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Love of Yield Beats Supply Fears as Africa Plans Bond Deluge

Love of Yield Beats Supply Concern as Africa Plans Bond Bonanza

(Bloomberg) -- The dollar-bond market remains unruffled by what could become a torrent of new-bond sales from African governments: the yields are far too attractive to worry about excess supply for now.

A measure of African sovereign dollar-bond yields eyed the biggest two-day drop in a month even as governments from South Africa to Ghana were testing the water for potential bond sales. Still, the gauge hovered above its 10-year average, acting as a lure for yield-chasing investors, given the little room for monetary tightening in the U.S., Europe or Japan.

Love of Yield Beats Supply Fears as Africa Plans Bond Deluge

A “reluctant rally” that’s seen Africa outperform emerging-market peers in the dollar-bond market may extend for a while, as investor caution over expanding bond supply is offset by short-term momentum, said Anders Faergemann, a senior money manager at Pinebridge Investments in London.

“There’s no catalyst for me to suggest that the spreads will widen to levels seen last year,” Faergemann said. “This demand for African paper can carry on for a while because the global macro environment is benign.”

Emerging-market borrowers have raised almost $400 billion in foreign bonds so far in 2019, a record on a year-to-date basis, as the Federal Reserve signaled it was in no hurry to tighten monetary policy further, the European Central Bank boosted stimulus and expectations grew for easing in Japan.

It has revived the hunt for higher yields in riskier emerging markets that was the hallmark of the Fed stimulus era. The premium investors receive to own African sovereign dollar bonds rather than U.S. Treasuries was at 461 basis points on Monday, according to JPMorgan Chase & Co. indexes.

African bonds have posted total returns of 8.1 percent this year, better than any other emerging economic region, JPMorgan data shows. That’s lowered Standard Bank’s measure of African sovereign-bond yields to 7.39 percent from a 33-month high of 8.65 percent in November.

A list of proposed African bond sales:

South Africa

  • Government is considering a sale of $2 billion this month as part of a budgeted $6 billion in external debt in the next three fiscal years
  • Read: South Africa Joins Boom in African Eurobond Issuance in 2018

Ghana

  • Officials will meet investors this week in Boston, New York and London and may choose to issue immediately if the feedback is favorable
  • Plans to raise $2 billion in foreign-currency debt to help finance the budget and will take on another $1 billion if the yield it must pay is lower than the rate for its existing liabilities
  • May opt for a benchmark dollar bond with maturities of seven and 12 years; latest details here

Benin

  • New kid on the block; West African country with GDP of $10 billion is preparing for its first-ever sale of Eurobonds
  • Sale will be benchmark-sized, denominated in euros, with a maximum maturity of eight years

Kenya

  • Said to plan offer of $2 billion of bonds in the first half to fund infrastructure development and promote growth to 6.1 percent this year
  • Proceeds will also refinance $750 million of debt maturing in June, and fund part of the nation’s 2018-19 budget

Angola

  • Plans to sell $2 billion of Eurobonds in the second quarter as part of its public-debt plan

Ivory Coast

  • World’s top cocoa grower plans $1 billion bond sale even as it reviews its financing needs against rising borrowing costs
  • Issue may be scheduled for May or June

African Development Bank

  • Eyes a 10-year euro-denominated benchmark bond; details here

To contact the reporter on this story: Srinivasan Sivabalan in London at ssivabalan@bloomberg.net

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

©2019 Bloomberg L.P.