Audio By Carbonatix
Ghana agreed to terms to swap about $4 billion of domestic debt, taking another step toward meeting its obligations under an International Monetary Fund bailout.
The results imply Ghana achieved about 95% target under the latest three debt exchange deals.
The country’s Eurobond maturing in 2032 declined by 0.2 cents on Wednesday, August 30, 2023, to 43.7 cents on the dollar. Notes maturing in 2051 dropped by a similar amount to 42 cents on the dollar.
Pension funds agreed to exchange 29.6 billion cedis ($2.6 billion) out of 31 billion cedis of existing bonds for two new notes maturing in 2027 and 2028. The new instruments pay a total 21% coupon, compared with an average rate of 18.5% on the old holdings, under a special structuring to ensure the retirement funds don’t lose any money.
Investors also agreed to swap $741.7 million of foreign currency-denominated notes out of $809 million eligible bonds for two new securities maturing in 2027 and 2028 that pay 2.75% and 3.25% respectively, the Finance Ministry said late Tuesday.
Separately, the country’s cocoa-industry regulator will offer 13% on five new bonds maturing in 2024 through 2028 to investors who tendered 7.7 billion cedis out of their existing 7.9 billion cedis of cocoa bills for the new notes.
The coupon on the domestic dollar bonds was reduced from an average of 5.4% paid by the old notes while the old cocoa bills paid about 30%.
The latest measures will help the world’s second-largest cocoa producer, which defaulted on a Eurobond payment earlier this year, to overhaul its public debt — valued at about $50 billion — and unlock payments under a $3 billion IMF program.
The West African nation, which received an initial disbursement of $600 million when the IMF approved the program in mid-May, will get another $600 million if the first review at end-September is successful.
Ghana completed a reorganization of local currency-denominated bonds in February, with investors exchanging 87.8 billion cedis of securities for notes that paid as little as 8.35%, versus an average of 19%.
The so-called domestic debt exchange plan helped convince the IMF about Ghana’s resolve to restructure its loans, helping the West African nation garner financing pledges from bilateral creditors under the Group of 20’s Common Framework.
Ghana still needs more relief to bring debt to a target of 55% of gross domestic product by 2028 from 71.1% of GDP at the end of April.
The Ghana Cocoa Board will pay 5% of the principal in 2024, 20% in 2025 and 25% each in the rest of the three years, according to CalBank Plc, which advised the industry regulator on the transaction.
Latest Stories
-
Chamber of Aquaculture Ghana calls for strong public-private partnerships to unlock finance and transform the sector
9 minutes -
Lions celebrate International Volunteer Day with over decades of service and impact
13 minutes -
3 dead, dozens injured in Mampong Abuontem head-on collision
23 minutes -
MoFFA shuts down several Eastern Region mortuaries over poor sanitation, non-compliance
24 minutes -
Domestic violence case: John Odartey Lamptey remanded over alleged brutal assault on wife
34 minutes -
Minority urges government to tackle smuggling and protect local farmers
36 minutes -
Ashanti regional minister drags Democracy Hub member to court over alleged galamsey remarks
38 minutes -
Mineral royalties surge across all sub-sectors in 2025; record strong gains in gold, manganese
39 minutes -
Police arrest five suspects behind robberies in Sefwi Bekwai
39 minutes -
Ghana’s economy to expand marginally to 5.9% in 2026 – Fitch Solutions
41 minutes -
Newage Agric Solutions donates rice, soybean oil and cash to MoFA for farmers’ day
41 minutes -
Analysis: After allocating over ₵1bn, parliament now turns on the OSP
1 hour -
OSP’s failure to stop Ofori-Atta is an irrecoverable mistake – Kpebu
2 hours -
UPSA confers posthumous honorary doctorate on former first lady Nana Konadu Agyeman-Rawlings
2 hours -
Martin Kpebu says he has not been formally charged by OSP
2 hours
