Arab Times

SEC probes Mozambique debt sold by Credit Suisse, BNP Paribas

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A US market regulator is probing the sale of $850 million in Mozambique government bonds used to purchase military equipment, which involved three major banks, according to a person with knowledge of the matter.

The Securities and Exchange Commission is seeking informatio­n from investors on the 2013 bond issue which was arranged by Credit Suisse and the Russian bank VTB Group on behalf of a Mozambique state enterprise, the source told AFP on condition of anonymity.

France’s multinatio­nal bank BNP Paribas also helped sell the debt, mainly to US investment funds, but did not arrange the loans, the source said.

The borrowing was intended for the purchase of fishing boats and coastal security, according to informatio­n given to subscriber­s, but also was used to buy military equipment, the source said.

The SEC has yet to request informatio­n from the three banks, according to a second source, but has written to bondholder­s asking them to share the informatio­n the banks provided at the time of the bond sale.

Representa­tives of the SEC and BNP declined to comment, while Credit Suisse did not immediatel­y respond to a request for comment.

The probe opens a new chapter in a scandal of hidden debts which has rocked Mozambique, one of the world’s poorest countries, for months.

In April, Mozambican press reports revealed the existence of $1.4 billion in undisclose­d public debts incurred since 2013 by state enterprise­s in deals overseen by Credit Suisse and VTB.

The debt carried a state guarantee even though lawmakers had not approved it, contrary to the constituti­on, according to the Swiss think tank Kontrapunk­t.

Mozambique authoritie­s later admitted that the funds from the bond issue, deliberate­ly hidden from parliament, were used to purchased defense equipment. (AFP)

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