Bondholders sent ‘$12bn debt rework proposal to govt’
Sri Lanka’s private creditors have sent a proposal on how to restructure $12 billion of overseas debt, including a new type of bond designed to ease repayments in case of future economic pressure, said two sources with direct knowledge of the matter.
Reuters reported that the proposal sent on Oct. 2 provides a write-down, or haircut, on both capital and interest, added the sources who declined to be named because the talks are private.
It foresees the issuance of regular sovereign bonds and so-called Macro Linked Bonds (MLBs), which will automatically lower coupon payments starting in 2027 if Sri Lanka fails to meet some of the economic targets linked to its International Monetary Fund (IMF) program.
Representatives for the government did not respond to a request for comment.
A spokesperson representing the creditor committee did not reply to a request for comment.
The overall proposal includes an option for creditors that combines MLB notes with a regular bond and a second option of regular bonds with a Value Recovery Instrument (VRI), one of the sources said.
The MLBs were included to ensure the new instruments would be index eligible, the sources said.
Bonds included in an index generally have more liquidity.
The proposal would be a crucial step for Sri Lanka which, under the terms of a $2.9 billion IMF bailout secured in March, has to provide assurances of debt restructuring from bondholders and key bilateral lenders, including China, Japan and India.
The sources added that it would be the first time such step-down bonds are being used in a debt restructuring.
One of the sources said that the trigger of the step-down payments on the MLBs would be linked to indicators such as Sri Lanka’s gross financing needs (GFN) to gross domestic product (GDP) ratio and debt to GDP ratio.
If the GFN/GDP ratio rises “above 4.5% in 2027, coupons will adjust downwards”, the source added.
The restructuring proposal is based on parameters from the debt sustainability analysis that the IMF produced when it agreed on the programme for the battered economy.
One of the sources said a copy of the proposal was also sent to the IMF and the Paris club secretariat.
Bondholders and the government remain in discussions through financial and legal advisers, so they are still not restricted to trade the country’s securities.