Unitholders of the Coronation Infrastructure Fund (CIF) are to face a tighter payout cycle as the fund manager proposes an 11.30 percent drop in its semi-annual distribution for the first half (H1) of 2026.
According to corporate actions filed with the Nigerian Exchange Limited (NGX) by the fund managers, the proposed distribution has been set at N8.98 per unit, down from the N10.13 per unit distributed during the same period in 2025.
The double-digit decline in semi-annual distribution for the first half (H1) of 2026
may initially alarm yield-hungry investors.
The closure of the register for qualifying unitholders is set for July 23, with electronic disbursements scheduled to commence on July 28.
This record single-year contraction trims the fund’s total half-year distribution pool by over N100 million, signaling a major transition in the fund’s asset management strategy.
In H1’2025, the fund had a total distribution pool of circa N890.690 million across its 87.9 million units in issue. Given the fixed structure of 87.9 million units, the lower per-unit rate yields a total half-year distribution pool of roughly N789.78 million.
During H1 2025, a significant portion of the fund’s capital was held in high-yielding short-term money market placements (averaging around a 23 percent weighted yield) while the fund finalised infrastructure loan financial closures.
However, by the first half of 2026, the fund’s operational structure shifted fully into its core infrastructure focus, drawing more heavily from long-term Senior Debt assets (such as its core independent energy and transportation project loans).
Payout changes reflect stabilised project cash flows and changes in the macroeconomic interest rate environment in 2026.
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