Our Expert in Nigeria
No results available
Understanding how to issue commercial paper in Nigeria is essential for any corporate treasury team, CFO or in‑house counsel preparing to raise short‑term funding outside the conventional bank‑lending channel. Commercial paper (CP) is an unsecured, discounted debt instrument with a tenor of up to 270 days, issued by corporates, banks and other financial institutions to meet working‑capital needs, bridge receivables gaps or pre‑fund capital expenditure. The commercial paper issuance process is governed by the Investment and Securities Act (ISA) 2007, the SEC Rules (most recently consolidated in the Executed Rules of December 2024) and the listing rules of the two principal exchanges, FMDQ Securities Exchange and NASD PLC.
This guide walks issuers through every stage of the process, from eligibility and board approvals to placement, settlement and post‑issuance reporting, and flags the regulatory and tax changes that took effect between 2024 and 2026.
A commercial paper is a short‑term promissory note issued at a discount to face value. The investor purchases the paper below par and receives the full face value at maturity; the difference represents the investor’s return. According to FMDQ Securities Exchange, CPs traded or listed on its platform carry tenors of up to 270 days. The instrument is typically unsecured, which means that the issuer’s creditworthiness, rather than collateral, drives investor appetite and pricing.
The principal actors in a Nigerian CP issuance are the issuer (the company raising funds), the Issuing and Placing Agent (IPA) registered with the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC), legal counsel to the issuer and/or the IPA, the paying/collecting agent (usually a commercial bank), a registrar or transfer agent, and, where the CP will be listed, the relevant exchange (FMDQ or NASD). The SEC exercises oversight under the ISA 2007 and its subsidiary rules, including the Executed Rules of December 2024 which formalised definitions and procedural requirements for IPAs and CP programmes.
At the highest level, the issuance process flows through five phases: (1) programme design and board approval; (2) appointment of agents and counsel; (3) preparation of offering documentation; (4) placement, pricing and settlement; and (5) post‑issuance compliance and reporting. For a broader overview of how this instrument fits within the Nigerian capital market, see the framework for the issue of commercial papers in Nigeria.
Not every entity can access the CP market. Meeting the commercial paper requirements Nigeria’s regulators and exchanges impose is the first gate an issuer must clear before engaging agents or preparing documentation.
The issuer must be a company incorporated under the Companies and Allied Matters Act (CAMA) and registered with the Corporate Affairs Commission (CAC). Its memorandum and articles of association must permit borrowing and the issuance of debt instruments. Before any external appointment is made, the board of directors should pass a resolution that:
Issuers should retain certified true copies of the board minutes and the resolution, as these will be required by the IPA, legal counsel, the exchange and, where applicable, the SEC.
Because CPs are typically unsecured, investors look closely at the issuer’s credit standing. While a formal credit rating from a registered rating agency is not universally mandatory under SEC rules, it is strongly recommended by market practice and may be required by the exchange on which the CP is to be listed. Issuers that lack a formal rating often rely on one or more of the following credit‑support mechanisms:
Issuers should confirm the specific credit‑support expectations with the target exchange (FMDQ or NASD) and with prospective investors’ internal credit committees before finalising the programme structure. For context on the broader regulatory framework governing securities issuance, see the review of the Investment and Securities Act.
The following numbered steps set out the commercial paper issuance process from initial programme design through to post‑issuance reporting. Each step identifies who is responsible, the key documents involved and the typical duration.
The issuer’s treasury team and legal counsel define the programme parameters. Key decisions at this stage include:
At the end of this step the issuer should have an approved term sheet or mandate summary setting out the programme’s commercial terms.
Under the SEC Executed Rules (December 2024), the Issuing and Placing Agent (IPA) is the principal intermediary responsible for structuring, marketing and placing the CP with investors. The IPA must be registered with the SEC. The issuer selects the IPA through a request‑for‑proposal process or direct engagement and executes a formal engagement letter covering:
In parallel, the issuer appoints legal counsel (to the issuer and, if required, independent counsel to the IPA), a paying/collecting agent (usually a commercial bank that will receive subscription funds and disburse principal at maturity), and a registrar or transfer agent to maintain the investor register. Where the CP will be listed, the issuer or IPA must also liaise with the relevant exchange at this stage to confirm listing requirements.
