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IRAQ TO RAISE $2BN WITH SOVEREIGN BOND NEXT YEAR

▶ Country in the middle of preparing 2018 budget incorporat­ing proposed oil price of $43 to $46 per barrel

- SARMAD KHAN

Iraq, Opec’s second-biggest oil producer, plans to tap the internatio­nal debt market with a US$2 billion sovereign bond in the second half of next year as it looks to rebuild the war-torn country after years of political instabilit­y and sectarian strife, according to its central bank governor.

“It will be 2018, but first of all we have to get the approval of [the] budget and then ministry of finance, they [will] have to plan for that [bond issuance]…. might be in the second half,” Ali Al Alaq said in Abu Dhabi.

The country, which has the world’s fifth-biggest oil reserves, had last raised $1bn through an unsupporte­d bond in August, its second foray into the internatio­nal markets this year. It raised a similar amount through a US-backed bond sold at 2.149 per cent in January this year.

For years Iraq has battled against ISIL and its sovereign offering in August came on the heels of the country declaring victory in the battle for Mosul against the militant group, which once controlled large swaths of land in the country.

The draft document of Iraq’s 2018 budget specifies the target of a $2bn bond, Mr Al Alaq said, without saying whether it would be raised through one deal or split over several transactio­ns.

“It will be easy to get that [amount] because we tried that in 2017 and we attracted so many investors and there was big demand on those bonds,” he said, adding that Iraq will be mindful about how much it will raise. “You have to be careful with that.”

Iraq, which is implementi­ng a sizeable fiscal adjustment programme and running an austerity campaign, has prepared its 2018 budget on a US$43 to $46 per barrel day base oil price, far lower than around the $60 mark, where crude has been trading for the past few weeks.

“If you look at the draft of the budget for 2018, the [oil] price that we have proposed is between $43 to $46 [per barrel], despite [the current] price being more than that.

“That will help us to put a ceiling on our expenditur­e and keep increasing our domestic revenues,” Mr Al Alaq said, adding that higher crude prices mean the country will be able to more convenient­ly pay off its debts.

“It will also give us the room for [servicing] our public debt. This is very important and we would like to give it a priority.”

Explaining the variance between $43 and $46 per barrel base oil price for next year’s budget, he said Iraq had worked with the $43 figure, although the IMF suggested that the budget could be built at a $48 per barrel price assumption. Hence the government has now chosen the in-between figure of $46, he said.

Iraq, working with the IMF through a three-year standby agreement, is implementi­ng measures to control inefficien­t expenditur­es while protecting its social spending. Fiscal consolidat­ion was achieved, but at a slower pace and to move the programme forward authoritie­s plans to implement further fiscal measures next year to ensure external and debt sustainabi­lity.

Mr Al Alaq, however, said that fiscal reform so far is “going well. They [the IMF] are comfortabl­e with that. We are very close to their targets. Most of the criteria they have listed we have met so far.”

The country, which still relies heavily on the sale of hydrocarbo­ns for revenues, is now seeing signs of improvemen­t in its non-oil economy.

“We have to enhance the real [GDP] sectors. It was very hard to do that as it was a difficult time with the war [on ISIL]. Now we can see some signs of serious projects, serious investors and serious investment­s coming to the country,” he said.

“That’s a positive sign for the near future.”

Iraq, which had 65 banks operating in the country as of January this year, is also looking to restructur­e some of the government-controlled lenders as part of its efforts to strengthen the financial sector.

There are seven state-owned banks in Iraq which dominate market share and account for the bulk of assets and credits. The financial positions of two – Rasheed Bank and Rafidain Bank – are fragile after years of quasi-fiscal operations, according to an August IMF statement on Article 1V consultati­ons.

There are operationa­l issues to improve the performanc­e of the banks. After cleaning up the balance sheets, it’s open ALI AL ALAQ Iraq central bank governor

Mr Al Alaq, who heads the committee that is overseeing the restructur­ing, said the government is now pushing to speed up the process.

“We just had a meeting a few days ago. Everybody was waiting for the financial statements to come from the internatio­nal firm [appointed to audit the banks] and without that you can’t plan anything,” he said adding that there are still a “few items to be fixed in the financial statements” of these banks.

“That’s what we are trying to do right now: separate those bad accounts.

“There are also operationa­l issues to be resolved to improve the performanc­e of the banks,” he added.

“After cleaning up the balance sheets, it’s open. There are a few options that we will go with.

“Those options include everything,” he said when asked if the lenders will be merged or opened up to foreign investors.

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 ??  ?? Faisal Al Haimus, chairman of the Trade Bank of Iraq, Ahmed Al Sayegh, chairman of ADGM, and Ali Al Alaq, Iraq central bank governor, yesterday Antonie Robertson / The National
Faisal Al Haimus, chairman of the Trade Bank of Iraq, Ahmed Al Sayegh, chairman of ADGM, and Ali Al Alaq, Iraq central bank governor, yesterday Antonie Robertson / The National

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