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Eskom bailouts to wind down in 2028 will keep South Africa's Eskom off the bond markets.

Eskom, the state-owned electricity utility in South Africa, said it would not access international capital markets before 2028. This is because it's working through a plan to stabilize its finances, backed by the government.

The utility that supplies almost all of South Africa’s electricity, and which employs over 40,000 people, reported earlier its first profit for the full year in eight years.

Eskom's power outages have hindered South Africa's growth in economic terms for over a decade. Its repeated bailouts also drained the state's coffers.

The company's presentation of results showed that it had reduced its gross debt from 412.2 billion rand to 327.7 milliards rand (19 billion dollars) in the year ending March, thanks to government debt relief.

Eskom has raised 8,7 billion rand in development finance from export credit agencies and is planning to raise another 13,4 billion rand over the next five-year period.

In the short term, borrowing will be limited to these facilities. Any additional financing is subject to approval by the South African finance minister in accordance with the conditions of debt relief.

Eskom said it aims to return to capital markets from 2028, when it expects to raise about 25 billion rand annually through conventional debt, including sustainability-linked bonds to fund renewable energy projects, emission cuts and grid upgrades.

The yield on Eskom's 2028 government-guaranteed dollar bonds has dropped 120 basis points this year to 5.34%.

Electricity Minister Kgosientsho RAMOKGOPA said that Eskom would not receive any further bailouts. The government will now allocate funds to other priorities.

Eskom received 140 billion rands in support by March 2025 since the Eskom Debt Relief Act was implemented in 2023.

The term of the current board has been extended until 30 November 2025. Ramokgopa announced that announcements about a new board will be made next week.

(source: Reuters)