The International Monetary Fund is open to renegotiating Ghana’s $3 billion financing program with the incoming administration provided accompanying reforms aren’t jeopardized, Bloomberg News reported. “IMF-supported programs are developed collaboratively with each country’s authorities,” a spokesperson for the Washington-based lender said in response to emailed questions.
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Ghana
Ghana’s financial authorities are reviewing restrictions imposed on pensions funds that limit their investments in offshore assets, Bloomberg News reported. The National Pensions Regulatory Authority previously introduced a requirement that pension funds seek authorization before buying foreign assets as a way to preserve foreign-exchange. The measure was implemented after Ghana began a restructuring of its debt, Nana Akua Asare, a spokeswoman for the NPRA, said by phone on Tuesday.
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Ghana is close to receiving another $360 million disbursement from the International Monetary Fund as it reached a staff-level agreement with the Washington-based lender on the third review of an extended credit facility program, Bloomberg News reported. The final decision will be taken by the IMF Executive Board, the fund said in a statement on Friday. This would bring to $1.92 billion in total disbursements the West African nation has received since agreeing to a $3 billion bailout package with the fund in May 2023.
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Ghana received “overwhelming” participation and support from its international bondholders to restructure $13 billion of eurobonds, a key step marking the conclusion of the West African nation’s debt rework, Bloomberg News reported. Eligible holders representing 98.6% of outstanding bonds agreed to a debt exchange following a consent solicitation, paving the way for the government to issue new bonds to investors to replace existing ones, Minister of Finance Mohammed Amin Adam said in the capital, Accra on Thursday. Investors will swap their securities for new notes on or around Oct.
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A group of Ghana’s commercial creditors including BlackRock Inc. and Abrdn Plc backed the government’s offer to exchange about $13 billion of eurobonds for restructured notes, a crucial part of the West African nation’s debt rework, Bloomberg News reported. “The committee considers that the legal and financial terms of the exchange offer and consent solicitation are in line with the agreement in principle reached between the committee and Ghana in June,” the group said in a statement on Thursday. Investors will be able to swap their debt until Sept.
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Ghana reached an agreement in principle with private creditors to restructure about $13 billion of debt, a key milestone in the West African country’s efforts to overhaul its loans. The nation’s bonds rallied, Bloomberg News reported. Under terms of an accord announced on Monday, investors accepted nominal losses of 37% on their holdings, according to a statement issued by the advisers to an international creditor committee and the government..
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Ghana and its bondholders will restart talks next week to hash out a debt restructuring deal on $13 billion of international bonds, four sources told Reuters, on the heels of a deal finalised with official creditors earlier this week, Reuters reported. Ghana, a gold and cocoa producer, defaulted on most of its $30 billion in external debt in 2022, weighed by the COVID-19 pandemic, the war in Ukraine and rapid global interest rate hikes that boosted borrowing costs.
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Ghana reached a deal with creditors formalizing debt treatment plans agreed in January, opening the the way for the disbursement of aid from the International Monetary Fund, the finance ministry said Wednesday, Bloomberg News reported. “The financial terms of the agreement remain unchanged,” the ministry said in a statement.
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