Romania sells EUR 3 bln Eurobonds as financing needs are widening

12 September 2023

Romania raised on September 11 EUR 3 billion (some 1% of GDP) with two Eurobonds, amid high interest expressed by investors (EUR 9 billion worth of orders placed) in an attempt to cover part of the gap between the actual financing need and the initial plans – which might range between 1.1% and 2.4% of GDP. 

But the EUR 3 billion was only the rest of the planned external financing: Romania raised two-thirds of the full-year target - EUR 5.6 billion of EUR 8.5 billion - from the foreign market in January.

In the meantime, the target was pushed up significantly by insufficient tax collection. The government initially targeted a 4.4%-of-GDP deficit (consistent with the initial financing needs) but informally shifted the target to 5.5%-of-GDP during the summer, and failure to implement any fiscal amendments by the end of the year would result in a 6.8%-of-GDP gap, according to the executive’s calculations. 

The Eurobons were launched just after Fitch expressed somewhat optimistic expectations vis-a-vis Romania’s capacity to conduct the fiscal consolidation, but before the announcement of the concrete, promised fiscal amendments. Fitch said Romania would be able to keep the public deficit at 5.5% of GDP, but this is still uncertain as the government may enforce corrective measures only from January. 

The maturities of the two Eurobonds are five and ten years. The fixed coupons, subject to minor adjustments, were 255bp and 340bp above mid-swap, resulting in 5.5% (five-year maturity) and 6.57% (ten-year maturity), Ziarul Financiar reported. For comparison, Romania issued Eurobonds with the same maturities at the end of January 2023, when the spreads over the mid-swap were 195bp, respectively 340bp.

The bonds’ arrangers were Citi, Erste Group, HSBC, JP Morgan and Societe Generale.

iulian@romania-insider.com

(Photo source: Breeze393/Dreamstime.com)

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Romania sells EUR 3 bln Eurobonds as financing needs are widening

12 September 2023

Romania raised on September 11 EUR 3 billion (some 1% of GDP) with two Eurobonds, amid high interest expressed by investors (EUR 9 billion worth of orders placed) in an attempt to cover part of the gap between the actual financing need and the initial plans – which might range between 1.1% and 2.4% of GDP. 

But the EUR 3 billion was only the rest of the planned external financing: Romania raised two-thirds of the full-year target - EUR 5.6 billion of EUR 8.5 billion - from the foreign market in January.

In the meantime, the target was pushed up significantly by insufficient tax collection. The government initially targeted a 4.4%-of-GDP deficit (consistent with the initial financing needs) but informally shifted the target to 5.5%-of-GDP during the summer, and failure to implement any fiscal amendments by the end of the year would result in a 6.8%-of-GDP gap, according to the executive’s calculations. 

The Eurobons were launched just after Fitch expressed somewhat optimistic expectations vis-a-vis Romania’s capacity to conduct the fiscal consolidation, but before the announcement of the concrete, promised fiscal amendments. Fitch said Romania would be able to keep the public deficit at 5.5% of GDP, but this is still uncertain as the government may enforce corrective measures only from January. 

The maturities of the two Eurobonds are five and ten years. The fixed coupons, subject to minor adjustments, were 255bp and 340bp above mid-swap, resulting in 5.5% (five-year maturity) and 6.57% (ten-year maturity), Ziarul Financiar reported. For comparison, Romania issued Eurobonds with the same maturities at the end of January 2023, when the spreads over the mid-swap were 195bp, respectively 340bp.

The bonds’ arrangers were Citi, Erste Group, HSBC, JP Morgan and Societe Generale.

iulian@romania-insider.com

(Photo source: Breeze393/Dreamstime.com)

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