A statement by SEC said its Director-General, Dr Emomotimi Agama,
said this during the ongoing 2nd International Islamic Capital Market
Conference in Karachi, Pakistan on Thursday.
Agama said the road projects covered over 5,820 kilometers across
the six geopolitical zones of the country.
He said the success rate made the Islamic Capital Market (ICM) to
stand out as a resilient and innovative tool for mobilising resources.
Agama described the issuance of sovereign Sukuk since 2017 as a key
pillar responsible for growth of the ICM in the country.
The director-general said that the issuance had consistently been
oversubscribed, with subscription rate reaching as high as 441 per cent.
He disclosed that sub-national and corporate Sukuk issuances were
also growing in the country.
”Beyond Sukuk, the ICM segment in Nigeria offers diverse investment
opportunities.
”From one registered fund in 2008, the segment currently boasts of
14 registered Halal mutual funds with a net asset value exceeding ₦105 billion
as of November 2024.
”The NGX Lotus Islamic Index tracks 11 Shariah-compliant equities,
while Nigeria’s first Islamic Real Estate Investment Trust – ChapelHill N-REIT
highlights the potential of real estate investments.
”The prospects for Nigeria’s Islamic finance industry are
underpinned by key growth drivers, both global and domestic,” he said.
Agama said the growth of the ICM segment had come with some
challenges including limited public awareness of Islamic finance principles,
paucity of tradable instruments, and regulatory alignment across institutions.
He said that capacity building efforts, particularly in Shariah
governance and compliance remained critical to sustaining the growth.