The IPA and issuer’s legal counsel prepare the suite of offering documents. The core documents include:
If the programme involves a trust structure (common for asset‑backed or credit‑enhanced CPs), a trust deed and related trustee appointment documents will also be required. All documents should be reviewed for compliance with the SEC rules and the applicable exchange listing rules before finalisation.
Once documentation is finalised, the issuer (through the IPA) proceeds to:
The issuer receives the net proceeds (face value less discount) once settlement is confirmed.
After settlement, the issuer and IPA must:
The table below consolidates the typical timeline for the full commercial paper issuance process.
| Step | Who does it | Typical duration |
|---|---|---|
| 1. Programme design and board approval | Issuer (CFO / Board), legal counsel | 3–14 days |
| 2. Appoint IPA, counsel, paying/collecting agent | Issuer (procurement / direct engagement) | 3–7 days |
| 3. Prepare IM, term sheet, subscription documents | IPA, issuer’s legal counsel | 7–14 days |
| 4. Obtain credit opinion or rating (if required) | Rating agency / issuer | 7–21 days (run in parallel with Step 3) |
| 5. Regulatory filings and listing application (FMDQ/NASD/SEC) | IPA / Issuer | 2–10 business days |
| 6. Placement / bookbuild / allotment | IPA / dealers | 1–5 days |
| 7. Settlement and pay‑out | Paying/Collecting Agent / CSD / Exchange | T+0 to T+3 |
| 8. Post‑issuance reporting | Issuer / IPA / Registrar | Ongoing; immediate notice for material events |
Assembling the correct documents is one of the most common bottlenecks in the commercial paper issuance process. Incomplete submissions to the exchange or to the SEC delay listing approvals and can push the issuer past its target pricing window. The table below lists every document typically needed and identifies who is responsible for producing it.
| Document | Notes |
|---|---|
| Board resolution approving the CP programme | Issuer board, signed minutes specifying programme amount, tenors and authorised signatories; certified true copy retained |
| Certificate of incorporation and CAC records | Issuer, certified true copies of certificate, memorandum and articles of association, and CAC annual returns |
| Audited financial statements (most recent 2–3 years) | Issuer, signed and stamped by the auditor; required for investor due diligence and exchange listing applications |
| Management accounts and working‑capital forecast | Issuer CFO, Excel or PDF format; supports assessment of tenor‑matched repayment capacity |
| Information Memorandum / Offer Letter / Term Sheet | Issuer + IPA + Counsel, sets out pricing, tenor, use of proceeds, risk factors and redemption mechanics |
| Issuing and Placing Agent engagement letter | IPA, executed agreement specifying scope, fees and responsibilities; SEC‑registered IPA required under SEC Executed Rules (Dec 2024) |
| Paying/Collecting Agent mandate | Commercial bank or agent, signed instructions for receiving subscription funds and disbursing principal at maturity |
| Registrar / Transfer Agent appointment letter | Registrar, appointment covering maintenance of the investor register and transfer processing |
| KYC and Beneficial Ownership declaration forms | Issuer and its directors / ultimate beneficial owners, per AML/CFT requirements and exchange rules |
| Legal opinion on capacity and authorisation | Issuer’s counsel, confirms valid incorporation, borrowing authority, due execution and enforceability under Nigerian law |
| Listing application form (FMDQ or NASD) | Issuer / IPA, completed application with all required attachments per the relevant exchange’s listing rules |
| SEC notification or filing (if applicable) | Issuer / IPA, form and content per the SEC Executed Rules (Dec 2024) and the ISA 2007 |
| Tax compliance certificates | Issuer, tax clearance certificate or evidence of current FIRS filing; confirm status with tax counsel |
Issuers targeting a listing on FMDQ should confirm whether additional exchange‑specific forms, such as a quotation request letter, a compliance certificate or a credit‑support confirmation, are required under the current FMDQ listing rules. NASD PLC has its own listing documentation checklist, which may differ in certain respects. In both cases, engaging the exchange’s listing team early in the process reduces the risk of delays.
