Nigeria’s Sovereign Eurobond Yield Rises Over Fresh Selloffs
Nigeria experienced an increase in its sovereign Eurobond yield as a result of renewed selling pressures in the global market environment. The fluctuations in average yield on Nigeria and other African eurobond yields were influenced by uncertainties affecting global markets.
Analysts said foreign portfolio investors reacted to Fitch Ratings and Moody’s decisions to downgrade the economic outlook, citing shifts in global trade risks. The rise in the Eurobond yield signified the impact of external factors on Nigeria’s financial standing.
Investors closely monitored the situation as the yield continued to reflect market conditions. The country’s economic stability was being tested by the ongoing challenges in the global financial landscape.
“We have revised our global sovereign outlook to negative from stable following uncertainty about trade policy and a potential overhaul of global trade, which hurt credit conditions for sovereigns globally”, Moody’s Ratings said in an update. Most issuers faced sell pressures in the African Eurobond space as foreign investors moved to optimise their portfolios for stronger returns.
Sell pressure was seen on Egyptian US dollar bonds after Moody’s said Egypt have large current account deficits in excess of 5% of GDP and external vulnerability indicators above 100.
This indicates that reserves are insufficient to cover upcoming external debt repayments, the ratings agency highlighted in its update on frontier market players. Analysts said the country’s large current account deficits, particularly amid tighter financing conditions, could put pressure on exchange rates or international reserves
The bearish performance of Nigeria’s foreign currency-denominated bonds was driven by strong investor sell-offs across NOV-2027, FEB-2032, and SEP-2051 instruments, attracting the most trading activity.
As a result, average yields rose by 8 basis points to settle at 8.54%, Cowry Asset Limited said in its investor note. The Eurobond market opened trading session mixed amid optimism over U.S. trade deals and growing signs of a labour market slowdown, which strengthened expectations of Fed rate cuts.
Prices briefly rose after President Trump’s trade deal with Vietnam, while ADP data showed an unexpected loss of 33,000 private-sector jobs in June — the first in over two years.
Investors now await Thursday’s U.S. jobs report for clearer Fed direction. June’s jobs report is expected to reveal slower hiring and a higher unemployment rate, as investors look for signs of labour market weakness to gauge the timing of the Fed’s next rate cut. #Nigeria’s Sovereign Eurobond Yield Rises Over Fresh Selloffs
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