African governments need to be tougher when negotiating the terms of Eurobonds and commercial loans, the African Development Bank said.
Some external debts mature before the infrastructure projects they fund start generating returns, which raises refinancing risks, the president of the development-finance lender warned. Neither should African borrowers be “price takers,” Akinwumi Adesina (pictured), the AfDB President said.
“The short-term maturity of some of these debts do not match the long-term revenue streams,” Adesina said in an interview in Johannesburg.
“You are going to have to pay back when you are not earning the money. These bonds are oversubscribed because people see opportunities to make a killing.”
Governments have increased their issuance of dollar and euro bonds in recent years as loose monetary conditions in developed nations push global investors to buy higher-yielding assets, not least those in emerging markets.
Borrowing More
African governments are issuing record amounts of Eurobonds
Africa’s sovereign issuance in the two currencies (dollar and euro) totaled $53 billion in 2018 and 2019, according to data compiled by Bloomberg. Egypt, Angola, South Africa and Nigeria were the most prolific borrowers in that period.
This year, Angola, Gabon and Ghana have tapped the Eurobond market. Ghana got around $15 billion of orders for a $3 billion deal last month.
Investors have been richly rewarded for buying African sovereign dollar debt. It generated a total return of 21% in 2019, more than any other region in emerging markets.
Public debt in sub-Saharan Africa has doubled to 50% of gross domestic product since 2008, the International Monetary Fund estimates.
Kenya raised its debt ceiling last year and the IMF said the government should be more cautious in building credit. In South Africa, authorities see debt spiking to 78% of GDP by 2028, from just above 60%. And while Nigeria’s debt is low as a proportion of GDP, the government spends more than half its revenue servicing it, according to the IMF.
Rising debt-service ratios are “increasingly problematic,” Razia Khan, Standard Chartered Plc’s chief economist for the Middle East and Africa, said in a tweet Sunday.
Still, Adesina said Africa isn’t facing a debt crisis.
“Debt is not a problem, it’s very bad debt that’s a problem,” the AfDB president said. “You have got to worry about the terms of those Eurobonds, the short term nature and the repayment risk when they are due.”
Some African borrowers have lengthened the maturity of their bonds. Ghana’s deal included a 40-year tranche, the longest yet from sub-Saharan Africa.