© 2026 GlobalCapital, Derivia Intelligence Limited, company number 15235970, 4 Bouverie Street, London, EC4Y 8AX. Part of the Delinian group. All rights reserved.

Accessibility | Terms of Use | Privacy Policy | Modern Slavery Statement | Event Participant Terms & Conditions | Cookies

Africa

Most recent/Bond comments/Ad

Most recent/Bond comments/Ad

Most recent


◆ Why emerging market issuers are doing less in dollars ◆ Republic of Congo located between rock and hard place ◆ The GlobalCapital Podcast was brought to you by the numbers 17, 100 and the whole Alphabet
The yield was ultra high but Congo had little room to manoeuvre
Benin showed Islamic issuance is a viable market for sub-Saharan African sovereigns
Observers have questioned why the country is issuing debt at this price
More articles/Ad

More articles/Ad

More articles

  • Mozambique’s debt crisis is the latest financial market hot potato to be passed around by its stakeholders with a series of statements that would not look out of place in an election campaign. But with the IMF in the country and Mozambique’s future ability to pay looking ever more likely, it is time to reach an agreement, restructure and move on.
  • Bankers were calling the end of the dream run in emerging market bonds on Friday after Liquid Telecom was unable to tighten pricing or meet the $600m size target for its debut note on Thursday.
  • Debut issuer Liquid Telecom had the sole focus of the CEEMEA primary bond market this week with bankers on the deal hoping that the combination of high yield and low duration will tick the right boxes for investors as rates continue to tick up.
  • Pan-African fibre cable company Liquid Telecom is expected to come to the market with a $600m five non-call three year trade this week, bolstered by sharply improving sentiment towards sub-Saharan Africa credit.
  • Bondholders and creditors remain at loggerheads over the restructuring of Mozambique’s debt following the publication of an independent audit of the country’s debt by risk assessment firm Kroll.
  • ABS
    The World Bank has issued an insurance linked securities (ILS) and derivatives offering to aid in the containment of worldwide pandemics, funding the organisation and enabling it to react quickly in the early stages of a major outbreak.