RATINGS agency Fitch on Tuesday downgraded Ghana’s long-term foreign-currency issuer default rating to ‘restricted default’, after the country missed the grace period to make a coupon payment on one of its Eurobonds.
Ghana on Friday missed making the $40.6 million coupon payment on its $1bn 2026 Eurobond, as part of the suspension of payments on selected external debt that the government announced in December, Fitch said.
The country has about $13bn in dollar-denominated international bonds, or Eurobonds, as they are also known. Most were trading at between 37 cents and 41 cents on the dollar on Tuesday.
On February 14, Fitch had already downgraded Ghana’s local debt rating to ‘restricted default’.
The government, which is battling a once-in-a-generation economic crisis, said last week it had finished a domestic debt exchange with 85 percent participation of ‘eligible’ bonds – or 64 percent of the 130bn cedis originally slated for restructuring, before pension funds were excluded when unions threatened to strike, Reuters reported.
It has now turned its attention to reaching an initial agreement on restructuring about $29bn of external debt, a condition of securing a $3bn International Monetary Fund loan.