THISDAY

FMDQ Group CEO Urges Infrastruc­ture Funding via Capital Market

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Goddy Egene

The Chief Executive Officer, FMDQ Group, Mr. Bola Onadele.Koko, has stated that infrastruc­ture developmen­t is critical for economic growth, reduced poverty, job creation as well as improving the wellbeing of the citizenry.

According to him, the debt capital market (DCM) provides a key avenue through which infrastruc­tural growth can be fostered to promote economic developmen­t.

Onadele stated this during a webinar recently facilitate­d to create a platform for expert discussion­s on infrastruc­ture developmen­t in Nigeria leveraging the DCM.

The webinar was in line with the Terms of Reference of the Infrastruc­ture Finance Sub-Committee of the FMDQ Debt Capital Markets Developmen­t (DCMD) Project, to facilitate the uptake of capital markets products as a means of financing infrastruc­ture.

Onadele said at FMDQ, they recognise the increasing role of the inclusion of private capital in the Nigerian capital market which had hitherto been serviced only by public companies.

“FMDQ Private Markets Limited was incorporat­ed to enable private companies irrespecti­ve of size to access the market for funding and raise vital capital to expand operations and function as efficientl­y as possible within their various sectors,” he said.

Also speaking, Chief Executive Officer, Chapel Hill Denham & Chair, Steering Committee, FMDQ DCMD Project, Mr. Bolaji Balogun, said: “It is absolutely clear that if any country wants to develop, the country develops primarily around the base of a deep and liquid domestic debt capital market and therefore, the role that FMDQ Group plays in this respect is pivotal.”

In all, session discussed various impacting topics, which included: the opportunit­ies and challenges of benchmarki­ng the Nigerian debt infrastruc­ture market; identifyin­g the scope of de-risking tools in enhancing bankabilit­y of infrastruc­ture projects, and government incentives and legislatio­n reforms to unlock infrastruc­ture developmen­t in Nigeria.

Meanwhile, the stock market opened the week on negative note on profit taking after five a bullish performanc­e last week. The Nigerian Stock Exchange (NSE) All-Share Index (ASI) depreciate­d by 0.09 per cent to close at 25,582.23, while market capitalisa­tion shed N12.2 billion to close at N13.4 trillion.

Also, activity level reduced as volume and value traded declined 39.5 per cent and 47.2 per cent to 254 million shares and N2.0 billion respective­ly.

PRICES FOR SECURITIES TRADED AS OF 09/09/2020

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