Business
Cote d’Ivoire’s Bond Falls As Fighting Rages
Cote d’Ivoire’s 2.3 billion dollars 2032 bond, on which it defaulted at the end of January, fell as much as 1.7 points on Monday.
It reversed some of last week’s gains as forces loyal to the two presidential claimants continued a fierce standoff.
The bond rose late last week to 31/2-month highs as hopes grew that incumbent Laurent Gbagbo would soon be ousted by rival Alassane Ouattara.
The latter, internationally recognised as the winner of the November 28 election in the world’s top cocoa producer, is seen as more likely to pay out on the defaulted bond.
Fighters loyal to the presidential rivals held their respective positions across Abidjan on Sunday, a day that saw less fighting than the previous three.
“The situation in Abidjan still looks pretty tense,” said Stuart Culverhouse, chief economist at frontier markets brokerage Exotix.
“(Abidjan) has not fallen as quickly as some people anticipated, so there could be a certain amount of profit-taking.”
The bond fell as much as 1.7 points in price to 47.6 in early trade and the yield rose 0.4 per cent to 13.4 per cent, according to Reuters data.
It had trimmed losses slightly to 47.9.
The yield fell over three per cent last week as Ouattara’s forces gained ground in battles.