Showing posts with label government bond. Show all posts
Showing posts with label government bond. Show all posts

Sunday, December 5, 2010

Refinery lands 1b USD loan package

PetroVietnam has obtained 1 billion USD in financing for the Dung Quat
Oil Refinery, the Ministry of Finance announced on Sept. 23.


The Vietnam Development Bank will co-ordinate the financing package,
which includes 700 million USD from Government bond proceeds and the
remainder from French bank BNP Paribas, which is extending credit for
the deal through 2020 at an annual interest rate of 3.3 percent,
following a four-year grace period.


PetroVietnam
will borrow the bond proceeds for a 16-year term at a fixed interest
rate of 3.6 percent, following four year's grace.


The ministry has authorised Citibank's Trust Agency in New York to
collect interest on the 700 million USD loan made from Government bond
proceeds, while the Ministry of Finance will make interest payments
directly to BNP Paribas.


The financing will be
allocated to the Dung Quat Oil Refinery Plant No 1, which began
operating at 100 percent production capacity last month. The plant has
imported 5.7 million tonnes of crude oil and processed nearly 5 million
tonnes so far, delivering over 4.7 million tonnes of refined products to
market.


In order to ensure repayment, Circular No
114/2010/TT-BTC issued by the ministry late Sept. 23 requires
PetroVietnam to give highest priority to servicing the loans under this
package. If it falls past due, the Ministry of Finance will require
other lenders to freeze existing and further credit to the oil giant.


The ministry is preparing further risk-provision plans
to ensure repayment of the 1 billion USD debt at maturity and is
guaranteeing ultimate repayment from the State budget.


However, following the recent troubles of debt-laden shipbuilder
Vinashin, PetroVietnam was expected to set an example as the best
economic group in Vietnam.


Last week, the
Government instructed the Ministry of Finance to consider Vinashin's
request for 300 million USD in Government bond proceeds to service its
debt to French bank Natixis.


If this proposal is
approved, the 1 billion USD in capital raised by Vietnam's second
overseas sale of Government bonds – offering higher yields than the
lower-rated Philippines and Indonesia – would go to Vinashin and
PetroVietnam.


The bonds were expected to offer a yield of 6.95 percent and a nominal interest rate of 6.75 percent.


The bond sale was originally conceived to provide capital for energy
and infrastructure projects that would support growth in an economy
suffering from a shortage of foreign exchange./.

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Saturday, December 4, 2010

Refinery lands $1 bln loan package

PetroVietnam has obtained US$1 billion in financing for the Dung Quat Oil Refinery, the Ministry of Finance announced Thursday

The Vietnam Development Bank will co-ordinate the financing package, which includes $700 million from Government bond proceeds and the remainder from French bank BNP Paribas, which is extending credit for the deal through 2020 at an annual interest rate of 3.3 percent, following a four-year grace period.

PetroVietnam will borrow the bond proceeds for a 16-year term at a fixed interest rate of 3.6 percent, following four year's grace.

The ministry has authorised Citibank's Trust Agency in New York to collect interest on the $700 million loan made from Government bond proceeds, while the Ministry of Finance will make interest payments directly to BNP Paribas.

The financing will be allocated to the Dung Quat Oil Refinery Plant No 1, which began operating at 100 percent production capacity last month. The plant has imported 5.7 million tonnes of crude oil and processed nearly 5 million tonnes so far, delivering over 4.7 million tonnes of refined products to market.

In order to ensure repayment, Circular No 114/2010/TT-BTC issued by the ministry late Sept. 23 requires PetroVietnam to give highest priority to servicing the loans under this package. If it falls past due, the Ministry of Finance will require other lenders to freeze existing and further credit to the oil giant.

The ministry is preparing further risk-provision plans to ensure repayment of the $1 billion debt at maturity and is guaranteeing ultimate repayment from the State budget.

However, following the recent troubles of debt-laden shipbuilder Vinashin, PetroVietnam was expected to set an example as the best economic group in Vietnam.

