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African nations may curtail bond sales amid US policy tightening

Johannesburg - African governments may curtail foreign-currency bond sales in coming months amid expectation that US policy tightening will make it more expensive to pay back those debts, African Development Bank president Akinwumi Adesina said.

“Right now there is a little bit of caginess with regard to issuing dollar bonds or Eurobonds because the Fed rates are going up, which means it’s becoming a race to the top of the yield curve,” Adesina said on Wednesday in an interview at the Conference of Montreal.

“There is a bit of cautiousness now because the interest rate is very high. So there’s not a lot of excitement to issue bonds right now.”

While African nations sold a record $16bn in Eurobonds in 2014, according to Rand Merchant Bank, sovereign debt issuance have been slow this year as an increase in US interest rates pushed up yields and the continent struggles with lower commodity prices and weakening currencies.

South Africa sold $1.25bn of ten-year notes in April and Ghana plans to raise as much as $1bn a Eurobond sale in July or September.

Rather than issuing bonds on foreign markets, African governments could turn to sovereign wealth funds and pension funds to raise capital for power and transport infrastructure, Adesina said. Pension funds on the continent have more than $330bn to invest, he said.

Local markets

“I personally think the African countries will look a lot to the domestic market to mobilise the huge amount of capital that is there,” he said. “What is needed is to have better regulations so that the pension funds can invest in asset classes such as infrastructure and so on.”

The AfDB estimates sub-Saharan Africa needs investment of at least $93bn a year over a decade to plug the gap in infrastructure.

Adesina disputed the notion that Africa is sliding back into a debt crisis, saying average indebtedness in the region remains lower than elsewhere.

“I don’t think Africa is in a debt crisis at all,” he said. “However it’s something to watch, and we are keeping our eye on that because of the Eurobonds being issued. But the African economy is still growing.”

Mozambique debt

Adesina dismissed concern that Mozambique’s public debt crisis may herald a wave of defaults after a state-owned company missed a May 23 deadline to make a $178m interest repayment. The nation owes its foreign creditors $9.84bn.

A mission from the International Monetary Fund is in Mozambique this week to assess the extent of the nation’s debt crisis.

“The case in Mozambique is a very unique situation,”Adesina said. “I don’t see a situation where they are going to be running into massive defaults. Mozambique must manage the situation and make sure they rein in public expenditures, and stabilise the economy quickly, given the debt level that they have.”

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