Nigeria opened its 2026 Federal Government Savings Bond programme with sharply higher yields, reflecting tighter domestic liquidity and mounting pressure from deficit financing.
The rate on the two-year savings bond rose to 14.396 percent for January, up from 12.838 percent offered in December, according to offer documents issued Tuesday by the Debt Management Office. Yields on the three-year paper also increased, climbing to 15.396 percent from 13.838 percent last month.
The two-year bond matures on January 21, 2028, while the three-year bond matures on January 21, 2029. Subscriptions opened on January 12 and will close on January 16, with settlement scheduled for January 21, 2026. Coupon payments will be made quarterly on April 21, July 21, October 21 and January 21 each year, the offer document said.
The higher savings bond yields mirror a broader repricing across Nigeria’s fixed-income market. Treasury bill rates rose at the government’s first auction of the year, with authorities lifting spot rates on the 91-day, 182-day, and 364-day tenors.
Borrowing pressures mount
Nigeria plans to tap both domestic and international markets this year to finance a widening budget deficit, adding to upward pressure on interest rates.
In its macroeconomic outlook for 2026, the Central Bank of Nigeria warned that the government’s fiscal programme would likely strain local funding conditions.
“The financing mix indicates a preference for local debt markets, which may tighten private sector liquidity, raise domestic interest rates, and minimize exposure to foreign exchange risk,” the central bank said.
The bank’s monetary policy rate currently stands at 27 percent. It raised rates aggressively throughout 2024 as inflation surged, peaking at 34.8 percent in December 2024. The tightening cycle ended in September, when policymakers cut the benchmark rate by 0.5 percentage points after it had reached 27.5 percent.
President Bola Tinubu’s 2026 budget projects an overall fiscal deficit of 12.14 trillion-naira, equivalent to 3.01 percent of gross domestic product. More than half of that gap – about 7.02 trillion naira – is expected to be financed through new domestic borrowing.
Other sources include 1.76 trillion naira in external borrowing, 0.40 trillion naira from the sale of government-owned assets, and 2.96 trillion naira from multilateral and bilateral project-tied loans.
Market analysts say the growing reliance on domestic debt is likely to keep yields elevated, as government borrowing competes with private-sector borrowing for funds. While higher savings bond rates may attract retail investors seeking inflation-beating returns, they also underline the broader challenge facing Africa’s largest economy: balancing fiscal funding needs without crowding out growth.
For now, Nigeria’s rising savings bond yields offer a clearer signal of where interest rates are heading — and how long the pressure may last.



