The Jerusalem Post

Iraq in market to raise $1b., first stand-alone bond in over decade

- • By DAVIDE BARBUSCIA

– Iraq started marketing a $1 billion bond on Wednesday, its first internatio­nal debt issuance as a stand-alone credit since 2006 and an attempt to put decades of turmoil behind it.

With huge oil reserves behind it, the bond is seeking to tempt emerging-market investors with alluring profits – necessary to offset concerns over a history of war and the recent rise of Islamic State.

Iraq issued $1b. in bonds last January, but that offering was 100% guaranteed by the US government. This time it is alone.

A document issued by one of the banks leading the deal showed an initial price guidance for the bond, with a maturity of five and a half years, in the low 7% area.

That level would be considered “attractive” by some fund managers. It is a yield comparable with that of Ukraine, another conflict-troubled emerging market.

The transactio­n is expected to gather significan­t demand from US and European investors looking at emerging markets for yield they cannot get elsewhere.

Pension funds, fund managers and sovereign-wealth funds are likely to take a good share of the paper, fund managers said.

Iraq needs external financing to plug a widening budget deficit that lower oil prices since 2014 and the slow pace of much-needed fiscal reforms have inflated to approximat­ely 25 trillion Iraqi dinars ($21.44 billion) for 2017, according to the bond prospectus.

Out of a deficit of 25 trillion Iraqi dinars, 23.3 trillion will be raised through domestic and internatio­nal borrowing, according to Iraq’s 2017 supplement­ary budget.

Commercial banks, bond investors and internatio­nal lenders, including multilater­al institutio­ns such as the Internatio­nal Monetary Fund, the World Bank and the Organizati­on for Economic Cooperatio­n and Developmen­t are estimated to contribute

approximat­ely 11.5 trillion dinars. The support Iraq gets from developmen­t finance institutio­ns is a form of an implicit guarantee for investors.

When compared with similarly rated countries across emerging markets such as Ukraine and Ghana, Iraq has the advantage of not having any immediate solvency concerns, and it has sizable commitment­s of donors for reconstruc­tion purposes.

It is less of a credit risk than some of its peers, but upcoming parliament­ary elections in spring 2018 and, potentiall­y, ensuing political instabilit­y are all risks that will be factored in the final pricing, fund managers said.

Iraq’s bond could also benefit from extra liquidity coming from yield-hungry investors exiting riskier assets.

“People potentiall­y exiting distressed highyield names in the emerging-markets space would look to participat­e in a new high-yield issue, given that they would get liquidity in the primary market rather than in the secondary,” Aberdeen Asset Management senior portfolio manager Max Wolman said.

Country representa­tives met fixed-income investors in the United States earlier this week, ending last Tuesday a road show that stopped in London, Boston and New York. Citi, Deutsche Bank and J.P. Morgan are the joint lead managers. Iraq is rated B-stable by S&P and Fitch.

 ?? (Ahmed Saad/Reuters) ?? INVESTORS MONITOR prices at the Iraq Stock Exchange in Baghdad yesterday.
(Ahmed Saad/Reuters) INVESTORS MONITOR prices at the Iraq Stock Exchange in Baghdad yesterday.

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