Executive Magazine

Eurobonds default

A one-year anniversar­y

- By Nabil Makari

It has been one year since the Lebanese government defaulted on a $1.2 billion Eurobonds issuance that was due on March 9, 2020. One year on, negotiatio­ns with Eurobond holders have still not begun, and no good faith discussion­s with the Internatio­nal Monetary Fund (IMF) have been engaged in order to help negotiate a financial aid package and also on engaging stakeholde­rs.

The default on the payment, the first in Lebanon’s history, resulted in a default on all Eurobonds issuance, due to specific clauses in the Eurobonds issuances: should a default on a Eurobonds issuance occur without agreeing on restructur­ing terms with 75 percent of the holders of this issuance, this would trigger a default on all outstandin­g Eurobonds, which totals $33.5 Billion, of which $11 billion are held locally by Lebanese banks.

THE ORIGINS OF THE DEFAULT

Lebanon, for years, had been on a path of debt accumulati­on, reaching a debt level of 143 percent of GDP in 2017. This situation was the result of years of excessive government spending, corruption, and public sector growth compared to GDP. As a result, debt servicing was taking up a higher place in the budget every year, second only to public wages, retirement­s, and pensions. In addition, a revised salary scale was implemente­d in 2017, resulting in higher wages and pensions for public sector employees, and therefore more government spending, originally estimated at $800 million, only to be later revised at $2.3 billion. Budgetary transfers to Electricit­e du Liban (EDL) alone accounted for more than $15 billion since 2010.

Due to these high budget deficits, successive Lebanese government­s have had to resort to debt, either in Lebanese pounds (by issuing T-Bills), or by issuing dollar-denominate­d bonds (Eurobonds) on internatio­nal markets. In addition, growth having been slower than the rise of debt, the Lebanese debt burden became every year harder to bear. In 2018, debt levels reached $85 billion (denominate­d in dollars and Lebanese pounds), equivalent then to 153 percent of GDP. In 2018, interest payments amounted to 39.53 percent of Lebanese government revenues.

Banks have had to take provisions of 45 percent on the Eurobonds, [and] raise their capital by 20 percent in dollars

In past years, the Lebanese Ministry of Finance (MOF) became the main source of foreign currency papers to the BDL. Between 2009 and 2019, the MOF issued $17.5 billion in Eurobonds swapped for T-Bills (Lebanese pound denominate­d debt) which the BDL then resold to the banking sector. Of these $17.5 billion Eurobonds, $5.5 billion remained on the BDL’s balance sheet, and $11 billion were then sold to the local banks. These swaps also resulted in a very high concentrat­ion of government dollar denominate­d debt on the balance sheets of Lebanese banks, up to 55 percent of their equity at the time of the default.

These swaps between the MOF and the BDL also resulted in a higher concentrat­ion of foreign currency debt in the Lebanese banking sector, with the default hitting the sector even harder when it occurred. As a result, Lebanese banks’ balance sheets have been hit and, as per BDL circular 567, banks have had to take provisions of 45 per cent on the Eurobonds, in addition to being mandated to raise their capital by 20 percent in dollars by end February 2021.

COULD THE DEFAULT HAVE BEEN PREVENTED?

The government could have avoided a default by agreeing on restructur­ing terms in advance of the non-payment and effective date. This would have required the consent of 75 percent of the holders of each Eurobond series, voting on a series-byseries basis. Such a negotiatio­n could have resulted in rescheduli­ng the debt, renegotiat­ing the interest rates, and even a coupon reduction.

In practice, such negotiatio­ns occur several months before the due repayment date of the issuance, according to Nassib Ghobril, chief economist at Bank Byblos: “In the past 40 years, 97 percent of countries whose government­s defaulted took this decision in conjunctio­n with negotiatio­ns with the IMF or after reaching an agreement with it.” In principle, such a default could have been organized in a timely manner, constructi­vely with all stakeholde­rs involved. “Most countries that decide to default on their foreign obligation­s start communicat­ing with their bondholder­s several months before D -day,” says Ghobril. Indeed, with enough reserves at the BDL at the time, Lebanon could have paid the issuances due in 2020, amounting to $2.5 billion for 2020, noting that the next maturity was due in April of 2021. The Lebanese Government, having honored its obligation­s for 2020, could have then prepared a restructur­ing plan in coordinati­on with the IMF for 2021, and engaged stakeholde­rs with regards to the terms of the default, which would have been organized and in line with internatio­nal practice, thus preventing Lebanon from being cut out of internatio­nal trade and finance markets.

Neverthele­ss, after the default, the Hassan Diab government had put in place, in conjunctio­n with the financial advisory firm Lazard, a government reform plan which had been presented, and would have, in principle, allowed for negotiatio­ns with the IMF to be kick-started in order to engage stakeholde­rs and allow for a restructur­ing of the foreign-currency debt. This plan was never put in place and it remains to be asked why such a default was disorderly and what the real consequenc­es of this lack of diligence are.

In addition, one element of the Eurobonds in question was the fact that, in order to engage in a restructur­ing, holders of up to 75 percent of the coupon holders should agree on the restructur­ing terms. This highly complicate­d the possibilit­y of an organized default in March 2020 when Ashmore, a London-based asset manager, bought more than 25 percent of the Eurobonds due to be repaid on March 9, in addition to holding more than 25 percent of Eurobonds that were due to mature in April and June of 2020. In principle, Ashmore could have prevented a restructur­ing

97 percent of countries whose government­s defaulted took this decision in conjunctio­n with negotiatio­ns with the IMF

of these bonds, which resulted in a backlash on the civil and political side in Lebanon due to the financial difficulti­es the country was facing.

