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Ghana gets green light for bond rework from official creditors

FILE PHOTO: FILE PHOTO: People make trade in Accra
July 08, 2024
Reuters - Reuters

ACCRA (Reuters) - Ghana has cleared a key hurdle to restructure its international bonds, as its official creditors confirmed the proposed debt rework was not overly favourable to bondholders.

"The Ministry ... has received a formal confirmation from its Official Creditor Committee (OCC) that the Agreement in Principle reached with representatives of Eurobond holders is consistent with the Comparability of Treatment principle," Ghana's finance ministry said in a statement on Monday.

"Comparability of Treatment" is a principle from the Paris Club of wealthy creditor nations aimed at ensuring its members do not give outsized concessions compared to private lenders or others outside the group.

A Paris Club spokesperson confirmed the OCC had found Ghana's bond restructuring deal gave comparable treatment to different types of creditor.

Leeuwner Esterhuysen, economist at Oxford Economics Africa, said the green light from official creditors meant Ghana could soon issue new bonds to investors to replace the ones being restructured.

"The country aims to begin the bond exchange this month still and conclude it by the end of September," he said.

Ghana had in January reached a deal to restructure $5.4 billion of loans with its Official Creditor Committee, including China and France, which co-chair the group.

The country clinched an agreement in principle with two bondholder groups to restructure around $13 billion of its international bonds in late June, making it the second African country after Zambia in recent weeks to reach the final stages of a debt overhaul.

The government now needs to ask all its bondholders to vote on the proposed deal, which if confirmed would finalise the debt rework.

The West African gold and cocoa producer defaulted on most of its $30 billion in external debt in 2022, after the COVID-19 pandemic, the war in Ukraine and higher global interest rates exacerbated years of overstretched borrowing.

(Reporting by Christian Akorlie; Writing by Alexander Winning; Editing by Karin Strohecker and Arun Koyyur)

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