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Alabi olabisi
Alabi olabisi
Asked: May 31, 20262026-05-31T17:11:30+00:00 2026-05-31T17:11:30+00:00In: BANKING & FINANCIAL SERVICES

Why does government bonds dropped in the amount invested in it?

I invested in government bonds around February on getting to the platform I used to check it,the amount I invested in has dropped.
My question is that is it possible for government bonds to reduce in capital and what affected it to make it reduced.

Bondsgovernment bondsInvestingreduction in government bonds
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  1. Ochoyoda
    Ochoyoda Educator
    2026-05-31T17:41:15+00:00Added an answer on May 31, 2026 at 5:41 pm

    Yes — what you’re seeing is normal for bonds, but it depends on how you’re viewing the value. A key point first: Government bonds do NOT reduce your “final repayment value” if you hold them to maturity. What usually changes is the market value (unit price) before maturity. Let’s break it down clearlRead more

    Yes — what you’re seeing is normal for bonds, but it depends on how you’re viewing the value.
    A key point first:
    Government bonds do NOT reduce your “final repayment value” if you hold them to maturity.
    What usually changes is the market value (unit price) before maturity.
    Let’s break it down clearly.
    1) Why your bond value appears to have dropped
    If you invested in an FGN Bond via an app (like Cowrywise, i-invest, Wealth.ng, etc.), what you’re usually seeing is:
    Mark-to-market value (current market price), not your guaranteed payout value
    So your investment dashboard shows:
    Original investment = ₦X
    Current market value = ₦X ± change
    That “drop” is not a loss unless you sell early.
    2) Can government bonds actually reduce in value?
    ✔ YES — but only in market price (not principal repayment)
    Bond prices move in the secondary market because of:
    A. Interest rate changes (MOST IMPORTANT FACTOR)
    This is the main reason.
    When interest rates in the economy rise, existing bonds become less attractive.
    Example:
    You bought bond at 12% interest
    New bonds are now offering 18%
    Investors will prefer the 18% bond, so: ➡ your 12% bond becomes less valuable
    ➡ its market price drops
    This is called:
    Interest rate risk (inverse relationship)
    B. Inflation changes
    If inflation increases:
    Investors demand higher yields
    Existing bonds lose market value
    C. Central Bank monetary policy (CBN actions)
    When the Central Bank of Nigeria raises interest rates:
    Bond yields rise
    Old bonds fall in price
    D. Time remaining to maturity
    The closer the bond gets to maturity → the more stable it becomes
    Long-term bonds fluctuate more
    E. Market demand and liquidity
    If many investors are:
    selling bonds → price drops
    buying bonds → price rises
    3) Important distinction (THIS is where confusion happens)
    Two values exist:
    1. Face value (your guaranteed repayment)
    This is what government pays at maturity
    Example: ₦1,000,000 invested → you still get ₦1,000,000 (plus interest)
    2. Market value (what apps show daily)
    Can go up or down
    Only matters if you sell before maturity
    4) So did you lose money?
    Only in these cases:
    You sold the bond early at a lower price
    Or you are in a fund where NAV fluctuates and you exited early
    If you hold to maturity:
    ❌ No loss on principal
    ✔ You still receive full capital + interest agreed
    5) Why it may look worse in apps
    Some platforms show:
    Daily bond valuation
    Unit price movement
    Fund NAV (if it’s a bond fund, not direct bond)
    So even small interest rate changes can show as:
    “-2%”
    “-5%”
    etc.
    But this is paper movement.
    6) Practical example (simple)
    You invest:
    ₦500,000 in FGN Bond (5 years, 14%)
    After 6 months:
    Interest rates rise in Nigeria
    Market price drops → your app shows ₦480,000
    But if you wait till maturity:
    You still receive ₦500,000 + interest
    7) Bottom line
    Government bonds do not permanently reduce your capital
    They only fluctuate in market value before maturity
    The biggest driver is interest rate changes (CBN policy)
    If you want deeper clarity
    Tell me:
    The platform you used (e.g. Cowrywise, i-invest, Wealth.ng)
    Whether it was “bond” or “bond fund”
    I can explain exactly what happened in your specific case and whether it’s safe to hold or exit.

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    • Alabi olabisi
      Alabi olabisi
      2026-05-31T19:21:34+00:00Replied to answer on May 31, 2026 at 7:21 pm

      Thank you very much for answering my questions. I used Afrinvest and it's bond not bond fund

      Thank you very much for answering my questions.
      I used Afrinvest and it’s bond not bond fund

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