The Star Late Edition

One of largest borrowers now in Africa

$18.7bn needed to plug SA’s 2018 Budget

- Kabelo Khumalo

S&P GLOBAL Ratings said on Friday that South Africa would be sub-Saharan Africa’s largest borrower this year (2018), forecastin­g $18.7 billion (R215.5bn) borrowings as the country looked to offset its weak fiscal trajectory.

Government borrowings in the 2017/18 year was R246bn, consisting of R217.3bn for the budget deficit and R28.7bn for debt repayments.

The rating agency projected that the 17 sub-Saharan Africa sovereigns that it rated would borrow an equivalent of $57bn from long-term commercial sources this year, representi­ng a 7.4 percent increase in longterm commercial debt issuance compared with 2017.

Gardner Rusike, a credit analyst at S&P, said it forecasts an appreciati­on of the US dollar against the rand, which would affect South Africa’s overall borrowing and gross debt numbers expressed in US dollars.

“About 41.4 percent of South Africa’s rand-denominate­d debt is held by non-residents, so exchange rate movements play an important part in non-residents’ decisions about whether to buy rand debt.

“Positively for the government, issuing in rand limits its repayment risks during periods of sharp depreciati­on – the risk lies with the buyers of the debt,” Rusike said.

S&P projection­s aligned with that of government. The Treasury in the 2018 Budget said in 2018/19, the total borrowing requiremen­t would be R224.2bn.

The National Treasury in the Budget review said demand for government remained robust, despite two-sovereign credit rating downgrades last year. “Deep and liquid domestic markets will remain government’s main source of borrowing. The debt portfolio remains well structured with an emphasis on longer-dated loans,” the Treasury said.

The Treasury plans to fund the expected borrowings through three mains sources.

These are short-term borrowings, consisting of Treasury Bills with maturities of 12 months or less.

The platform is expected to increase liquidity and transparen­cy, and to reduce funding costs

Treasury would also tap into loans from the Corporatio­n for Public Deposits and foreign-currency loans.

To diversify its funding sources, the Treasury said it would explore a rand-denominate­d Islamic bond in 2018/19.

In addition, the government said it will increase the variation in maturities across inflation-linked and fixed rate bonds by considerin­g issuing a new bond in each category.

In another developmen­t, the Treasury said it was working with the Johannesbu­rg Stock Exchange, the Reserve Bank, primary dealer banks and the World Bank to develop an electronic trading platform for gov- ernment bonds.

“The pilot phase will be launched in the 2018/19 financial year. The platform is expected to increase liquidity and transparen­cy, and to reduce funding costs by simplifyin­g access to government bonds.”

A further sovereign credit-rating downgrade has been flagged as one of the main risk to government’s financing strategy. A downgrade by Moody’s into a sub-investment grade rating would exclude South Africa from the Citi World Government Bond Index. This would trigger compulsory bond sell-offs by some institutio­nal investors.

Jan Friedrich, an analyst at Fitch Ratings, said the Budget speech presented last week reversed some of the fiscal deteriorat­ion seen last year.

“However, the need to fund expenditur­e measures announced in recent months means the consolidat­ion envisaged is relatively modest,” Friedrich said.

Dondo Mogajane, the director-general at National Treasury, has already said Fitch and Moody’s and S&P have all indicated their preliminar­y satisfacti­on with the contents of the Budget.

Fitch and S&P’s cut the country’s local debt rating to sub-investment in November, while Moody’s was due to announce its decision next month.

Kamilla Kaplan, an economist at Investec, said averting further credit rating downgrades over the longer-term will require a sustained economic growth recovery to 3 percent and beyond.

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