The Philippine Star

Phl raises $2 B from global bonds

Market gobbles up offer at all-time low coupon of 3.95%

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The Philippine­s raised $2 billion in dollar denominate­d global bond offering that has attracted about $13.5 billion of orders or well above the target offer.

The country priced the 25year bonds at an all-time low coupon of 3.95 percent, about 25 basis points tighter than its initial price guidance of 4.2 percent.

The Philippine­s is the first Asian country to tap the internatio­nal bond market in 2015 with order reaching $13.5 billion despite an economic slowdown in key global economies.

Investors from the US purchased 47 percent or nearly half of the bonds while Asian investors accounted for 41 percent and Europeans 12 percent.

The Philippine­s has a track record of selling global bonds early in the year to support majority of its annual foreign debt requiremen­t and obtain favorable bor- rowing costs.

The bonds came with a switch tender offer for 15 series of dollar denominate­d bonds maturing between 2016 and 2034 as part of the government’s proactive liability management program. This arrangemen­t allows the Philippine government to buy back a series of existing bonds at a specified bid price and replace them with new deb papers.

Aside from providing investors with the opportunit­y to sell their debt holdings, the switch tender strategy also allows the issuer to reduce interest payments.

Finance Secretary Cesar Purisima said the success of the bond issue reflects the country’s strong economic fundamenta­ls and track record.

“This is reminiscen­t of the award-winning one-day accelerate­d switch tender offer conducted in January last year, hailed by

FinanceAsi­a to be an innovative case of proactive liability management… It took courage and conviction to pursue this strategic transactio­n in the midst of global market volatility,” Purisima said.

Yields on bonds have been on a downward trend as investors are increasing­ly getting interested in the Philippine­s given the string of credit rating upgrades it received from major global debt watchers.

Of the $2 billion issued by the

government, $1.5 billion was used to switch and retire old bonds. The remaining $500 million in new money, on the other hand, will be used for funding the budget.

“We continue to pursue liability management transactio­ns that provide opportunit­ies to reduce high coupon debt while achieving interest expense savings which the government can instead use for more inclusive initiative­s,” Purisima said.

Deutsche Bank and HSBC served as joint global coordinato­rs. They also acted as joint bookrunner­s alongside Citigroup, Credit Suisse, Deutsche Bank, Goldman Sachs, HSBC, J.P. Morgan, Morgan Stanley, Standard Chartered Bank and UBS.

National Treasurer Rosalia De Leon noted that the country attracted new name investment grade-only investors in this transactio­n.

“This robust response from the internatio­nal markets reflects that our manifest confidence in the strength of the Philippine economy and liability management strategy is very well placed,” she said.

“Despite the volatility we have seen at the start of the year, we continue to see strong support by investors in our bond program, which enabled the Republic to achieve a stronger fiscal position for the Philippine­s. The series of liability management programs has significan­tly reduced debt repayment risks,” De Leon said.

 ??  ?? By ZINNIA B. DELA PEÑAPurisi­ma
By ZINNIA B. DELA PEÑAPurisi­ma

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