Last week, the Government instructed the Ministry of Finance to consider Vinashin's request for $300 million in Government bond proceeds to service its debt to French bank Natixis.

If this proposal is approved, the $1 billion in capital raised by Vietnam's second overseas sale of Government bonds – offering higher yields than the lower-rated Philippines and Indonesia – would go to Vinashin and PetroVietnam.

The bonds were expected to offer a yield of 6.95 percent and a nominal interest rate of 6.75 percent.

The bond sale was originally conceived to provide capital for energy and infrastructure projects that would support growth in an economy suffering from a shortage of foreign exchange.

 

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Saturday, November 27, 2010

Japan PM warns of more action vs yen

TOKYO - Japanese Prime Minister Naoto Kan said Tokyo was ready to act again if the yen moved sharply, keeping traders on guard against further intervention as expectations of US monetary easing weighed on the dollar.

Japan intervened in the currency market last week by selling yen for the first time in more than six years as its surge to a 15-year high against the dollar threatened to derail Japan's slowing economy and worsen deflation.

In an interview with the Financial Times published on Wednesday, Kan said currency intervention would be unavoidable if there were a drastic change in the yen exchange rate.

The comments coincided with the dollar's drop below 85 yen to its weakest level since last week's intervention, after the Federal Reserve signaled it was ready to stimulate the US economy more.

Traders said the yen was still below levels that would trigger another intervention, but more yen selling could not be ruled out.

"I don't think markets are bracing for imminent intervention with the dollar still above 84.00 yen. But if the dollar falls further to test 82 yen, markets will focus on whether authorities will step in again to defend that level," said Ayako Sera, market strategist at Sumitomo Trust & Banking.

"Japanese authorities will intervene in the event of sharp market moves, regardless of whether Kan will be away from Japan or not."

Kan, who is traveling to New York this week for a U.N. General Assembly meeting, said there was an agreement among G20 nations that overly rapid currency movements were undesirable, and that he would seek to defend Japan's action.

Bank of Japan Governor Masaaki Shirakawa declared further support for the country's economy, saying in a newspaper interview the central bank would provide ample funds to the market.

That would include liquidity supplied through intervention, Shirakawa said, suggesting that the BOJ would continue to refrain from draining funds released into the market when authorities sell the yen.

The BOJ also stands ready to ease policy further at its next rate review on October 4-5, although there is a debate within the bank on what exactly it should do next with its policy options limited, sources familiar with the bank's thinking said.

BOJ's options

Those options include increasing government bond purchases, buying private sector assets or expanding a cheap fund-supply scheme targeting growth industries, sources say.

Shirakawa told the Yomiuri newspaper that greater uncertainty about the global economy meant increased risks to Japan's recovery, a warning echoed by BOJ board member Ryuzo Miyao.

Miyao, who joined the board in March, told business leaders in western Japan that a possible extended spell of sluggish US economic growth could force the BOJ to alter its forecast of a sustained moderate recovery in Japan's economy.

He also said the BOJ was not ruling out any policy option, including increasing its government bond buying from the current 21.6 trillion yen per year.

With its hands tied by public debt double the size of Japan's $5 trillion economy, the government has mainly counted on the BOJ to come up with ways of revving up the sagging economy.

But Kan said Tokyo planned a comprehensive package of measures that would stimulate domestic demand and help to weaken the currency.

While he did not elaborate on measures to boost domestic demand, he said one option was to use the yen's strength to invest in natural resources overseas.

"I think it is necessary to combine economic policy and monetary policies that will be conducive to ... slightly lower than the current level," he added.

Kan has instructed his cabinet to compile an extra budget for the current fiscal year to March, although the size of spending will likely be too small to significantly boost the economy.

Unsterilized interventions are a departure from the usual central bank practice of absorbing the extra funds through issuance of government bills, effectively making intervention a part of a monetary loosening mix.

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