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Bloomberg predicts doom and gloom

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Pakistan Default Risk Surges as $50 Billion Debt Bill Coming DueBloomberg

Divya Patil, Faseeh Mangi

Bets are rising that Pakistan will default on its debt just as it starts to revive investor interest with a reduction in terrorist attacks.

Credit default swaps protecting the nation’s debt against non-payment for five yearssurged 56 basis points over the past week amid the global market sell-off, the steepest jump after Greece, Venezuela and Portugal among more than 50 sovereigns tracked by Bloomberg. About 42 percent of Pakistan’s outstanding debt is due to mature in 2016 -- roughly $50 billion, equivalent to the size of Slovenia’s economy.


Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif has worked to make Pakistan more investor-friendly since winning a $6.6 billion International Monetary Fund loan in 2013 to avert an external payments crisis. The economy is forecast to grow 4.5 percent, an eight-year high, as a crackdown on militant strongholds helps reduce deaths from terrorist attacks.


"Pakistan’s high level of public debt, with a large portion financed through short-term instruments, does make the sovereign’s ability to meet their financing needs more sensitive to market conditions," Mervyn Tang, lead analyst for Pakistan at Fitch Ratings Ltd., said by e-mail.

Since Sharif took the loan, Pakistan’s debt due by end-2016 has jumped about 79 percent. He’s also facing resistance in meeting IMF demands to privatize state-owned companies, leading to a strike this month at national carrier Pakistan International Airlines Corp.


The bulk of this year’s debt, some $30 billion, is due between July and September, and repayments will get tougher if borrowing costs rise more. The spread between Pakistan’s 10-year sovereign bond and similar-maturity U.S. Treasuries touched a one-year high on Thursday.

If Pakistan’s debt servicing costs rise, Sharif doesn’t have much room to maneuver. Already about 77 percent of the country’s 13 trillion rupees ($124 billion) budget for the year through June 30 is earmarked for interest and principal repayment on loans.

More from Bloomberg.com: China's Central Bank Says No Basis for Continued Yuan Decline

Right now, there’s not much reason to panic. Fitch’s Tang says Pakistan’s external liabilities are "relatively modest," foreign-currency reserves have risen, the IMF is ready to help meet maturing loans and Chinese investment in an economic corridor is on its way.

“Improving growth prospects, lower inflation and smaller budget deficit should help to underpin investor confidence, particularly the domestic investor base,” Tang said.

S. Javed, a spokesman for Pakistan’s Finance Ministry, didn’t respond to emailed questions. Pakistan is committed to successfully implement its IMF macroeconomic stability program, the Finance Ministry said in a statement Feb. 1. Sharif’s administration has a “quite good" chance of completing the program, IMF mission chief Harald Finger said last month.

Only 17 percent -- or $8.3 billion -- of Pakistan’s 2016 bond and loan repayments will need to be in foreign currency. That accounts for 40 percent of the nation’s $21 billion in foreign-exchange holdings.

That stockpile, however, isn’t airtight. While it increased by more than 55 percent last year -- the steepest rise in Asia -- more than half consists of debt and grants that could leave the country quickly if global risk appetite worsens. Outflows would weaken the rupee, a currency that is estimated by the IMF to be as much as 20 percent overvalued even though it’s proved remarkably stable amid the recent market turmoil.

Investors should expect volatility in bonds and pressure on the rupee this year, according to Mustafa Pasha, head of investments at Lakson Investments Ltd., which manages $200 million of Pakistani stocks and bonds.

While the plunge in oil prices helped the government last year, predicting the outlook would be like “reading the tea leaves," he said by phone from Karachi.

Another worry, as ever in Pakistan, is political stability. The military has ruled the country for most of the time since independence in 1947, and General Raheel Sharif -- no relation to the prime minister -- has boosted the army’s image with a campaign to root out terrorists who massacred 134 children in 2014.

While Raheel Sharif has said he plans to retire when his term ends in November, the risk of political upheaval is ever present. Pakistan has the 10th highest political risk score among more than 120 countries in the Economist Intelligence Unit ranking, worse than Egypt and Iran.


More from Bloomberg.com
 
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its not gloom and doom since Pakistan has never defaulted, but we need to get out of the debt trap and that only comes with fiscal and budgetary & financial reforms. Some good progress made but the external debt alone is one major impediment towards our growth. Must get out of the debt trap and implement IMF reforms.....then dump the IMF and stop resorting to the usual emergency room procedures. One crucial reason why we've recovered economically under this govt is b/c oil prices are at their lowest for some time. We cant rely on external factors to act as a relief. A lot of re-thinking needs to be done.

and what we need to do is bring back all the stolen wealth from public coffers back to Pakistan...but the Swiss and other governments have not been cooperative to help Pakistan in this regard. I dont even know where to begin!
 
