Home GCC Bahrain Bahrain in talks with banks for bond sale in second half of 2021 The nation last tapped the international debt market in January by Bloomberg June 6, 2021 Bahrain has started talks with banks for a potential debt sale in the second half of this year, according to people familiar with the matter. The discussions are still preliminary, the people said, asking not to be identified because the plans are private. The nation last tapped the international debt market in January, when it raised $2bn. Cash from a debt sale would bring some relief for the island state. Bahrain saw a sharp deterioration in finances in 2020 after the Covid-19 pandemic spurred widespread lockdowns and curbed demand for energy, dragging Brent crude to the lowest level in about two decades. Bahrain’s 2020 budget deficit of BD1.6bn ($4.2bn) was wider than the government’s projection in its fiscal plan. And it’s unclear if a $10bn package pledged by neighbours in 2018 will be enough to sustain its finances. In the last few weeks, both Moody’s Investors Service and S&P Global Ratings lowered the country’s outlook to negative. “The government remains committed to achieving a balanced budget in the medium-term and will remain opportunistic in its approach to any funding requirements to take advantage of optimal market conditions,” a spokesperson at the Finance Ministry said. Since the nation’s last debt sale, demand for riskier assets has improved, with investors keen to cushion themselves from the prospect of faster inflation with high-yielding assets. Oil has also rallied, rising 38 per cent this year to more than $70 a barrel, bringing the commodity closer to the nation’s fiscal breakeven price, which the International Monetary Fund estimates is around $88. Tags Bahrain Debt finances Fiscal Plan investors 0 Comments You might also like Bahrain’s ATME aims transforming regional markets with asset tokenisation Bahrain’s new domestic minimum top-up tax: What it means for multinationals BNP Paribas to scrap Bahrain as Middle East HQ and cut jobs Abu Dhabi wealth fund ADQ sells $2bn bond