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Angola intends to offer $1 bln bond in 2024, eyes ESG problem -Finance Minister

Angola wishes to return to international bond markets this year with a $1 billion bond, Finance Minister Vera Daves de Sousa told , predicting the federal government could bring its debttoGDP ratio to 60% or below by 2027.

Daves de Sousa, speaking on the sidelines of the International Monetary Fund and World Bank spring conferences in Washington stated a rise in oil costs could help bring down obtaining expenses for Africa's second-largest crude oil exporter.

We hope that will assist us get access to the marketplace at a. much better cost, Daves de Sousa stated, adding the federal government was. also checking out providing an ESG bond.

Increasing stress in the Middle East have lifted oil prices. above $90 per barrel in early April.

Sub-Saharan African issuers have gone back to markets this. year after a near-two year hiatus when the fallout from. COVID-19, Russia's war in Ukraine and rising worldwide interest. rates made foreign currency financial obligation excessively costly for. most nations in the region from early 2022 onwards.

Daves de Sousa said she expected Angola's debt-to-GDP ratio,. currently at 74-75%, to come down to 60% or below as the. government is pushing ahead with its ambitious reforms.

Our national advancement plan, is to discover a way to. diversify up until 2027-- so hopefully near to 2027 and even before. that we will reach that point and we will safeguard it, she stated.

A raft of privatisations become part of the strategy. The. federal government is anticipating to move ahead with a public listing of. the Angolan Financial Obligation and Securities Exchange (BODIVA) and a stake in. insurance provider ENSA this year, while Unitel, the country's greatest. telecoms company, ought to debut in late 2024 or early. 2025. State-oil producer Sonangol was on track for a. dual-listing next year or in 2027, she added.

Daves de Sousa said the economy ought to grow by 2.8% this. year, and around the same rate again next year.

Inflation pressures meanwhile remained a problem, and the. government might selected to extend the existing due date to stage. out final fuel aids by end-2025.

Depending upon the social and financial conditions, we will. take more time to settle (the removal), however we still want to. do it slowly, she said.

The IMF had actually informed Angola in March to continue eliminating fuel. aids. Angola's Reserve bank Guv Manuel Tiago Dias informed. on Saturday that inflation, which he predicted at 19% by. year-end, might be greater if fuel aids were removed.

Output at Africa's second-largest crude oil exporter has. declined progressively considering that hitting a peak of 2 million barrels per.

(source: Reuters)