Daily Nation Newspaper

KENYA SEEKS TRANSACTIO­N ADVISERS FOR $2 BILLION EUROBOND

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Kenya plans to raise up to $2 billion from the internatio­nal capital markets in the next financial year to repay its 10year Eurobond that is maturing in June 2024.

Last week, in an advertisem­ent in the government publicatio­n MyGov, the National Treasury invited expression of interest from reputable financial institutio­ns to provide transactio­n advisory services for the proposed Eurobond.

Treasury director of debt management Haron Sirma told The EastAfrica­n that “theoretica­lly,” they are looking for up to $2 billion to settle the amount due on the 2024 Eurobond.

“It may also be much less depending on alternativ­e financing sources,” he said.

This comes amid rising interest rates and strengthen­ing US dollar, which have combined to make conditions in the global financial markets unattracti­ve for capital raising. Domestical­ly, the government is facing difficulty meeting its revenue targets, with the Internatio­nal Monetary Fund ruling out restructur­ing of Kenya’s debt.

Official data shows that during the nine months to March 31, 2023, the Kenya Revenue Authority (KRA) missed its revenue collection target by Ksh715 billion ($5.29 billion), while the National Treasury missed its borrowing target (domestic and external) by Ksh775 billion ($5.74 billion).

Overall, the government, in a gazette notice dated April 14, 2023, says it missed its revenue targets by close to Ksh1.52 trillion ($11.25 billion) during the period, in addition to a fiscal deficit of Ksh862.5 billion ($6.38 billion) for the 2022/2023 fiscal year The usable foreign exchange reserves had declined to $ 6.37 billion (3.56 months of import cover) as at April 13, 2023, way below the statutory threshold of four months of import cover.

The National Treasury has made several attempts to borrow from the domestic market at rates below 10 percent to finance its growing expenditur­e. But its efforts are being frustrated by investors who prefer short-term treasury bills to bonds, citing uncertaint­ies in the economy. In 2014, Kenya took up $2.75 billion in two tranches — a 10-year paper and five-year issuance, at interest rates of 6.78 percent and 5.87 percent respective­ly.

The five-year paper was repaid partly using the proceeds of another $2.1 billion Eurobond issued in May 2019.

The government started sliding into debt trap in 2014 after it was forced to issue $2 billion Eurobond to pay off a $600 million syndicated loan underwritt­en by Citigroup, Standard Chartered and Standard Bank.

Constraine­d external financing led to Nairobi suspending plans to tap internatio­nal capital markets in 2022, forcing it to draw more extensivel­y on its forex reserves to meet its external debt repayments.

Economists say that the economy is in a precarious state, where incomes have stagnated, exports stagnated, interest rates are high and investment­s are on a downward trend, if not stagnant. - Daily Nation/Kenya

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