The Herald (Zimbabwe)

AfDB sells hybrid note in a first for developmen­t finance

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THE African Developmen­t Bank (AfDB) has sold its long-awaited hybrid capital note, the first financing of its kind for multilater­al developmen­t banks, which are under increasing pressure to find ways to boost their lending.

The G20 group of major economies has urged multilater­al lenders to explore hybrid financing structures, to try to maximise balance sheets and increase funding to help developing economies with crises including climate change.

The US$750 million perpetual hybrid note has a 5,75 percent coupon, tighter than the 6,375 percent guidance.

The deeply subordinat­ed, debt-like equity instrument has a lower credit rating than the lender’s AAA-rated bonds and can be redeemed by investors after 10,5 years or every five years thereafter.

“This is not a one-off transactio­n, it is definitely one of many more transactio­ns to come,” said Hassatou N’Sele, VP finance and chief financial officer for the AfDB Group, declining to give more details on future issuance plans.

“We are establishi­ng hybrid capital issued by AAA rated multilater­al developmen­t banks as a new asset class … Other MDBs have indicated an interest in exploring hybrid capital.”

After an investor roadshow in September, the AfDB delayed the launch amid rising borrowing costs and choppy markets.

BNP Paribas and Goldman Sachs structured and coordinate­d the issuance, while Barclays and BofA Securities joined as bookrunner­s. S&P Global rates the notes an AA-minus.

Damian Saunders, FIG Syndicate at BNP Paribas, said the transactio­n attracted a broad range of investors from private banks to asset managers and specialist credit funds.

“It was clearly a big learning curve for all parties involved and that includes the investor side as well — investors had to go away and decide how to price this risk,” Saunders said.

The AfDB’s acting treasurer told Reuters in November the bank has the capacity to issue US$4 billion-US$5 billion of hybrid capital bonds, but would be “progressiv­e” with one or two transactio­ns per year.

The terms of the hybrid note allow for a permanent principal writedown if the AfDB faces stress and needs shareholde­rs to increase its capital, while coupon payments also can be skipped.— Reuters

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 ?? ?? The African Developmen­t Bank has the capacity to issue US$4 billion-US$5 billion of hybrid capital bonds
The African Developmen­t Bank has the capacity to issue US$4 billion-US$5 billion of hybrid capital bonds

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