Ghana draws strong demand as sells $3 billion in Eurobonds
Ghana drew strong demand for an issue of hard-currency debt, raising $3 billion in a eurobond auction that the government said on Wednesday was five times oversubscribed.
It sold $1.25 billion in seven-year bonds at a coupon of 6.375% in Tuesday's sale, as well as $1 billion in 15-year bonds with a coupon of 7.875% and $750 million in 41-year paper with a coupon of 8.875%.
The 41-year paper is the longest-dated bond for an African country, the government said in a statement.
Simon Quijano-Evans, chief economist at Gemcorp Capital LLP in London, called the sale "a clear vote of confidence from the market... even if cash ratios do appear to be high among funds."
The sale should encourage the government to press on with reforms in the run-up to a presidential election scheduled for the fourth quarter, he said.
Ample liquidity in financial markets and historically low interest rates among major central banks around the globe have seen borrowing costs come down in many emerging markets. Ghana's outstanding dollar-bond maturing in 2051 currently yields just over 8.6%.
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