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Cameroon green-lights R6bn in external borrowing to cover treasury gaps
Cameroon green-lights R6bn in external borrowing to cover treasury gaps

TimesLIVE

time26-05-2025

  • Business
  • TimesLIVE

Cameroon green-lights R6bn in external borrowing to cover treasury gaps

Cameroon's finance minister has been authorised to raise up to 200-billion CFA francs (R6.18bn) from international financial markets to shore up government cash flows for fiscal year 2025, according to a presidential decree. Kelly Mua Kingsly, head of finance operations of the state at Cameroon's ministry of finance, told Reuters on Wednesday that the government would consider using several market instruments, but most likely syndicated loans. "This is most likely given the urgency and nature of liquidity needs. It is also attractive due to shorter structuring time and flexible drawdown options," Kingsly said. In addition, he said concessional or semi-concessional loans suitable for budget support components and assimilable treasury bonds or treasury bills on the Bank of Central African States (BEAC) market could also be considered. Eurobonds were less likely, he said, due to high global interest rates, low sovereign credit ratings and lower appetite from international capital markets for frontier markets in the wake of the Covid-19 pandemic and during a period of geopolitical risk.

Cameroon greenlights $347 million in external borrowing to cover treasury gaps
Cameroon greenlights $347 million in external borrowing to cover treasury gaps

Reuters

time21-05-2025

  • Business
  • Reuters

Cameroon greenlights $347 million in external borrowing to cover treasury gaps

YAOUNDE, May 21 (Reuters) - Cameroon's finance minister has been authorised to raise up to 200 billion CFA francs ($348 million) from international financial markets to shore up government cash flows for fiscal year 2025, according to a presidential decree. Kelly Mua Kingsly, Head of Finance Operations of the State at Cameroon's Ministry of Finance, told Reuters on Wednesday that the government would consider using several market instruments, but most likely syndicated loans. "This is most likely given the urgency and nature of liquidity needs. It is also attractive due to shorter structuring time and flexible drawdown options," Kingsly said. In addition, he said concessional or semi-concessional loans suitable for budget support components and assimilable treasury bonds or treasury bills on the Bank of Central African States (BEAC) market could also be considered. Eurobonds were less likely, he said, due to high global interest rates, low sovereign credit ratings and lower appetite from international capital markets for frontier markets in the wake of the COVID-19 pandemic and during a period of geopolitical risk. The borrowing plan comes as Cameroon faces slow disbursement of external financing and delays in revenue mobilisation, notably non-oil tax collection deficits. Tight monetary policy by the regional central bank to curb inflation and stabilise the CFA franc currency has provoked a liquidity squeeze across Central Africa, while the BEAC's reserve requirement has impacted treasury liquidity. Officials also say the government is keen to diversify its sources to avoid excessive domestic borrowing that could crowd out private sector investment. Cameroon has recently relied on domestic and external borrowing to bridge budget deficits. ($1 = 575.5000 CFA francs)

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