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Morocco Returns to Overseas Bond Market After Five-Year Absence

Morocco Returns to Overseas Bond Market After Five-Year Absence

(Bloomberg) -- Morocco plans to raise at least $1 billion from an international bond sale this year, ending a roughly five-year hiatus, and switch to a policy of more consistent offerings to finance its broader economic overhaul program.

The North African kingdom -- the region’s only investment grade sovereign -- has mandated a consortium of banks for the bond sale, its first since 2014, Finance and Economy Minister Mohamed Benchaaboun said in an interview. It also plans to go to the market again in 2020 amid efforts to hold more consistent sales, he said.

King Mohammed last year told the government to come up with a new growth model for the $105 billion economy as it steps up a crackdown on tax evasion. That directive has taken on even more urgency as the eruption of unrest in neighboring Algeria sends a clear message about how a toxic mix of high youth unemployment and sputtering growth could snowball out of control.

The sale will take place “as soon as conditions permit it this year,” Benchaaboun said Friday in Marrakesh, declining to elaborate further on the timing.

Morocco Returns to Overseas Bond Market After Five-Year Absence

The former chief executive of Banque Centrale Populaire, Morocco’s second-biggest lender, said the country would continue to tap the market “in the most natural manner because debt, in essence, depreciates, and so you have evidently to build up the share of external financing in the overall debt.”

Morocco Growth Falls to 24-Month Low as Drought, Demand Weigh

The plan marks a shift in strategy from his predecessor, Mohamed Boussaid, who was relatively reluctant to turn to the international market.

The proposed shift comes as authorities review how state-owned enterprises can finance the nation’s development plans and make them less reliant on government financing. As it stands now, the debt is counted as quasi-sovereign, limiting the administration’s room to maneuver.

Morocco’s neighbor Egypt has gone to the international bond market twice in the past few months, most recently with a 2 billion euro offer.

“When you are regularly present in the international bond market you set your pricing target for the debt you want to raise, and evidently you also move faster in the mobilization of financing on behalf of the lenders because they know you,” Benchaaboun said.

Moroccan officials have struggled to revive growth that has been squeezed over the past two years by drought and weak consumer demand.

The International Monetary Fund, in the latest review of its precautionary and liquidity line arrangement with the country earlier this month, said that “improved fiscal management and economic diversification” have made the economy more resilient, though unemployment remains high, especially among younger Moroccans.

The government needs to press on with the changes it’s making “in order to increase productivity gains, create jobs, and raise growth potential” in line with its medium-term objectives, the Washington-based fund said in an April 2 report.

“The growth story can’t be summed up in one quarter,” Benchaaboun said, pointing to the impact this year of drought on the country’s labor-intensive agricultural sector and “a non-agricultural GDP that is posting good growth levels.”

The government is sticking to its budgeted projection of 3.2 percent growth, he said. The central bank last month cut the growth projection for 2019 to 2.7 percent, citing mostly lower farming output.

Among the measures the government is taking to boost growth is a draft bill -- now with parliament -- to protect minority rights in corporations, as well as the launch later this year of the first real-estate investment trust, or REITs, which he said would “provide a fundamental source of financing for businesses across the board.”

“The repercussions will not be felt overnight,” Benchaaboun said, stressing that authorities are confident the measures would boost growth and create jobs.

To contact the reporter on this story: Souhail Karam in Rabat at skaram10@bloomberg.net

To contact the editors responsible for this story: Lin Noueihed at lnoueihed@bloomberg.net, Tarek El-Tablawy, Mark Williams

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