to the image of the country.The worst case is to extend or renegotiate the tenure just like the case in vanuzula.Thst is why bonds are more secured.
Re: Treasury Bills In Nigeria by emmanuelewumi(m): 10:02am On Mar 30, 2021
Lazyyouth4u:


The bolded has got absolutely nothing to do with a bank’s capital structure.

Bonds issued by banks are not more secured than depositors funds. I don’t know where you are getting this from.


Representative of the issuer of the bond ie Trustee is represented on the board of the company if the debt is substantial to the business capital structure, they also have representatives on the investment, risk management and other important committees of the board.

Who are the representatives of the depositors on the board or important committees of the bank
Re: Treasury Bills In Nigeria by emmanuelewumi(m): 10:04am On Mar 30, 2021
Biafran4life:
The cooperate bonds can hardly fail while the bank as a company can fail.The bond failure is a big dent to the image of the country.The worst case is to extend or renegotiate the tenure just like the case in vanuzula.Thst is why bonds are more secured.


We have sovereign and corporate bonds.

Sovereign bonds are issued by countries, while commercial papers and corporate bonds are issued by businesses

1 Like

Re: Treasury Bills In Nigeria by emmanuelewumi(m): 10:06am On Mar 30, 2021
maishai:
I need a bond that can pay me @ least 15% per annum for the next 9 years..........



Hopefully a bond thread will be opened, I read in a lot of annual report companies paying off bonds and the least coupon they pay is 13%.


That are never advertised


Who is your Stockbroker? They are advertised, especially if you use some of the big Stockbroking firms

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