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Oil price rise to help MENA debt sales decline this year

Oil price rise to help MENA debt sales decline this year
Updated 26 February 2018

Oil price rise to help MENA debt sales decline this year

Oil price rise to help MENA debt sales decline this year

LONDON: Debt sales across the Middle East and North Africa are expected to fall by 6 percent this year following a 30 percent decline in 2017, according to a report from a ratings agency.
Standard & Poor’s (S&P) expects government spending cuts and a firmer oil price to keep a lid on new debt.
The 13 MENA nations — including Ƶ — rated by S&P are forecast to borrow around $181 billion this year, down $11 billion from 2017.
Egypt remains the largest borrower with $46.4 billion or 26 percent of the region’s gross commercial long-term borrowing, followed by Iraq at $35 billion or 19 percent of the total, and Ƶ at $31 billion or 17 percent of total borrowing.
“We expect MENA sovereigns’ absolute commercial debt will increase by $21 billion to about $764 billion at year-end 2018, up 3 percent from 2017,” the ratings agency said in a statement.
S&P also projects that government debt rated in the “AA” category — which includes Abu Dhabi and Kuwait — will account for 19 percent of total debt, up from 16 percent in 2017.
The share of “A” category debt will rise to about 20 percent of total regional debt. S&P noted that no MENA sovereigns are rated “AAA.”
Sharp oil price declines in 2014 and 2015 resulted in a “significant widening of GCC fiscal deficits,” according to S&P.
The S&P Global Ratings report stated that “in recent years, GCC sovereigns have implemented fiscal consolidation measures to cut government spending and increase non-oil government revenues. We expect regional fiscal deficits to moderate as a result, while the modest recovery in oil price of late should boost government revenues.”