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◆ 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
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Senegal has launched its 2033 amortising note to raise $1.1bn after books reached $7.7bn at 8:30am New York time on Tuesday.
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Kenya’s $500m loan from development financial institutions (DFIs) will be syndicated six months from its signing date, to avoid clashing with the country's commercial loan of $1bn from international banks, according to one of the bankers on the deal.
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Afreximbank’s second syndicated loan this year is expected to grow from the initial asking amount of $700m as banks pile in to join, according to bankers on the deal.
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The price of oil provided a point of focus for emerging markets this week after a barrage of other macro events came and went without too much concern. Easing sales of Brent crude created a decent window for Senegal to bring its first dollar trade in almost three years.
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New deals from the Middle East and Africa are beginning to flow as EM’s hot run gathers momentum. In the Gulf Cooperation Council, Saudi Electricity Co (Seco) and Oman Electricity Transmission are exploring dollar opportunities as Abu Dhabi Commercial Bank plots a comeback. Further south and west, Senegal has picked leads for a dollar comeback as the market awaits the results of Ivory Coast’s RFP.
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Senegal will meet investors next week ahead of a potential return to the dollar market for the first time in nearly three years.