PH plans $500-M ‘samurai’ bond sale
The proposed offshore borrowing — part of this year’s $3-billion borrowing program — also marks the Philippine government’s return to the Japanese bond market for the first time since the COVID-19 pandemic.
“Based on our advisors, I think it is the optimum time to get lower rates. The idea is to do it for the cheapest borrowing cost,” Finance Secretary Ralph Recto said in an ambush interview during the 74th anniversary of the Philippine Life Insurance Association.
In a surprise move, the Bank of Japan has raised its interest rate by 15 basis points to 0.25 percent from between 0 and -0.1 percent on Wednesday, making it the highest hike since 2008.
BOJ Governor Kazuo Ueda stated that the bank could tighten policy further if necessary.
Nonetheless, the Japanese debt securities market remains attractive to sovereign and institutional borrowers looking for the cheapest funding options.
In the case of the Philippines, Recto approved the issuance of samurai bonds on July 29 and is now being processed by the Bureau of Treasury. The government will also issue bonds in US dollar and euro denominations in the second semester.
The Department of Finance earlier said it was considering raising funds for its priority projects from yen-denominated securities, or samurai bonds.
The last time that the Philippines had tapped the samurai bond market was in April 2022 during the Duterte administration, when it raised a total of ¥70.1 billion or P28.55 billion.
The last issuance was a four-tranche offering with tenors of five, seven, 10 and 20 years. Coupon rates were recorded at 0.76 percent, 0.95 percent, 1.22 percent and 1.83 percent, respectively.