Egypt has raised $4 billion in a dollar-denominated Eurobond sale that closed late on Tuesday, the finance ministry said, part of a drive to plug its budget deficit and boost dollar holdings as it pursues an IMF-backed reform programme. The bonds were issued in five, 10- and 30-year tenors at 5.58 pct, 6.59 pct and 7.9 pct, respectively - prices on par with Eurobonds it sold last May.
The issuance attracted $12 billion in bids, and were sold "despite the instability of the global market, which reflects the great confidence in the Egyptian economic reform programme," Finance Minister Amr El Garhy told Reuters. Egypt in late 2016 agreed to a three-year $12 billion IMF loan programme tied to sweeping reforms that include tax hikes and subsidy cuts aimed at enticing back investors that fled after its violent popular uprising in 2011.
Garhy said Egypt would begin talks this month with European banks to issue euro-denominated Eurobonds expected to valued at 1-1.5 billion euros and sold next April, he said. Egypt's foreign debt rose to $80.8 billion in the quarter that ended in September.