The specialised credit enhancement company issues naira-denominated guarantees that elevate local-currency bond ratings, directly unlocking institutional pension fund investments into critical infrastructure projects across Africa’s largest economy.
Shareholders have approved comprehensive capital restructuring that cancels billions in preference shares previously held by InfraCo Africa under the Private Infrastructure Development Group. The Nigeria Sovereign Investment Authority converts its shareholding into redeemable form whilst InfraCo retains ordinary shares following the restructuring.
InfraCredit targets Nigeria’s shallow domestic capital markets where institutional investors traditionally concentrate on short-term sovereign debt instruments. Its naira-denominated guarantees de-risk infrastructure bonds, making them eligible for pension fund portfolios that hold substantial liquidity but face regulatory constraints on long-term asset deployments.
The Securities and Exchange Commission has strengthened operational frameworks supporting guarantee mechanisms, whilst CardinalStone Registrars manages proxy administration under existing Nigerian tax regulations. InfraCredit operates as a registered capital market operator and has extended independent director tenures to ten years following articles restatement.
Rights issue proceeds will significantly scale guarantee capacity, supporting enhanced bond structures across power generation, transportation, and renewable energy sectors. The capital restructuring includes provisions to cancel unallotted shares, ensuring operational flexibility whilst amendments align corporate documents with current regulatory requirements.
This domestic financing model reduces dependency on dollar-denominated debt amid rising global borrowing costs. Nigerian pension funds can now channel assets into roads, power infrastructure, and renewable projects through de-risked investment vehicles.
The expansion positions Nigeria advantageously as international development aid contracts. Institutional investors gain access to yields potentially exceeding sovereign bond returns whilst policymakers secure a replicable blueprint for African infrastructure financing needs estimated between $68-100 billion annually by African Development Bank assessments. InfraCredit’s enhanced capacity establishes Nigeria as a regional infrastructure finance hub, demonstrating how domestic capital mobilisation can address critical development gaps through innovative guarantee structures that bridge regulatory constraints with institutional investment appetite.
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