Pakistan Default Risk Surges as $50 Billion Debt Bill Coming Due

Pakistan Default Risk Surges as $50 Billion Debt Bill Coming Due http://l.yimg.com/bt/api/res/1.2/y0JkgvmAQ7A9EKRPJnGINw–/YXBwaWQ9eW5ld3NfbGVnbztxPTg1/http://media.zenfs.com/284/2011/06/08/bloomberg-106x27_102102.gif By Divya Patil, Faseeh Mangi February 14, 2016 5:00 PM

                                                                                                              [http://l3.yimg.com/bt/api/res/1.2/mu9VODLjtL_XlEUpgooPsQ--/YXBwaWQ9eW5ld3NfbGVnbztmaT1maWxsO2g9MjI1O3E9NzU7dz0zMDA-/http://globalfinance.zenfs.com/en_us/News/Reuters/a7cae04dbf213abdc1128d400b77b74b](http://finance.yahoo.com/news/pakistan-default-risk-surges-50-220000024.html#)                                                                                                                .                                                                  View photo
                         
                                                           Nawaz Sharif, Pakistan's prime minister, arrives ahead of a news conference at the Chancellery in Berlin, …
                                  
         
     
                                                                              Bets are rising that Pakistan will default on its debt  just as it starts to revive investor interest with a reduction in  terrorist attacks.

Credit default swaps protecting the nation’s debt against non-payment for five years surged 56 basis points over the past week amid the global market sell-off, the steepest jump after Greece, Venezuela and Portugal among more than 50 sovereigns tracked by Bloomberg. About 42 percent of Pakistan’s outstanding debt is due to mature in 2016 – roughly $50 billion, equivalent to the size of Slovenia’s economy.
Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif has worked to make Pakistan more investor-friendly since winning a $6.6 billion International Monetary Fund loan in 2013 to avert an external payments crisis. The economy is forecast to grow 4.5 percent, an eight-year high, as a crackdown on militant strongholds helps reduce deaths from terrorist attacks.
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“Pakistan’s high level of public debt, with a large portion financed through short-term instruments, does make the sovereign’s ability to meet their financing needs more sensitive to market conditions,” Mervyn Tang, lead analyst for Pakistan at Fitch Ratings Ltd., said by e-mail.
Since Sharif took the loan, Pakistan’s debt due by end-2016 has jumped about 79 percent. He’s also facing resistance in meeting IMF demands to privatize state-owned companies, leading to a strike this month at national carrier Pakistan International Airlines Corp.
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The bulk of this year’s debt, some $30 billion, is due between July and September, and repayments will get tougher if borrowing costs rise more. The spread between Pakistan’s 10-year sovereign bond and similar-maturity U.S. Treasuries touched a one-year high on Thursday.
If Pakistan’s debt servicing costs rise, Sharif doesn’t have much room to maneuver. Already about 77 percent of the country’s 13 trillion rupees ($124 billion) budget for the year through June 30 is earmarked for interest and principal repayment on loans.
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Right now, there’s not much reason to panic. Fitch’s Tang says Pakistan’s external liabilities are “relatively modest,” foreign-currency reserves have risen, the IMF is ready to help meet maturing loans and Chinese investment in an economic corridor is on its way.
“Improving growth prospects, lower inflation and smaller budget deficit should help to underpin investor confidence, particularly the domestic investor base,” Tang said.
S. Javed, a spokesman for Pakistan’s Finance Ministry, didn’t respond to emailed questions. Pakistan is committed to successfully implement its IMF macroeconomic stability program, the Finance Ministry said in a statement Feb. 1. Sharif’s administration has a “quite good" chance of completing the program, IMF mission chief Harald Finger said last month.
Only 17 percent – or $8.3 billion – of Pakistan’s 2016 bond and loan repayments will need to be in foreign currency. That accounts for 40 percent of the nation’s $21 billion in foreign-exchange holdings.
That stockpile, however, isn’t airtight. While it increased by more than 55 percent last year – the steepest rise in Asia – more than half consists of debt and grants that could leave the country quickly if global risk appetite worsens. Outflows would weaken the rupee, a currency that is estimated by the IMF to be as much as 20 percent overvalued even though it’s proved remarkably stable amid the recent market turmoil.
Investors should expect volatility in bonds and pressure on the rupee this year, according to Mustafa Pasha, head of investments at Lakson Investments Ltd., which manages $200 million of Pakistani stocks and bonds.
While the plunge in oil prices helped the government last year, predicting the outlook would be like “reading the tea leaves," he said by phone from Karachi.
Another worry, as ever in Pakistan, is political stability. The military has ruled the country for most of the time since independence in 1947, and General Raheel Sharif – no relation to the prime minister – has boosted the army’s image with a campaign to root out terrorists who massacred 134 children in 2014.
While Raheel Sharif has said he plans to retire when his term ends in November, the risk of political upheaval is ever present. Pakistan has the 10th highest political risk score among more than 120 countries in the Economist Intelligence Unit ranking, worse than Egypt and Iran.

