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Warning Signs for Zambia as Eurobond Curve Becomes More Inverted

Warning Signs for Zambia as Eurobond Curve Becomes More Inverted

(Bloomberg) -- Zambia’s finance minister said this month there’s no need to worry about the government’s debt load. Investors are sending the opposite signal.

The yield curve for the southern African nation’s Eurobonds, which are the worst performers in emerging markets in the past year, is increasingly inverted -- meaning that shorter-dated securities have higher yields than those with longer maturities. That’s a rarity and often occurs when countries are already in default, with one example being Venezuela.

Yields on Zambia’s $750 million of bonds due in 2022 have climbed almost 500 basis points since early February to 17.45 percent. Its 2027 bonds trade at 15.8 percent. No other country that’s not in default has yields as high.

Warning Signs for Zambia as Eurobond Curve Becomes More Inverted

The inversion is partly because the shorter bonds have a bullet maturity and have to be paid back in one go, while the longer ones amortize, making them less risky, according to Neville Mandimika, an analyst at Rand Merchant Bank in Johannesburg. But it also suggests traders are getting more nervous, he said.

“That yield curve inversion can be seen as an indicator of how concerned investors are about the situation,” he said. “In times of extreme debt concerns, the less risky bond will price at a premium to the bullet bond.”

Finance Minister Margaret Mwanakatwe said in an interview with Bloomberg TV on April 12 that Zambia is borrowing to improve the country’s infrastructure and the debt should be seen as an investment.

Africa’s second-biggest copper producer is battling to shore up its finances and has been in on-off talks with the International Monetary Fund for more than a year about a loan. Bank of America says it could be forced into restructuring if it fails to get an IMF bailout or friendlier terms on bilateral loans from China, which it’s trying to renegotiate.

Warning Signs for Zambia as Eurobond Curve Becomes More Inverted

Investors are also watching dwindling foreign-exchange reserves. They’ve halved in the past three years to $1.5 billion. They now cover barely 10 percent of Zambia’s external debt, which is the lowest ratio among all African nations that have sold dollar bonds, according to data compiled by Bloomberg.

--With assistance from Lyubov Pronina.

To contact the reporter on this story: Paul Wallace in Lagos at pwallace25@bloomberg.net

To contact the editors responsible for this story: Dana El Baltaji at delbaltaji@bloomberg.net, Robert Brand, Gordon Bell

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