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Egypt Seeks Non-Loan IMF Deal by October, Finance Minister Says

Egypt Seeks IMF Deal by October, Finance Minister Says

(Bloomberg) -- Egypt aims to conclude a non-financial agreement with the International Monetary Fund by October to replace a three-year loan deal that expires this month, a step that may help the country remain an attractive market for foreign investors.

Officials are exploring the various IMF programs Egypt is eligible for, Finance Minister Mohamed Maait said in London, where he’s attending the Bloomberg Emerging & Frontier Forum.

“We understand that we have to choose from different options,” Maait told Bloomberg TV in an interview set to be broadcast on Tuesday.

When Egypt signed its $12 billion accord with the IMF in 2016, it was suffering from a crippling dollar shortage. Since then, it’s attracted billions of dollars into its debt markets. A new deal, even if it doesn’t come with loans attached, may help reassure investors that economic policy will stay on the current course.

The new program, which could last about two years, would “support Egypt’s vision for the coming period of enhancing growth and structural reforms,” he said. “Hopefully by October we will get it done.”

Egypt was able to return to the global bond markets in 2017, lowering the country’s borrowing costs overseas as domestic interest rates soared. The government has since issued more debt, including its first euro-denominated securities.

Maait said his ministry aims to raise between $4 billion and $7 billion in the fiscal year that starts July 1. The sales could include green bonds and Islamic sukuk as well as issuance in Chinese and Japanese currencies.

“I’d love to see that,” he said. “I still have the cabinet approval for the green bond and instructions from the prime minister to consider the sukuk and what we call infrastructure bonds, and I am in talks with some of our advisers about sukuk in particular.”

The minister also said:

  • Green bond sales (a way for issuers to raise money for environmentally friendly projects) could raise between $250 million to $500 million
  • A similar amount could be issued in Samurai and Panda bonds
  • Foreign investments in local debt have surged by 50% since January to $18.7 billion
  • He expects local debt to conform with the requirements of the Euroclear clearing house by the end of 2019
  • The government hedged against oil-price fluctuations in the current fiscal year and plans to repeat the policy in 2019-2020 budget

Egypt secured IMF support after devaluing its currency, sending inflation to more than 30%. While price gains have eased considerably, planned cuts to energy subsidies have prompted the central bank to keep its benchmark interest rate at 15.75%.

Maait said Egypt, which had to rely on short-term Treasury bills for 95% of its local borrowing in the last fiscal year, is seeking to extend the maturity of debt as interest rates decline.

The share of bonds in Egypt’s domestic debt has already increased to as much as 30% in the current fiscal year from 5% last year, he said.

To contact the reporters on this story: Mirette Magdy in London at mmagdy1@bloomberg.net;Yousef Gamal El-Din in London at ygamaleldin@bloomberg.net

To contact the editors responsible for this story: Alaa Shahine at asalha@bloomberg.net, Ben Holland

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