Onome Amuge
VFD Group’s latest N12.83 billion commercial-paper redemption may appear, at first glance, like a routine settlement in a well-run funding programme. But in a year when liquidity strains have defined Nigeria’s fixed-income market, the move sets the Lagos-based investment company apart.
The redemption, completed on November 14 and concluding the firm’s Series 5 issuance under a N20 billion programme, is VFD’s largest to date. It also arrives at a moment of heightened investor caution. With policy rates elevated, foreign-exchange volatility persistent and refinancing risks rising across Nigeria’s corporate debt landscape, firms have increasingly rolled over obligations or sought to renegotiate maturities. VFD, by contrast, is paying down short-term debt even as it pursues an ambitious N50 billion rights issue scheduled to close later this month.
Rather than frame the settlement as a routine liability clean-up, VFD executives have cast it as part of a deliberate deleveraging strategy, separating the group from peers that have leaned more heavily on short-term funding to cushion profit pressures created by surging yields. “Timely redemption is non-negotiable,” said Folajimi Adeleye, executive director for finance and investor relations.
Nigerian corporates have faced a punishing rate environment since mid-2023. Central bank tightening and structural liquidity shortages have pushed money-market rates to multi-year highs, compressing margins in leveraged sectors and complicating refinancing plans across the board. While commercial paper issuance has remained relatively active, maturities have lengthened and investor appetite has tilted toward top-tier names.
Against this backdrop, VFD’s decision to redeem rather than roll over a large, high-yielding CP, discounted at 24.55 per cent, is considered a contrarian move. The firm argues that reducing short-term leverage now, while raising long-term equity capital through its rights issue, strengthens its funding mix heading into 2026.
For investors, the implication is two-fold. First, it signals that VFD has the internal liquidity to service obligations despite market volatility. Second, it indicates a shift toward more permanent capital to support expansion plans in financial services, fintech, market infrastructure and real estate.
The group’s liquidity posture also stands in contrast to the operating environment for many Nigerian investment holding companies, several of which have faced pressure from rising funding costs, deterioration in asset values, and tighter cash-flow conditions at portfolio businesses. By managing to retire N12.83 billion in commercial paper at maturity, VFD is positioning itself as a reliable counterparty in a market where reliability itself has become a premium asset.
The latest redemption marks VFD’s fifth consecutive CP settlement since the programme launched in 2022. Over that period, the company has raised and redeemed a total of N33.4 billion.
The consistency matters. Commercial-paper markets, particularly in emerging economies, rely heavily on issuers’ reputational capital. Any missed or renegotiated maturity can raise an issuer’s future cost of capital. VFD’s spotless record (Series 1 through Series 5) develops a history that investors can benchmark against a volatile macro backdrop. For a company positioning itself as a principal investment firm with exposure across sectors and geographies, predictable funding behaviour shores up its credibility both domestically and abroad.
This is especially relevant as VFD pushes ahead with its ongoing rights issue, through which it aims to raise N50 billion via the sale of five billion ordinary shares at N10 apiece. The equity raise, already receiving what executives describe as positive momentum, is central to VFD’s medium-term strategy, while fortifying its balance sheet while providing fresh capital for scaling its technology-driven platforms, including its Bvndle loyalty ecosystem.
A maturing issuer in a maturing market
The Nigerian commercial-paper market has expanded rapidly since reforms in the mid-2010s, but it remains vulnerable to macro shocks. Issuers often rely on institutional investors with short-term mandates, heightening rollover risks during periods of liquidity stress. In this context, VFD’s methodical approach to issuance and redemption is seen to reflect a maturing issuer adapting to a maturing but still fragile market.
The company’s emphasis on market discipline and efficient balance-sheet management is also considered a signal to regulators and rating agencies keeping a close eye on corporate leverage amid rising systemic risks.
For now, VFD’s clean execution gives it room to deepen investor trust ahead of its rights issue’s closing date on November 24. More importantly, it marks the start of a funding model increasingly reliant on permanent capital rather than the fast-cycling debt that has powered much of its early expansion.