http://finance.yahoo.com/news/pakistan-default-risk-surges-50-220000024.html

Re: Pakistan Default Risk Surges as $50 Billion Debt Bill Coming Due

Panchi pai, chaudhry puttar, etc can you tell noon that taking loans to prop up Pakistan's forex reserves can be darnomics BUT NOT sound economicS?

Re: Pakistan Default Risk Surges as $50 Billion Debt Bill Coming Due

^^^ Why care, when most Pakistanis like to get 'F' by people like NS, B and Z?

Actually, Pakistan twice defaulted before, both when NS was PM and I$ was finance minster. First default was in late 1998 and second was in early 1999. After that, Pakistan went on begging spree, and got some bheek from few world countries.

NS and ID together have PhD in stealing the country, lying to Pakistanis, taking loans and begging from Arabs/Americans. With them in power, it is obvious that Pakistan would default, but nothing would happen, as they would appeal for bheek, take further loans stealing a chunk from that, sell Pakistani assets cheaply (buying most of it themselves or selling them to their cronies), than lie to Pakistan that all is well, and Pakistan would survive ... leaving the burden for future generations.

Eventually, if these thugs (NS and likes) would stay in power than there would be nothing left to sell, and under the burden of foreign debt (and desire to steal), initially Pakistan would start selling Pakistani armed forces (that Pakistan is already doing for Petrodollars), than Pakistan would sell nuclear capability to USA, and eventually Kashmir to India ... just to survive.

Re: Pakistan Default Risk Surges as $50 Billion Debt Bill Coming Due

Meanwhile India is getting an f-16 factory.

Wow....

Re: Pakistan Default Risk Surges as $50 Billion Debt Bill Coming Due

The Ministry of Finance has contradicted a news report carried by Bloomberg News Agency on Pakistan’s debt obligations and termed it a misleading report and not based on facts.

A statement issued by the Ministry of Finance on Tuesday said that Bloomberg News Agency had carried a misleading report on the debt situation of Pakistan.

“It is unfortunate that despite repeated interactions to correct the factual errors in their report, the agency chose to ignore the clarification and wrote a report not based on factsj,” the statement of the Finance Ministry said.

The statement further said that the report had thus created an impression about Pakistan’s debt profile which was conjectural and contrary to the actual situation.

The ministry’s statement noted that the headline implied that Pakistan’s External debt of $50 billion was maturing in one year, which was factually not correct.

The statement further clarified that Pakistan’s total external public debt was $50.9 billion on end-June, 2015, maturing over the next 40 years.

It further clarified that out of the total debt, around $4 billion was maturing in 2016 and $2.8 billion in 2017.

The Finance Ministry said that the External public debt also included Eurobonds of $4.6 billion out of which only $500 million was maturing in March 2016 and $750 million in June 2017.

“The risk of default is never on the domestic debt but only on the external one. Therefore, the headline number of $50 billion is highly misleading. Such a statement from a highly respected news agency is disconcerting,” the Finance Ministry’s statement said.

It added that the obligations maturing during the year were fully covered by reserves as well as the planned build-up during the year.

Pakistan, the statement said had successfully tapped international capital markets three times during the last 30 months and each time it had received oversubscription to its offers.

The Finance Ministry’s statement noted that Pakistan returned during this year to the international capital market after 7 years and was now a regular issuer of its debt. During this period its credit rating had been enhanced, it added.

Pakistan, the statement said, had only accumulated an additional $3.8 billion of external debt during the tenure of this government since the middle of 2013.

“On the other hand it has accumulated reserves of nearly $21 billion from a dismal level of $7.5 billion on end-February 2014. Thus it is fallacious to claim that Pakistan has built reserves on the back of short-term borrowings,” the statement said.

