The Star Early Edition

Tanking currencies raise debt-service fears

- Paul Wallace and Chris Kay

IN THE past decade, countries across Africa, encouraged by surging commodity prices and a global appetite for high-risk debt, sold dollar bonds to finance everything from roads to railways to tunafishin­g fleets.

Now commodity prices have halved and African currencies are tanking, making the bond payments tougher and raising the possibilit­y of a debt crisis on the poorest continent.

The risk of such an outcome is denting the outlook for countries from Ghana to Mozambique. Africa in recent years boasted most of the world’s fastest-growing economies and lured investors hungry for assets yielding more than those in the rich world.

“There’s certainly been a turn in sentiment around Africa,” Giulia Pellegrini, a sub-Saharan Africa economist at JP-Morgan Chase, said from London. “There is a perception, in some cases grounded in reality, that some African countries have been borrowing rather quickly. Weaker exchange rates make it harder for them to service their debts.”

Investors don’t have to look far back to find emerging market crises brought about by too much foreign debt. Asia’s financial turmoil of 1997 and 1998 was triggered by Thailand’s baht tumbling, making the country’s foreign debt un- payable. Mexico in 1994 and 1995 was caught short when a peso devaluatio­n raised payments on its dollar-linked bonds.

Not all African countries have overloaded on debt. Nigeria, Africa’s biggest economy and oil producer, had external debt equivalent to less than 2 percent of gross domestic product (GDP) last year, while its ratio for overall borrowing, including in local currency, was 10 percent, according to Standard Bank Group.

For the region, total government debt amounted to 30 percent of annual output, compared with 41 percent for emerging markets, according to the Internatio­nal Monetary Fund.

Sub-Saharan Africa

“Sub-Saharan Africa is still among the least-indebted regions in the world, probably the least indebted,” Jan Dehn, the head of research at Londonbase­d Ashmore Group, said.

“In general, debt is not a concern.”

Still, of the region’s roughly 50 countries, the 16 that have issued eurobonds – foreign currency bonds typically denominate­d in dollars – may be among the most vulnerable.

Ghana, whose main exports are gold and oil, has seen its foreign debt ratio more than double to 38 percent since 2006, the year before it sold the first of its $2.75 billion (R36.9bn) of eurobonds. Senegal’s borrowing levels are now higher than when the west African country was given relief under the Heavily Indebted Poor Countries Initiative 10 years ago.

And Mozambique, which issued a dollar bond for the first time in 2013 when stateowned tuna company Empresa Moçambican­a de Atum borrowed $850 million, said in June it needed to restructur­e the security because it was too expensive.

Rising concern about subSaharan Africa means countries that have signalled plans to tap the eurobond market this year, including Ghana, may find it tough to win over investors. Dollar bonds from the region have lost 3.8 percent this quarter, the most among emerging markets.

Yields have soared. Those on a $1bn security due in April 2024 for copper-rich Zambia rose to 10 percent for the first time in August. Ghana’s dollar yields climbed above 10.5 percent for the first time since December, while Nigeria’s reached 8.5 percent, more than 300 basis points above levels in May. That compares with an average yield of 5.1 percent for emerging market dollardeno­minated government debt, according to data.

“Investors are less and less likely to have appetite for Africa’s debt, in light of what’s happening now,” said Rick Harrell, an analyst at Boston-based Loomis Sayles, which oversees $240bn. “I’m really worried about some countries,” including Ghana and Zambia, he said.

Pressure

Falling local currencies are adding to the pressure by making it more expensive for countries to repay external bonds. Ghana’s cedi, Zambia’s kwacha and Mozambique’s metical have all weakened more than 15 percent against the dollar this year.

Investors are concerned that slowing growth in China will depress prices of commoditie­s from oil to copper, and about the first hike in US interest rates since 2006. That would draw capital out of emerging market assets.

Sub-Saharan Africa’s growth would be 4.2 percent this year, down from 4.6 percent last year and 5.7 percent in the first decade of the 2000s, the World Bank said in a June report.

“Debt-to-GDP ratios for the countries with increased bond market access have picked up in recent years,” the bank said.

“While debt burdens remain manageable, continuing currency depreciati­ons against the US dollar could lead to a rapid increase in the value of foreign currency debt.”

Some nations have already called on the Internatio­nal Monetary Fund (IMF) for help. One was Ghana, which agreed to an almost $1bn loan with the Washington-based lender in February. West Africa’s secondlarg­est economy came unstuck after the government ramped up borrowing to cover budget deficits caused by salary increases for public workers and falls in commodity exports.

Others may have to follow suit if commodity prices do not rebound, according to Pellegrini.

Zambia’s central bank warned on August 28 that the kwacha was “under immense pressure” because of the falling price of copper, from which the southern African nation derives 70 percent of export earnings. The government has so far ruled out an IMF loan. The kwacha dropped 4.2 percent to 9.7922 (R14.4511) per dollar, a record, by 11.36am in Lusaka.

Loomis’s Harrell said investors might have to prepare for another round of restructur­ings similar to HIPC. The negotiatio­ns would be more fraught this time, given the involvemen­t of eurobond investors, he said. Previously, African government­s were negotiatin­g almost solely with developmen­t institutio­ns such as the World Bank and the IMF.

“If a restructur­ing occurs, it will definitely include the private sector and it will make it more complicate­d,” Harrell said. “Private investors would have to take some losses.” – Bloomberg

 ?? PHOTO: EPA ?? Downtown Ikeja in Lagos. According to Standard Bank, Nigeria had external debt equivalent to less than 2 percent of GDP last year, while its ratio for overall borrowing was 10 percent.
PHOTO: EPA Downtown Ikeja in Lagos. According to Standard Bank, Nigeria had external debt equivalent to less than 2 percent of GDP last year, while its ratio for overall borrowing was 10 percent.

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