Dangote Industries had on June 30 this year, issued a Series 1 Bond offer under its N300 billion debt issuance programme. The deal comprised two tranches of seven and 10 years. Each tranche was priced at the “higher range” of the initial price guidance, of 12.25 percent to 12.75 percent and 13.00 percent to 13.50 percent for each tranche respectively, according to Abiodun Keripe, managing director of Afrinvest Research and Consulting.
The bond was oversubscribed, with N10 billion demand for the seven-year tranche and N176 billion for the 10-year offering.
The Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation (NNPC) has also provided $3.8 billion as part of the federal government’s equity in the project, comprising $1 billion in cash, while the remaining $2.8 billion is in crude supply.
Although the Dangote refinery is yet to commence operations, the $2.5 billion petrochemical plant has been operational since March 22, 2022, and the Nigerian Midstream and Downstream Petroleum Regulatory Authority (NMDPRA), in a tweet in October said the facility is 97 percent completed, according to the 2022/2023 work plan presented by the Dangote Industries.