Minister of Finance, Colm Imbert, said yesterday that the Ministry of Finance is working on formalising and finalising a NIF (National Investment Fund) 2 within the next two months.
Speaking at a virtual news conference, Imbert said the NIF 2 will be a five-year instrucment as the five-year Series A bond, which was issued in August 2018 and matured in August 2023, was very successful and was particularly attractive to people on the lower end of the income pyramid.
He said the first five-year bond was so successful that when the Ministry of Finance did an analysis, it found that individuals, particularly people at the lower end of the scale, were far more interested in the five year Series A tranche of NIF than they were in the 12 year or the 20-year bond.
In 2018, the Government also issued 12-year and 20-year NIF bonds, which were backed by assets acquired from CL Financial as part of the repayment of the group’s debt to the Government following the 2009 bailout. The three tranches of NIF bonds were also backed by Trinidad Generation Unlimited, the La Brea-based generation company.
“The 20-year bond was picked up mostly by institutions like insurance companies and so on, while 12-year bond was picked up by wealthy individuals. The five-year bond was picked up by by your ordinary investor,” said Imbert.
He said right now the Ministry of Finance is figuring out what the interest rate would be.
“In fact, I signed off on that just a week ago, but I don’t tell tales out of school. That will become known very soon. We are focusing the NIF 2 so that it will target again, that group of individuals from the person with the smallest amount of money to medium-size individuals.
“It is being designed for that; it will be a very attractive interest rate, and it will have a tenor of five years and I expect you to formalise and finalise all of this within the next two months,” said Imbert.
New TTSEC chair
Asked about the appointment of a new chair for the Trinidad and Tobago Securities and Exchange Commission (TTSEC), Imbert said: “The Cabinet has made a decision to appoint the person who is the deputy chairman as the chairman and that decision has been communicated to the relevant authorities for the instruments of appointment to be prepared and issued.
“So that problem has been resolved.”
The deputy chair of the TTSEC is Imtiaz Hosein, who is described on the Commission’s website as being a certified fraud examiner and an expert in the areas of finance and business.
The TTSEC has been without a chair for several months following the departure of Enid Zepherine, who is a senior public servant in the Ministry of Finance. Her departure has not been explained.
Section 10 of the Securities Act, which is the legislation that governs the securities industry in T&T, states: “Subject to subsection (6) the Commission shall consist of no more than nine nor fewer than five individuals, including—
• ↓An attorney-at-law of at least ten years standing; and
• ↓A representative from the Ministry of Finance.