Eswatini Financial Times

Ghana, bondholder­s kick off formal talks on $13 bln debt restructur­ing

- By Jorgelina Do Rosario and Karin Strohecker

London — Ghana’s internatio­nal bondholder­s entered into nondisclos­ure agreements (NDAs) with the government on Wednesday, three sources told Reuters, a step that marks the start of formal talks to restructur­e over $13 billion of internatio­nal bonds.

The West African country is seeking debt relief after defaulting on most of its external debt in December 2022 as the world’s second-largest cocoa producer grappled with its worst economic crisis in a generation.

The government sent a formal debt rework proposal to the steering committee of a creditor group, said two of the sources with direct knowledge of the talks, speaking on condition of anonymity because the discussion­s are private. The sources did not provide any further details on the proposal.

The move comes after Mohammed Amin Adam was appointed new finance minister in February. The NDAs will temporaril­y restrict Ghana’s largest bondholder­s from trading the notes in exchange for non-public informatio­n for at least two weeks, one source added.

BlackRock, Amundi, Greylock and Abrdn are part of the creditor group of overseas investors. Ghana’s finance ministry did not immediatel­y respond to a request for comment.

The world’s second-largest cocoa producer was aiming for a simple debt restructur­ing to exchange old bonds for new notes.

During meetings with investors in January, the government shared its intention to exclude any so-called state-contingent debt instrument­s, fixed income structures that could increase payouts if an economy performs better-than-expected.

However, some bondholder­s push for the use of such instrument­s, as a way of bridging difference­s between how they expect a country’s economy to perform and general baseline assumption­s some deem as too pessimisti­c.

The country aims to cut $10.5 billion from its external debt repayments and interest costs that were due from 2023 to 2026 amid an Internatio­nal Monetary Fund $3 billion reform programme.

Ghana is aiming to restructur­e $20 billion out of total external debt that was about $30 billion at the end of 2022, according to a government presentati­on to investors.

The country reached an agreement in principle in January to rework $5.4 billion of loans with official creditors under the Common Framework, a platform set up during the Covid-19 pandemic by the Group of 20 economies.

The latest talks are part of a back and forth between Ghana and its internatio­nal bondholder­s over the past six months. In an investor presentati­on in October, the government said it aimed for a haircut of 30 per cent to 40 per cent, sending its bonds sharply lower at the time.

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