By Libby George
When Gabon’s General Brice Oligui Nguema ousted his distant cousin last month, he became the eighth military leader who has taken power by force in Africa since 2020. But one aspect about the country was different: it had sold a sizeable amount of bonds on international capital markets, and had just weeks prior sealed continental Africa’s first debt-for-nature swap.
The putsch not only sent
Gabon’s bonds tumbling 10%, but also hit those issued by a number of other
countries including neighbouring Cameroon, as jittery investors scanned for who
might be next.
The apparent coup trend is
adding to other major concerns deterring many investors from Africa – a wave of
debt crises, tense geopolitics and an extreme vulnerability to climate change.
“Nearly all markets in that
region are paying some price in terms of rising cost of debt,” said Sergey
Dergachev, portfolio manager at Union Investment.
A UNDP study dated July shows
how the costs add up. It estimated Guinea’s 2008 coup and one in Mali in 2012
wiped a combined $12-$13.5 billion off the two countries’ economies over a
5-year period. This represented 76% of Guinea’s 2008 gross domestic product and
almost half of Mali’s 2012 GDP, the study calculated.
There have been scores of
coups and attempted coups in recent decades including in Thailand, Ecuador,
Egypt and Turkey.
Investors in those markets
reacted reflexively – sell first, think later.
Gabon’s coup not only hurt its
bonds, it also ratcheted up the interest rate premium, or ‘spread’, investors
demand to hold bonds in JPMorgan’s multi-country “Nexgem” Africa index, a move
that has still not fully retraced.
Cameroon has been particularly
sensitive. Its bonds have lost more ground than Gabon’s since the coup. The
country’s President Paul Biya has ruled for over 40 years through crackdowns
and contested elections and wants his son to take over.
In focus too is Senegal, whose
President Macky Sall recently ruled out running for a third term after violent
unrest, and Congo Republic which had to quash weekend rumours of an overthrow
while President Denis Sassou Nguesso – in power for 38 years – was in New York
for the U.N. General Assembly.
“Certainly there’s a lot of
eyeballs on this (coup) theme right now,” said Eamon Aghdasi, a sovereign
analyst at investment firm GMO, who co-authored a recent paper on whether
democracy matters to debt investors.
“As a bondholder, the
worst-case scenario is that a new government comes in and repudiates the
previous government’s debt”.
There is no sign of Gabon’s
new leaders repudiating debt, though payments on bonds have run into trouble
elsewhere, such as Niger.
Credit ratings usually suffer
too. Fitch and Moody’s have put Gabon on a downgrade warning since the Aug. 30
overthrow. Agencies slashed ratings for Burkina Faso, Mali and Niger, although
further afield, Thailand’s never budged despite two coups in the last two
decades.
“Coups, in general, in Africa
or anywhere else, can cause problems for debt repayment partly because of the
potential for sanctions,” S&P Global analyst Ravi Bhatia said, adding that
vital international support can also get shelved.
Gabon, where the Bongo family
had ruled for nearly 60 years amid stark inequality, has yet to face the kinds
of sanctions imposed on Mali, Guinea, Burkina Faso and Niger – although its
International Monetary Fund programme was already off track.
Moody’s cited the rise in oil
prices in its decision to hold off on a full downgrade, as well as Gabon’s
membership of the Central African monetary union (CFA franc), which shields it
from currency volatility.
The country’s bond spreads
have eased somewhat since investors’ initial panic and could recover entirely,
some analysts say, if it makes its first post-coup bond payment on time next
month.
“You may get a situation where
bondholders might say, if it’s a change away from long-term single leaderships,
then it may well be a turn for the better,” said Simon Quijano-Evans, chief
economist with Gemcorp. “As long as elections and democracy come back”.
Broadly though, concerns about
sovereign stability across Africa loom large. This year’s “Fragile States
Index” published by non-profit The Fund for Peace rated 46 African countries as
at least somewhat unstable.
Even in Kenya, a solid
democracy on the other side of the continent, investors warn that general risk
aversion could push up the cost of issuing a new bond.
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