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What a load of crap backed by zero evidence or any statistics of any sorts. No shocker as it has been written by an Indian.

Pakistan economy isnt a peach but this is complete nonsense as she didnt give any stats to back her claim.
 
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Pakistan risks default as $50 billion debt bill due in 2016: report

Despite improvement in the country's security situation and the economy growing at an eight-year high, Pakistan risks default as 42 percent of its foreign debt, around $50 billion, is due in 2016, reports Bloomberg.

Around $30 billion is due between July and September, of which $8.3 billion will need to be in foreign currency, depleting 40pc of the nation’s $21 billion in foreign-exchange holdings.

“Pakistan’s high level of public debt, with a large portion financed through short-term instruments, does make the sovereign’s ability to meet their financing needs more sensitive to market conditions,” Mervyn Tang, lead analyst for Pakistan at Fitch Ratings Ltd., told Bloomberg.

In 2013, a $6.6 billion loan from the International Monetary Fund (IMF) was used to make payments for previous outstanding loans and avoid a Greece-like crisis. Since then, the projected debt due by end-2016 has grown by 79pc.

At Rs13 trillion ($124 billion), 77 pc of the budget is already allocated for loan repayments this year.

A concurrent challenge is meeting IMF demands to privatise state-owned concerns, as witnessed by the strike at Pakistan International Airlines, which ended only last week.

November 2015 saw new taxes worth Rs40 billion to meet the fiscal deficit.

Read more: Rs40bn additional tax measures soon to meet fiscal deficit: IMF

In a Feb 1 statement, the Finance Ministry emphasised that Pakistan is committed to successfully implementing its IMF macroeconomic stability program, while the IMF is confident; mission chief Harald Finger said there is a “quite good” chance of implementing the guidelines provided.

Despite the grim outlook, experts are optimistic. According to Fitch’s Tang, Pakistan’s external liabilities are “relatively modest,” foreign-currency reserves have risen, the IMF is ready to help meet maturing loans and Chinese investment in an economic corridor is on its way.

“Improving growth prospects, lower inflation and smaller budget deficit should help to underpin investor confidence, particularly the domestic investor base,” Tang said.

Other risks include further capital flight and currency outflows, as well as devaluation of the rupee and fluctuations in the exchange rate. According to the IMF, the rupee is already overvalued at the current rate by as much as 20pc.

Mustafa Pasha, head of investments at Lakson Investments Ltd, which manages $200 million of stocks and bonds, told Bloomberg investors should expect volatility in bonds and pressure on the rupee this year.

Although the decrease in oil prices has helped, the future remains unclear.

Pakistan risks default as $50 billion debt bill due in 2016: report - Pakistan - DAWN.COM
 
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:china: China won't let Pakistan default.

Venezuela on the other hand will default this year :agree:
 
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Waterboard politicians and confiscate their property.

12717362_991953950897247_9120537528951542909_n.jpg
 
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LET US START MOVEMENT OF

"KARZ UTARO MULIK SAWAROO"

Again
:lazy2:
 
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It is unlikely to default, especially if it has the backing of the IMF and world bank. As much as people may laugh, there is also China's huge financial commitment.

What will likely happen is that Pakistan will pay off a portion of its immediate debt(which the current national budget has already allocated to do, from what I've read) and renegotiate the rest. Renegotiations are likely to succeed, as reformation and development projects will build a strong argument for Pakistan's case.

This is not an Argentina, where it had little to no backing from anyone. Neither is it like Venezuela, where the country refuses to enact liberalization reforms.
 
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50% Pakistani.
Issue has been discussed in another thread. Last year $6 billion was paid and this year only 1.5 billion is due. Report is utterly bogus. Economic situation isnt a peach but this report was written by an amature.
 
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Issue has been discussed in another thread. Last year $6 billion was paid and this year only 1.5 billion is due. Report is utterly bogus. Economic situation isnt a peach but this report was written by an amature.

To the authenticity or accuracy of the report, I have not passed any comment. But the article was not just 'Indian' writing it. But, had a Pakistani too.
 
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"(A previous version of this story was corrected to show smaller outstanding external debt)"
Pakistan's Risk Surges to One-Year High Amid Global Turmoil - Bloomberg Business

"The statement further clarified that Pakistan’s total external public debt was $50.9 billion on end-June, 2015, maturing over the next 40 years.

It further clarified that out of the total debt, around $4 billion was maturing in 2016 and $2.8 billion in 2017.

The Finance Ministry said that the External public debt also included Eurobonds of $4.6 billion out of which only $500 million was maturing in March 2016 and $750 million in June 2017."

Source: Bloomberg News Agency report on debt misleading: Finance Ministry
 
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