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South African State Pension Fund Would Buy Eskom Debt, BT Says

South African State Pension Fund Would Buy Eskom Debt, BT Says

(Bloomberg) -- South Africa’s state pension fund would buy Eskom Holdings SOC Ltd. bonds if the government offered them to help refinance the ailing power utility, the Business Times reported.

The company can’t be allowed to fail because of the negative impact it would have on the country’s economy, the Johannesburg-based newspaper reported, citing Abel Sithole, principal executive officer at the Government Employees Pension Fund. Eskom’s total debt is 419 billion rand ($30 billion), while the GEPF says it has 1.6 trillion rand of assets.

“If the government came to me or the GEPF or any investor and says, ‘We will issue a bond because we need to refinance Eskom, we’ll give you a guarantee, and we’ll give you a good coupon, the duration of this bond is suitable for your liabilities,’ yes, thank you very much, we will take them,” the paper quoted Sithole as saying.

Eskom, the supplier of almost all of South Africa’s power, is being battered by declining sales, high fixed costs, surging debt and unplanned outages that are holding back economic growth. The Johannesburg-based company poses the biggest credit risk to Africa’s most industrialized nation, according to S&P Global Ratings.

To contact the reporter on this story: Paul Richardson in Johannesburg at pmrichardson@bloomberg.net

To contact the editors responsible for this story: Antony Sguazzin at asguazzin@bloomberg.net, Stephen Kirkland, James Amott

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