Nigeria has tapped into a massive structured finance deal with the UAE’s largest lender, drawing $2 billion from a $5 billion total return swap facility arranged with First Abu Dhabi Bank (FAB). The arrangement gives Africa’s biggest economy access to dollar liquidity at a time when traditional external borrowing has become more expensive.
How the swap works
Nigeria posts Federal Government of Nigeria (FGN) securities worth approximately 133% of whatever amount it draws. For the full $5 billion facility, that means roughly $6.65 billion in naira-denominated bonds sitting as collateral.
In exchange, FAB provides dollar liquidity. Nigeria pays a floating interest rate pegged to a benchmark plus approximately 4%, while FAB receives the returns generated by the underlying bonds.
Nigeria’s House of Representatives gave legislative approval for the facility on March 31, 2026. The $2 billion draw represents an initial, partial utilization of the approved ceiling.
Why Nigeria chose this route
Global yields have been rising, making conventional external borrowing more expensive for frontier market sovereigns. Senegal and Angola have both deployed similar strategies to access dollar liquidity without the pricing penalties of a public bond issuance.
The funds are earmarked for supporting Nigeria’s 2026 budget, financing infrastructure projects, and refinancing costlier domestic and external debt.
The International Monetary Fund issued a warning in June 2026 about the opaque and complex nature of derivatives financing used by African sovereigns, noting that these deals are hard to track, hard to value in real time, and can obscure the true extent of a country’s financial obligations.
What this means for investors
The swap sends mixed signals. The immediate infusion of dollar liquidity provides near-term fiscal support, with the option to draw another $3 billion beyond the initial $2 billion. However, derivatives like total return swaps don’t show up in the same way as Eurobonds on a country’s debt ledger, making it harder for investors to accurately assess Nigeria’s overall debt burden and risk profile.
The 133% collateralization requirement also creates a secondary risk: if the value of the naira-denominated bonds posted as collateral drops significantly, whether due to currency depreciation or a selloff in FGN securities, Nigeria could face margin calls requiring it to post additional collateral.
Disclosure: This article was edited by Editorial Team. For more information on how we create and review content, see our Editorial Policy.

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