Since 2020, risk-averse nations have increasingly turned to intricate financial structures, including total return swaps and state-contingent bonds. While these tools were designed to navigate volatile conditions like pandemic-era aid cuts and geopolitical instability, they have created a fragmented landscape. Pierre Cailleteau, managing director at Lazard, noted that the resulting lack of clarity makes it difficult for creditors to assess their standing, ultimately forcing borrowing countries to pay a premium for the added complication.
Frontier economies, including Angola, Nigeria, and Senegal, have adopted these mechanisms to bypass traditional bond market constraints, while Zambia and Sri Lanka have utilized them to structure restructuring deals. The IMF and World Bank have voiced concerns regarding these opaque liabilities, particularly regarding the status of preferred creditors during defaults. Cailleteau argued that mandatory transparency must become a prerequisite for accessing multilateral financing. Currently, investor sentiment appears to ignore these structural risks, with emerging market debt premiums sitting at near-record lows, a trend Lazard identifies as a potential sign of market exuberance underpricing the underlying volatility.
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