Tough times for Treasury as lenders hold back, demand high returns

A week after the Central Bank
of Kenya (CBK) was forced to cancel the issuance of a reopened 15-year bond,
the government’s path towards funding its coffers is getting more slippery.
Raising debt from investors
after showing signs of being broke and even failing to pay salaries for a
section of civil servants has become a tall order as investors seek to cover
risks by demanding high returns.
The attempt to raise Sh30
billion from the domestic market saw the reopening of a 15-year bond first sold
in 2019 and a three-year paper first sold last year.
The three-year bond only
managed to raise Ksh.1.76 billion barely two weeks after another bond auction
targeting Sh20 billion only yielded Ksh.3.6 billion in the first tranche.
Data shows that investors
demanded two per cent higher returns above the offered coupon in the three-year
bond, a scenario that is likely to play out in the near future and which may
force the government back to the drawing board in plugging its yawning cash
deficits.
The tough scenario is also
evident in the international market where investors are likely to be attracted
by the higher yields on the dollar bonds and with the shillings’ recent
freefall, borrowing from the international market is not only becoming difficult
but also very expensive.
The Treasury however remains
trapped between the high cost of debt and the risk of defaulting on maturing
ones. This has already pushed the government to plan floating an international
bond to help meet the $2 billion dollar Eurobond repayment due in the next
financial year.
With just $6.3 billion in
foreign reserves and which has remained the desired four months’ cover, it is
almost certain that the country will have to seek foreign debt despite the
unfavourable market situation, probably worse than how it was when a Ksh.115
billion bond was cancelled in June last year.
The low acceptance from the
bond auction will continue to pile pressure on the exchequer’s domestic
borrowing targets for the 2022/23 fiscal year just under two months away.
The Kenya Revenue Authority
which has been struggling to meet revenue collection targets also faces more
pressure as the treasury faces more hurdles in accessing debt both at home and abroad.
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