Daily Mirror (Sri Lanka)

Sri Lanka begins sale of 5-year sovereign bond

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Sri Lanka yesterday commenced the sale of her sixth internatio­nal sovereign bond. Internatio­nal rating agencies Fitch, Standard & Poor’s and Moody’s rated the bond at ‘BB-(EXP)’, ‘B+’ and ‘(P)B1’, respective­ly, in line with their respective sovereign credit ratings assigned to the country.

The bond is expected to mature in 2019 and, according to Bloomberg the price guidance for the bond was set around 6.25 percent. The news agency further said Citigroup, HSBC, Standard Chartered and UBS were managing the sale.

Though there has not yet been a confirmati­on about the size of the bond issue, Budget 2014, which was presented a couple of months back, proposed to raise US $ 1.5 billion from internatio­nal markets.

It was proposed to float a US $ 750 million longterm internatio­nal bond for the constructi­on of urban and estate housing complexes through the Urban Developmen­t Authority, which will be backed by a government guarantee, along with a further US $ 750 million for the government to finance the counterpar­t funds required for various developmen­t projects.

The proposed bonds will constitute direct, unconditio­nal, unsubordin­ated and unsecured general obligation­s of the issuer and payments will be backed by the full faith and credit of Sri Lanka.

“The sovereign credit ratings on Sri Lanka take into account the country’s relatively weak external liquidity, moderately high and increasing external debt and a high government debt and interest burden. In addition, some of the country’s political institutio­ns lack extensive checks and balances,” S&P said.

However, if Sri Lanka sustains its recent improvemen­ts in external indicators, including a reduction in the current account deficit, these rating constraint­s could ease, S&P noted.

In July 2013, Moody’s affirmed Sri Lanka’s B1 rating and changed the outlook to stable from positive.

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