The total elapsed time from initial board approval to settlement varies depending on programme complexity, whether a credit rating is required, the responsiveness of service providers, and the exchange’s processing time for listing applications. As a practical guide:
The critical‑path items that most frequently cause delays are:
Issuers should build a backward‑looking timeline from the target issue date, identifying each predecessor activity and its lead time. A simple project‑management tracker, shared between the issuer, IPA, legal counsel and the paying agent, is the most effective way to keep the process on schedule.
The cost of issuing a CP is typically lower than the all‑in cost of a bank term loan or an overdraft facility, which is one of the instrument’s principal attractions. However, issuers must budget for several direct and indirect costs. The table below sets out the main cost items on an indicative basis. Exact amounts are negotiable and should be confirmed with each service provider and the relevant exchange.
| Cost item | Indicative basis | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Issuing and Placing Agent (IPA) fee | Typically 0.25%–1.0% of the issuance amount | Negotiable; may be tiered for larger programmes. Confirm current market rates with the IPA. |
| Legal fees (issuance counsel) | Fixed or hourly; varies with programme complexity | First‑time programmes require more documentation work and therefore attract higher fees. |
| Credit rating or credit opinion | Varies by rating agency | Only where a rating is required or recommended; confirm scope and fees directly with the agency. |
| Exchange listing fee (FMDQ or NASD) | Flat fee or banded by issuance size | Confirm the current fee schedule directly with the exchange; fees may differ between initial listing and subsequent tranches. |
| SEC filing or administrative fees | Per SEC fee schedule | Confirm the applicable fee with the SEC at the time of filing. |
| Registrar and paying agent fees | Negotiated (fixed component plus per‑investor charge) | Confirm with the appointed agent. |
| CSD / settlement fees | Per transaction or per investor | Charged by the Central Securities Clearing System (CSCS) or the exchange’s depository; confirm current tariff. |
| Stamp duty and withholding tax | Depends on instrument classification and applicable Finance Act provisions | Tax counsel must verify the issuer’s and withholding agent’s obligations under the current tax regime (see below). |
Nigeria’s tax landscape for debt instruments has been reshaped by a series of Finance Acts enacted between 2019 and 2024, as well as the broader Nigeria tax reform acts. Key questions issuers must resolve with their tax counsel before pricing include:
Industry observers expect that the ongoing consolidation of Nigeria’s tax reform agenda may further clarify or simplify the treatment of money‑market instruments. Issuers planning a CP programme in 2026 should seek a written tax opinion before execution.
Several developments between late 2024 and mid‑2026 have direct implications for issuers preparing to access the CP market:
The practical effect of these changes is that issuers can no longer rely on pre‑2024 precedents or template documents without updating them. A compliance review by legal counsel, benchmarked against the SEC Executed Rules (December 2024) and the current exchange rules, should be a mandatory step before any new issuance.
This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Theo Osanakpo at Dr. T.C Osanakpo & CO, a member of the Global Law Experts network.
posted 10 minutes ago
posted 36 minutes ago
posted 1 hour ago
posted 2 hours ago
posted 3 hours ago
posted 3 hours ago
posted 4 hours ago
posted 4 hours ago
posted 5 hours ago
posted 5 hours ago
posted 6 hours ago
posted 6 hours ago
No results available
Find the right Legal Expert for your business
Sign up for the latest legal briefings and news within Global Law Experts’ community, as well as a whole host of features, editorial and conference updates direct to your email inbox.
Naturally you can unsubscribe at any time.
Global Law Experts is dedicated to providing exceptional legal services to clients around the world. With a vast network of highly skilled and experienced lawyers, we are committed to delivering innovative and tailored solutions to meet the diverse needs of our clients in various jurisdictions.
Global Law Experts is dedicated to providing exceptional legal services to clients around the world. With a vast network of highly skilled and experienced lawyers, we are committed to delivering innovative and tailored solutions to meet the diverse needs of our clients in various jurisdictions.
Send welcome message