Nigeria seeks managers for planned $10 billion diaspora fund
Nigeria is seeking fund managers for a planned $10 billion diaspora fund that is aimed at attracting dollar inflows and foreign investment into the economy, a tender document showed.
The fund seeks to pool
together billions of dollars remitted monthly by its citizens oversees for
local investments, including infrastructure, healthcare and education.
Last year, Nigeria is
estimated to have received in excess of $20 billion in diaspora remittances,
according to the World Bank.
Nigeria's industry and
trade ministry said in a public notice that it was seeking "fund managers
for the development and establishment of a multisectoral, multiateral private
sector-led investment fund to form the $10 billion Nigeria Diaspora Fund."
The fund manager's role
includes designing and setting up the fund, including legal, operational,
financial and administrative structures, the tender document said.
The expected investment
period is for three to five years with follow on investment thereafter. The
life of the fund will be 10 years and could be extended for a further two
years, the government said.
The trade ministry tender
said prospective fund managers must have had verifiable business in Nigeria in
the past five years, have a record of raising capital and managing large and
profitable venture capital funds.
Doris Anite, minister of
industry and trade, in a statement said it is an "unprecedented
opportunity for our citizens in disapora to drive Nigeria's economic
growth."
Foreign currency
shortages due to lower crude oil exports have put the naira currency under
pressure, forcing businesses and individuals to buy dollars on the black
market.
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