ECONOMYNEXT – Sri Lanka is looking at options to re-structure domestic debt, or local law local currency debt (LLLC), without harming the banking sector and announce them the International Monetary Fund said in a report.
Local Law Local Currency Debt is held by the banks, pension funds, individuals and the central bank.
Sri Lanka has to re-structure debt to meet a ceiling on debt-rollovers and new deficits called the gross financing need from 2027, which has been set at 13 percent of GDP (from 30-pct in 2022).
Foreign debt service has to be 4.5 percent of GDP or below.
“The authorities and their financial advisors are weighing different options and their associated legal procedures to optimize the design of an LLLC debt treatment while preserving financial stability,” the IMF said in a statement.
“The maturity shortening and interest rate increase of LLLC debt in the recent periods contributed to a sharp increase in the government’s GFNs.
“The authorities and their financial advisors are weighing different options and their associated legal procedures to optimize the design of an LLLC debt treatment while preserving financial stability.
In the course of driving the country into a currency crisis and external default, by printing money to repay debt issued for past deficits (rejecting bids at bond auctions), financing private sector activity (sterilizing interventions) to maintain a policy rate central bank had acquired a large volume of Treasuries.
One the gross financing need ceiling can be met, is to extend the maturity of central bank held Treasury bills in to a longer term and an unspecified ‘select pool debt is to be ‘re-profiled’ while reducing the impact on banks.
“T-bills held by the Central Bank are exchanged into longer term debt instruments; a select pool of the remaining domestic debt is assumed to be reprofiled to reduce gross financing need, while limiting the impact on the financial sector,” the report said.