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Armenia Uses Eurobond Proceeds To Cover Deficit And Buy Back Debt

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  • Armenia Uses Eurobond Proceeds To Cover Deficit And Buy Back Debt

    ARMENIA USES EUROBOND PROCEEDS TO COVER DEFICIT AND BUY BACK DEBT

    Reuters
    March 26 2015

    YEREVAN, March 26 Thu Mar 26, 2015 7:29pm IST

    YEREVAN, March 26 (Reuters) - Armenia has used proceeds of a recent
    $500 million Eurobond to buy back part of an older issue and will
    use another $85 million to cover its 2015 budget deficit instead of
    selling domestic debt, the deputy finance minister said.

    Pavel Safaryan told a government meeting on Thursday that Armenia
    had received $487.4 million from the March 19 sale of a $500 million
    10-year Eurobond.

    Some of that money was used to buy back $205 million of its only
    previous Eurobond, a $700 million seven-year transaction sold in
    September 2013. The new Eurobond paid a yield of 7.5 percent, much
    less than the 2020 bond's 10 percent coupon.

    "We will use 40 billion drams ($85 million) from the Eurobond issue
    to cover the budget deficit in 2015 instead of an initial decision to
    issue local treasury bills," Safaryan said, adding this would avoid
    overloading the domestic debt market.

    The 2015 budget sees total government revenues of 1.191 trillion drams,
    spending of 1.305 trillion drams and a deficit of 114 billion drams.

    The dram has fallen sharply in value over the last year along with
    Russia's rouble, which has been hit by weak oil prices and Western
    sanctions over Moscow's role in the Ukraine crisis. Armenia, a former
    Soviet state of 3.2 million people, is closely tied to Russia through
    trade and remittances.

    The local currency was trading at around 473 to the dollar on Thursday,
    compared to just 407 drams a year earlier.

    Armenia is rated Ba3 with a negative outlook by Moody's and B+ with
    a stable outlook by Fitch.

    Downgrading Armenia in January, Moody's cited declining remittances,
    uncertain foreign investment, exchange rate volatility and pressure
    on foreign exchange reserves.

    ($1= 472.5 drams) (Reporting by Hasmik Lazarian; Writing by Margarita
    Antidze; Editing by Jason Bush and Catherine Evans)

    http://in.reuters.com/article/2015/03/26/armenia-bonds-idINL6N0WS3HB20150326

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