Dear Iking,
I would like to understand more about how the FGN savings bond interest investment works. Is the percentage calculated on an annual basis or just in the total investment circle?
Best regards
Muyideen
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FGN Savings Bonds in Nigeria pay interest annually in percentage terms, but the actual interest is paid to you quarterly (every 3 months). So when you see something like: “FGN Savings Bond — 17.121%” that 17.121% is a per annum (annual) interest rate, not the total return for the whole investment peRead more
FGN Savings Bonds in Nigeria pay interest annually in percentage terms, but the actual interest is paid to you quarterly (every 3 months).
So when you see something like:
“FGN Savings Bond — 17.121%”
that 17.121% is a per annum (annual) interest rate, not the total return for the whole investment period.
How it actually works
Suppose you invest:
₦100,000
at 17% annual interest
for a 2-year FGN Savings Bond
Your yearly interest is approximately:
So:
₦17,000 per year interest
paid quarterly
Quarterly payment becomes approximately:
Meaning:
every 3 months you receive about ₦4,250
until maturity
Then at the end of the bond tenor:
your original ₦100,000 capital is returned.
Important things to understand
1. The coupon rate is annualized
If the bond says:
16%
17%
18%
it means:
“per year,” not total for the entire duration.
So a 2-year bond at 17% does NOT mean total return is just 17% after 2 years.
Over 2 years, ignoring reinvestment, total interest is closer to:
before taxes/fees.
2. FGN Savings Bonds pay simple interest
Unlike some mutual funds or compound investments:
your interest is not automatically reinvested,
unless you personally reinvest the quarterly payments yourself.
So:
they are income-generating instruments,
not aggressive growth investments.
3. Minimum investment
FGN Savings Bonds are designed for retail investors.
Typical structure:
minimum: ₦5,000
additional units: multiples of ₦1,000
That is why many beginners like them.
4. Safety level
FGN Savings Bonds are among the safer naira investments in Nigeria because they are backed by the Federal Government of Nigeria through the Debt Management Office.
Risk still exists mainly from:
inflation risk,
naira purchasing power decline,
opportunity cost.
But default risk is considered relatively low compared to many private investments.
5. What happens at maturity?
At maturity:
your capital comes back to your brokerage/bank account,
interest payments stop.
Then you can:
withdraw the money,
or buy another bond.
6. Can the value change?
If you hold till maturity:
you simply receive scheduled interest + principal.
If you sell before maturity on the secondary market:
price can go up or down depending on interest rates.
But most retail investors simply hold till maturity.
Difference between FGN Savings Bond and Money Market Fund
FGN Savings Bond
fixed interest rate
predictable income
quarterly coupon payment
usually longer holding period
government-backed
Money Market Fund
variable returns
daily accrual
more liquid
managed by fund managers
returns change with market conditions
Who FGN Savings Bonds are best for
They are good for:
conservative investors,
people wanting stable income,
medium-term parking of money,
retirees,
disciplined savers.
They are usually not ideal for:
fast wealth growth,
high inflation environments,
people seeking aggressive returns.
One thing many Nigerians misunderstand
If you invest ₦1 million at 17% FGN bond:
you do NOT receive ₦170k every quarter.
You receive approximately:
which is:
See less₦42,500 every 3 months,
not monthly,
not weekly.
Total yearly interest would still be around ₦170k before applicable deductions.
Ochoyoday, Thank you for the response in details and you have answered my question and a plan question in detail at all levels.
Ochoyoday, Thank you for the response in details and you have answered my question and a plan question in detail at all levels.
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