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Sri Lanka asks dollar debt holders for 30% haircut to ease crisis

COLOMBO, June 29 (Reuters) – Sri Lanka is asking foreign investors in its international sovereign bonds to take a 30% haircut and is seeking similar concessions from domestic holders of its other dollar-denominated bonds as it seeks to restructure its massive debt, its central bank governor said on Thursday.

The government will also exchange shorter-term treasury bills into longer-term bonds as part of a domestic debt restructuring programme, Nandalal Weerasinghe told a press conference as he unveiled details of the long-awaited plan, which will cover part of the island nation’s $42 billion domestic debt.

Sri Lanka is struggling with its worst financial crisis since its independence from Britain in 1948 after the country’s foreign exchange reserves hit record lows and triggered its first foreign debt default last year. Widespread protests driven by the economic collapse forced former president Gotabaya Rajapaksa to flee the country last July.

Pledging to put its mammoth debt burden on a sustainable track, Sri Lanka locked down a $2.9 billion bailout from the IMF in March, which is due for its first review in September.

The domestic restructuring is needed to help the country reach the IMF programme goal of reducing overall debt to 95% of GDP by 2032.

Meanwhile, the government is also pushing forward with reworking its foreign debt with bondholders and bilateral creditors including China, Japan and India.

The domestic plan announced on Thursday did not give details on Colombo’s pitch to foreign lenders, but Weerasinghe indicated the government is proposing the same terms to both local and international creditors.

Under the domestic debt revamp, holders of locally issued dollar-denominated bonds such as Sri Lanka Development Bonds (SLDBs) will be given three options, Weerasinghe said.

The first would be treatment similar to that being proposed to investors in the country’s international sovereign bonds — a 30% reduction in the principal they are owed, with repayment in 6 years at a 4% interest rate, he said.

“We are asking foreign debt holders for a 30% haircut but that is still under discussion,” Weerasinghe said.

Sri Lanka currently has $12.5 billion in international sovereign bonds. It also has $11.3 billion in bilateral loans.

Weerasinghe would not comment on current talks with bilateral creditors. Sri Lanka has set a goal of finalising debt restructuring talks by September to align with the IMF review.

China wants multilateral lenders like the International Monetary Fund (IMF) and World Bank to absorb some of the losses, which those institutions and many developed nations, notably the United States, are resisting.

Japanese Finance Minister Shunichi Suzuki said he was unaware of Colombo’s call for a haircut for creditors and said he could not comment on its debt restructuring.

MORE INTERNATIONAL SUPPORT

The domestic debt proposals will be presented to parliament on Saturday for approval.

Earlier on Thursday, the World Bank approved $700 million in budgetary and welfare support for the country, the biggest funding tranche since the IMF deal in March. About $500 million of the funds will be allocated for budgetary support while the remaining $200 million will be for welfare support earmarked for those worst hit by the crisis.

As part of efforts to shore up its finances and win IMF support, the government has already raised taxes, cut spending and slashed subsidies on goods such as fuel, and the economy is starting to show signs of recovery.

Sri Lanka’s cabinet approved the domestic debt programme at a special cabinet meeting on Wednesday, a source at the president’s office told Reuters.

Domestic bondholders will have two other options:

– Similar treatment to that being proposed to bilateral dollar creditors: No reduction in their principal, but the maturity would be extended to 15 years with a 9-year grace period at a 1.5% interest rate.

– Exchange their holdings for local currency denominated instruments: No principal haircut with a 10-year maturity at the SLFR (Sri Lanka Standing Lending Facility Rate) + 1% interest rate.

Local currency bonds held by superannuation funds, including pension funds, will be replaced with new bonds which will have 9% interest, Weerasinghe added.

But banks’ local currency bonds have been excluded from the scheme to avoid putting further strain on the financial sector.

Sri Lanka’s sovereign U.S. dollar bonds were edging higher in early morning trade, with the bonds maturing in November 2025 and March 2024 gaining the most, 0.77 cents, by 0627 GMT, according to Tradeweb data.

Source: REUTERS

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