Pakistan may require a debt adjustment in some form given the sharp deterioration in its external position, even if some International Monetary Fund (IMF)/bilateral support materializes.
Barclays’ Credit Research report on Pakistan estimates recoveries in the mid-to-high 50s under various reprofiling scenarios and see them falling to the 40s if principal haircuts are involved.
Pakistan sovereign bonds have been pricing a high chance of a default/restructuring since September 2022, when Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif noted the need for debt relief (moratorium from Paris Club members) in a Bloomberg interview. Since then, the sovereign’s bonds have traded in a range of 31-46 cents on the dollar.
Rebuilding foreign reserves is key for the government to restore investor confidence. The government is exploring foreign direct investments with China and the UAE. But with no access to capital markets, the country’s ability to secure loans or funding from bilateral and multilateral sources will be critical to arrest the drain of reserves.
In its base case, the report assigns a high probability to the “need to adjust debt” and believes political outcomes in the coming 3-4 months will be important drivers to predict the timing of the event. The type and size of available multilateral and bilateral funding will determine the type of restructuring needed; reprofiling or principal haircut.
While it is possible that the nation can avoid restructuring, there is a real risk that some form of reprofiling will become necessary. In such a case, the report suggests international bonds will play a key role.
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