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    Mozambique sinks deeper into default after missing $119 million loan payment

    Mozambique missed a $119 million payment due Tuesday on a loan Credit Suisse Group AG arranged, the second debt repayment the government failed to make in as many months.

     

    The $622 million facility was taken out by state-owned ProIndicus and was supposed to fund the purchase of boats and radar systems to protect the country’s Indian Ocean coastline, where companies including Italy’s Eni SpA and US-based Anadarko Petroleum Corp. have large offshore gas reserves. Credit Suisse on Tuesday declined to comment on its financing of Mozambique.

     

    “We are in negotiations with the investors,” Finance Ministry spokesman Rogerio Nkomo said by phone yesterday from the capital, Maputo.

     

    Donors and the International Monetary Fund froze aid to the government after about $1,4 billion of undisclosed loans, including the ProIndicus facility, were uncovered in April last year. The southeast African nation said in October it couldn’t afford to service its debt and subsequently defaulted on a $60 million interest payment on its Eurobonds in January.

    In November, Mozambique said it had fallen into $175,5 million of arrears on another loan a state-owned company contracted, which the government had guaranteed.

     

    The following are more details on Mozambique’s finances and debt:

     

    The nation expects to receive $350 million in capital gains tax after Eni sold a 25 percent stake in its gas project to Exxon Mobil Corp., and part of this could go toward paying arrears, according to Verner Ayukegba, sub-Saharan Africa analyst at IHS Markit Economics in London.

     

    A group of holders of the $727 million in Eurobonds due 2023 has so far resisted entering into restructuring negotiations until after the government publishes an audit into its debt, due for completion at the end of the month. They also want to first see the outlines of a new IMF programme, and have questions over inter-creditor equity addressed, according to their adviser, Charles Blitzer.

     

    While formal restructuring negotiations haven’t started, Blitzer has been communicating with government advisers, which include Lazard Ltd and White & Case, he said on Tuesday.

     

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