Arab Times

Sri Lanka holds sovereign bond issues

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Sri Lanka has abandoned plans to raise money through sovereign bonds and will pursue badly-needed revenue elsewhere after Moody’s downgraded its credit rating amid political turmoil, an official said Thursday.

President Maithripal­a Sirisena’s economic advisor said “alternativ­e finance” raised locally would service much of Sri Lanka’s $4.5 billion in foreign debt repayments in 2019.

Lalith Samarakoon said the credit downgrade by Moody’s on Tuesday would result in higher borrowing costs for Sri Lanka in the internatio­nal markets.

He said Sri Lanka would seek to extend a $1 billion loan from China by an additional $500 million, but would only turn to internatio­nal markets for cash “as a last resort”.

“We have arranged certain other financing options such as raising $1 billion through state banks,” he said.

Moody’s said its decision was “exacerbate­d most recently by a political crisis which seems likely to have a lasting impact on policy even if ostensibly resolved quickly.”

The South Asian nation has been gripped by an unpreceden­ted political crisis since Sirisena sacked his prime minister on October 26 and appointed former strongman Mahinda Rajapakse in his place.

Sirisena dissolved parliament and called snap elections on January 5 but the legislatur­e, restored by court order, voted twice to topple Rajapakse.

He has refused to step down, leaving Sri Lanka without a government since Nov 15.

The unrest also prompted the Internatio­nal Monetary Fund to suspend a tranche of a $1.5-billion bailout loan agreed to in 2016. (AFP)

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