I received an in-app notification from my investnaija app today that FGNSB is now open.
I want to know if it’s the same with the one that was opened few months ago which I think is now closed or if this one is a different one.
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Yes. The notification you received is most likely for a new FGN Savings Bond offer, not the old one that closed months ago. The Debt Management Office (DMO) has opened the June 2026 FGN Savings Bond subscription, and it was published today, June 1, 2026. A key thing to know is that FGN Savings BondsRead more
Yes. The notification you received is most likely for a new FGN Savings Bond offer, not the old one that closed months ago.
See lessThe Debt Management Office (DMO) has opened the June 2026 FGN Savings Bond subscription, and it was published today, June 1, 2026.
A key thing to know is that FGN Savings Bonds are issued monthly. Each month’s offer opens for subscription for a few days and then closes. After it closes, a new offer is released the following month with potentially different interest rates and maturity dates.
For the current June 2026 offer:
Subscription opened on June 1, 2026.
It is a different issuance from the previous months’ offers.
The June offer is reported to have yields of up to about 14.8% per annum.
Minimum investment remains ₦5,000, with units sold at ₦1,000 per unit and a maximum subscription of ₦50 million.
You can verify the current offer directly on the official dmo.gov.ng, where each month’s subscription document is published separately.
One thing to note: if you invested in a previous FGN Savings Bond that has already been allotted, that investment remains active until maturity. The new June offer is simply another opportunity to buy additional bonds; it does not replace or affect your earlier subscription.
If you want, I can also explain the difference between:
FGN Savings Bond
FGN Bond Auction
Treasury Bills (T-Bills)
Money Market Funds
and show which currently makes the most sense for someone investing ₦5,000–₦10,000 monthly in Nigeria.
Thank you for your answer. Please go ahead and enlighten us on FGN savings bond FGN bond Auction. Money money market mutual fund. T.Bills etc.
Thank you for your answer. Please go ahead and enlighten us on FGN savings bond
See lessFGN bond Auction.
Money money market mutual fund.
T.Bills etc.
Understanding these investment options is important because although they are all considered relatively low-to-moderate risk, they work very differently. 1. FGN Savings Bond This is a government-backed investment created mainly for ordinary Nigerians. How it works You lend money to the Federal GoverRead more
Understanding these investment options is important because although they are all considered relatively low-to-moderate risk, they work very differently.
See less1. FGN Savings Bond
This is a government-backed investment created mainly for ordinary Nigerians.
How it works
You lend money to the Federal Government and receive:
Fixed interest (coupon)
Quarterly interest payments
Full capital repayment at maturity
Current June 2026 offer:
2-Year Bond: 13.777% p.a.
3-Year Bond: 14.777% p.a.
Minimum investment: ₦5,000
Interest paid every 3 months
Example
If you invest ₦100,000 in a 14.777% bond:
Annual interest:
100,000×14.777%=14,777
Quarterly payment:
14,777÷4=3,694 approximately
You receive roughly ₦3,694 every quarter and your ₦100,000 back at maturity.
Advantages
✅ Government-backed
✅ Low minimum (₦5,000)
✅ Predictable income
✅ Suitable for beginners
Disadvantages
❌ Money is tied up for 2–3 years
❌ Interest is not automatically compounded
❌ Inflation can reduce real returns
Best for
People building wealth gradually and wanting safety.
2. FGN Bond Auction
This is different from the FGN Savings Bond.
It is where:
Banks
Pension Funds
Insurance Companies
Large Investors
buy longer-term government bonds.
Typical maturities:
5 years
7 years
10 years
20 years
30 years
Example
You buy a 10-year FGN Bond yielding 15%.
Government pays coupon periodically and returns principal after 10 years.
Advantages
✅ Usually higher liquidity
✅ Tradable on the secondary market
✅ Large institutional participation
Disadvantages
❌ Higher entry requirements through brokers
❌ Bond prices fluctuate
❌ More complex for beginners
Best for
Experienced investors and people with larger capital.
3. Treasury Bills (T-Bills)
Treasury Bills are short-term government debt.
Tenors usually:
91 days
182 days
364 days
Instead of paying periodic interest, they are sold at a discount.
Example
Suppose:
Face Value = ₦100,000
Purchase Price = ₦90,000
At maturity:
Government pays ₦100,000
Profit: ₦10,000
Advantages
✅ Very safe
✅ Short duration
✅ Good for parking money
Disadvantages
❌ No regular cashflow
❌ Must reinvest when maturity arrives
❌ Yield changes frequently
Best for
Emergency funds, short-term goals, or waiting for other opportunities.
4. Money Market Mutual Fund
This is where many Nigerian beginners start.
Examples include funds managed by:
ARM Investment Managers
Stanbic IBTC Asset Management
Meristem Wealth Management
Coronation Asset Management
The fund manager pools money from thousands of investors and invests in:
Treasury Bills
Commercial Papers
Bank placements
Government securities
How returns work
Returns are usually accumulated daily and reflected in your unit price/NAV.
This means:
Earnings stay inside the fund
Returns effectively compound automatically
That is why you asked earlier whether ARM’s Aggressive Growth Fund compounds. Most mutual funds reinvest gains unless distributions are paid out separately.
Advantages
✅ Daily compounding effect
✅ Easy withdrawal
✅ Professional management
✅ Very beginner-friendly
Disadvantages
❌ Returns are not fixed
❌ Fund management fees apply
❌ Returns can fall when interest rates fall
Best for
Monthly savers and long-term wealth building.
Comparison Table
Feature
FGN Savings Bond
FGN Bond Auction
T-Bills
Money Market Fund
Safety
Very High
Very High
Very High
High
Minimum Entry
₦5,000
Usually higher
Varies
Often ₦1,000–₦5,000
Tenor
2–3 Years
5–30 Years
3–12 Months
Flexible
Liquidity
Moderate
Moderate–High
High
High
Fixed Return
Yes
Yes
Yes
No
Compounding
No (unless reinvested)
No (unless reinvested)
No (unless reinvested)
Yes, generally
Beginner Friendly
Very High
Moderate
High
Very High
Volatility
Very Low
Low–Moderate
Very Low
Very Low
If You Are Investing ₦5,000–₦10,000 Monthly
For someone gradually building capital in Nigeria:
Stage 1 (₦5k–₦100k savings)
70–80%:
Money Market Fund
20–30%:
FGN Savings Bond whenever subscription opens
Reason: You maintain liquidity while still earning attractive yields.
Stage 2 (₦500k–₦1m+)
You can begin combining:
Money Market Fund
FGN Savings Bond
Treasury Bills
Selected dividend-paying NGX stocks
Stage 3 (Long-term wealth building)
A balanced structure could look like:
40% Money Market Fund
20% FGN Savings Bonds
20% Treasury Bills
20% Quality NGX Shares
This gives:
Liquidity
Government-backed stability
Dividend income
Capital appreciation potential
One important distinction: for most small Nigerian investors contributing monthly, a good Money Market Fund is often more practical than repeatedly buying FGN Savings Bonds because the fund compounds continuously and allows easier withdrawals, while FGN Savings Bonds are better when you want to lock in a known yield for 2–3 years.