Gulf News

Lebanon bonds take a plunge as default worry deepens

It has a $1.2b payment due next month and $2.1b in April 2021

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Lebanon’s foreign debt has sank to a record low as speculatio­n mounted that the government may not repay a $1.2 billion (Dh4.41 billion) Eurobond due in less than a month.

Investors are pondering the possible shape a default might take, with the crisis-ridden nation’s government wrangling over whether to continue servicing its debts. The $1.2 billion of notes, due on March 9, plunged 12 cents to 70 cents on the dollar in London. Lebanon’s $2.1 billion bond maturing in April next year fell 8 cents to 38, with the yield climbing above 100 per cent for the first time.

The government should restructur­e its debt as soon as possible to prevent Lebanon’s economic and political crisis from worsening, according to Franklin Templeton, which oversees about $690 billion of assets worldwide. The nation’s Eurobonds, most of which trade at less than 50 cents on the dollar, and its credit-default swaps already reflect expectatio­ns of a default within the next 12 months, said Mohieddine Kronfol, the firm’s chief investment officer for Middle Eastern and North African fixed income.

“The reality is whether they pay this March Eurobond or not, the market is saying that Lebanon will default,” Kronfol said. “The longer you wait, the

more pressure you’re going to put on the country.”

On Wednesday, distressed­debt investor Greylock Capital Management announced it and other bondholder­s had formed a group to talk to the government about its options. “This group will facilitate communicat­ion between disparate creditors and stands by to engage with the Lebanese Republic in any discussion­s,” Hans Humes, chief executive of Greylock, said.

Lebanon will ask the Internatio­nal Monetary Fund for technical assistance to draw up a stabilisat­ion plan for its financial and economic crisis.

 ?? Bloomberg ?? Lebanese soldiers and police pass by a burning Blom Bank branch near the parliament in Beirut on Tuesday. The government needs to restructur­e its debt soon to prevent Lebanon’s economic and political crisis from worsening.
Bloomberg Lebanese soldiers and police pass by a burning Blom Bank branch near the parliament in Beirut on Tuesday. The government needs to restructur­e its debt soon to prevent Lebanon’s economic and political crisis from worsening.

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