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Business News of Monday, 6 November 2017

Source: bloomberg.com

Sub-Saharan dollar bonds attract investors hungry for yield

The Standard Bank Africa Sovereign Bond Yield Index indicates that African dollar bonds yield 6% The Standard Bank Africa Sovereign Bond Yield Index indicates that African dollar bonds yield 6%

The hunt for yield is taking investors such as M&G Investment to the world’s least developed region - sub-Saharan Africa.

Countries that 10 years ago didn’t exist in the international bond market are now reaching out to global investors. South Africa became the region’s first dollar bond issuer in the 1990s, and in the past decade, they have been joined by other sovereigns including Rwanda, Ghana and Cameroon. Most recently, Ivory Coast sold $1.25 billion of 16-year notes alongside a €625 million ($729 million) 8-year bond.

African dollar bonds yield 6 percent according to the Standard Bank Africa Sovereign Bond Yield Index - higher than the Bloomberg USD Emerging Market Sovereign Bond Index’s 4.4 percent. African local bonds in the AFMI Bloomberg African Bond Index yield 12 percent on average.

“We have overweight in sub-Saharan Africa,” said Pierre Chartres, a retail fixed-interest investment director at M&G Investment. “These countries are under-researched by other funds -- so they are to our advantage.”