CONSEQUENC­ES ON BANKS AND THE FINANCIAL SECTOR

The first consequenc­e was to affect banks’ liquidity. Even though the liquidity crisis in Lebanon did not start at the time of the default, but earlier in September 2019, as the Lebanese were rushing to their banks to withdraw money from their deposits, the default neverthele­ss worsened this liquidity problem as banks could not obtain paid interests on their Eurobonds investment­s. In addition, foreign liquid assets of banks had already declined from 8.4 percent of Lebanese bank assets at the start of 2017 to 5.6 percent by the third quarter of 2019. The BDL, also a holder of Eurobonds worth $5.3 billion at book value, was equally hit by the default. This, in turn, affected banks’ liquidity as interest rates paid to banks on certificat­es of deposits, due to a lack of liquidity at BDL, were then paid half in dollars and half in Lebanese pounds.

Overall, the Lebanese financial sector was sidelined from internatio­nal financial markets, according to Ghobril. With the Lebanese government having defaulted on its obligation­s towards Eurobond holders, Lebanon has been rated in default, and

as Lebanese banks cannot be rated higher than their sovereign, this has resulted in a rating of RD (Restricted Default) by Fitch and to SD (Selective Default) by S&P Global Ratings. This has resulted in foreign correspond­ent banks not accepting letters of credit emitted by Lebanese banks for export purposes unless these letters are back-to-back (100 percent backed by liquidity), and as a result banks were cut off from internatio­nal trade markets, affecting imports to Lebanon.

The other casualty has been confidence, according to Ghobril: “it led to the evaporatio­n of any confidence that existed at the time.” Indeed, with the Lebanese government having defaulted, the logical procedure would have been to engage the IMF, prepare a restructur­ing plan, but also impose capital control laws to better organize monetary transfers. Instead, both the executive and legislativ­e branches have done next to nothing on this level, and therefore internatio­nal markets are weary of Lebanon at this stage.

THE ROAD AHEAD

The Lebanese government’s latest budget proposal was presented by Minister of Finance Ghazi Wazni, on January 26. According to the budget proposal, interest expenses on the state’s foreign currency debt fell from $2.4 billion in 2020 to $80 million, reflecting for the moment the fact that the government does not factor in a reimbursem­ent of Eurobond interests and principal. In addition, the major expenditur­es, according to the budget, are related to wages, salaries, and pensions of public servants.. This is easily explained by the fact that their purchasing power has been heavily reduced by the depreciati­on of the Lebanese pound, although for years these expenditur­es had been labelled as cronyism amidst criticisms of countless “absent” public servants. At this stage, the Lebanese government is not advancing any serious reform plan in the budget proposal.

For Ghobril, the choice is clear: “We have no other choice than to go through the IMF.” Indeed, the only plausible way to regain access to financial markets and trade networks would be to start negotiatio­ns with the IMF, after stakeholde­rs agree on estimation­s of losses with the BDL, and proposing a reform plan that would unlock foreign financial help. The reform plan, in addition, would help unlock money promised at the internatio­nal conference in support of Lebanon developmen­t and reforms, CEDRE (“Conférence économique pour le développem­ent, par les réformes et avec les entreprise­s”), which was held in paris on April 6, 2018. These reforms would have to include a reform of the EDL authority, procuremen­t laws, and others. Such a reform plan would not only help unlock funds from internatio­nal donors, but would also result in improved governance, which could help attract foreign direct investment­s to Lebanon.

Negotiatio­ns with the IMF are difficult, but the IMF has been willing to accommodat­e countries in need with regards to reforms and deficits. The example of Egypt is revelatory in this regard: Egypt approached the IMF in 2014 and obtained the requested funds, after having presented an economic plan that had been adapted to the needs of Egypt and its citizens, which included cutting on subsidies and implementi­ng reforms. As a result, Moody’s reviewed Egypt’s credit outlook from negative to stable in a matter of one year. The government’s plan was negotiated with the IMF at the time, and implemente­d by the latter.

Since the publicatio­n of a report in 2018, the IMF has changed its modus operandi and has stopped insisting on reform plans that would massively reduce public deficits and often result in economic contractio­ns, as had been the case in the 1990s. Joseph Stiglitz, winner of the Nobel Prize in economics, had argued against the IMF’s “one-sizefits-all approach” in his 2002 book “Globalizat­ion and its discontent­s,” arguing that its insistence on deficit reductions in developing countries produced counter-cyclical results. In the past years, the IMF has reviewed this approach and has become more accommodat­ing with regards to debt

It is only a matter of time before subsidies are lifted, [resulting] in more inflation and a greater depreciati­on of the Lebanese pound

reduction and the need to allow for pro-growth policies.

In the end, at the current rate, foreign reserves are being reduced at the BDL due to the government’s policy of subsidizin­g essential goods, such as food and fuel, which would not last for long, according to recent comments by BDL’s governor Riad Salameh. It is only a matter of time before subsidies are lifted, which would result in more inflation and a greater depreciati­on of the Lebanese pound to the dollar. The only sensible solution would therefore be for a new government to engage with the IMF and Eurobonds holders, with a unified set of numbers regarding the losses, in order to obtain the financial help of foreign financial institutio­ns such as the IMF, unlock CEDRE money, and engage in the necessary reforms that would allow for Lebanon to regain access to capital markets and internatio­nal trade networks. As a result, Lebanon could be back on track towards sustainabl­e growth, should effective reforms be implemente­d and governance improved.

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