“Having recently completed the 10th Review under the IMF programme, it has been repeatedly emphasized by the Fund that the risks associated with Pakistan’s external account have been greatly reduced,” the statement said.

Pakistan’s Euro Bonds maturing in 2016s, 2017s, 2019s, 2024s had traded mostly at a premium since May 2014 and CDS levels had been on a downward trajectory as depicted in the graph shown by Bloomberg itself, the statement added.

It said that domestic debt was perpetual in nature and was constantly refinanced through new issues.

“It would be novel to consider domestic debts maturing in the near future as posing any risk of default as a sovereign owes these debts in the local currency,” the statement said.

“We conduct three auctions in the domestic market every month, one for investment bonds of various maturities (three years or more) and two auctions for treasury bills (of maturities of 3, 6 and 12 months,” the statement said.

It added that participation in each auction ranges from Rs 100 billion to Rs 500 billion and accordingly the government refinances its domestic debt from domestic market as a standard practice in all jurisdictions which have competitive debt markets.

Domestic markets (both primary and secondary) are very well developed in Pakistan and as such the government does not feel any cause for concern with regard to refinancing its domestic debt which is also evident from the fact that the yield curve of short term and long term debt have both been declining steadily for the past one year and the yield curve is flattening across the maturity profile which again is a sign of stability.

Further, interest payments on domestic debt as percentage of GDP are moderate at around 4%, the statement said.

The ministry also said that public debt risk indicators have in fact improved during the last two years i.e. the refinancing risk of the domestic debt reduced at the end of 2014-15 as indicated by the percentage of domestic debt maturing in one year, which reduced to 47 percent compared with 64 percent at the end of 2012-13.

It added that exposure to interest rate risk has also reduced as the percentage of debt re-fixing within one year decreased to 40 per cent at the end of 2014-15 as compared with 52 per cent at the end of 2012-13.

The statement further said that the share of external loans maturing within one year was equal to around 28 per cent of official liquid reserves at the end of 2014-15 as compared with around 69 per cent at the end of 2012-13 indicating improvement in foreign exchange stability and repayment capacity.

It added that clearly, the above position establishes that Pakistan’s external account does not face any difficulty in respect of its debt servicing obligations.

“Therefore the headline is more hyperbolic than realistic.”

Re: Pakistan Default Risk Surges as $50 Billion Debt Bill Coming Due

Since we hate Pakistan to the extend that anything posted against Pakistan is taking as word of god...

Re: Pakistan Default Risk Surges as $50 Billion Debt Bill Coming Due

The bloomberg article has overstated a few things.. However, that doesnt take away from the fact that Pakistan is at fiscal risk/possibility of default.

The current IMF loan of $6.3 billion (which is being disbursed over 3 years) is all being used to solely pay off previous loans/interests. And whats telling is that Pakistan's annual debt servicing bill currently stands at around $7 billion.
Starting next year, this IMF loan will also be added to debt servicing, along with other loans that we may possibly get in the CPEC (which happen to come with conditions far worse than any IMF loan). It wouldnt be surprising to see Pakistan's debt servicing bill double in a year's time.

Considering the nature of Pakistan's forex reserves (loans and remittances only, no treasury assets), these reserves will whittle down in a flash if trade revenues dont increase. And if PMLN remains in power, then its a given that trade revenues will not increase. And their sole way of getting monies to service the debt would be through further IMF programs, which IMF would be more than happy to disburse. After all, they prey on foolish countries like ours.

Keep in mind that the current govt loves to keep information from the public, always presenting a rosy picture. Thats what happened in 1998, when were were surprised by a default out of nowhere. Ishaq Dar even managed to fool the IMF back then.

Re: Pakistan Default Risk Surges as $50 Billion Debt Bill Coming Due

In a country where half of the population is illiterate, you think the electoral know what 'default' means?

PMLN always pulls this tricks. Whenever they come to power, borrowing goes out of the roof, and their illiterate electoral base thinks they are doing wonders for the economy. They give one big mega expensive lollipop project, and year or two later the country is defaulted. They did exactly that in 90s, and yet they got elected again. So really nothing has changed and nothing will ever change. They will keep getting elected again and again.

If you think a common Pakistani who has no education and experience will pick up on their corporate style of government - good luck with that.