Bloomberg
Hungary plans to offer a range of dollar and euro bonds to shore up its budget as it’s facing a potential delay in accessing European Union funds because of a feud with the bloc over democratic values.
The country may sell 10-year and 30-year bonds in dollars, as well as seven-year and/or 20-year bonds in euros. Hungary’s debt management agency increased its cap for 2021 foreign-currency borrowing to 4.5 billion euros ($5.3 billion) from 644 billion forint ($2.2 billion).
“The plan to issue several bonds, in both euros and dollars at once, is quite bold, but considering the state of the market, the issuance will be successful,†said Anton Hauser, a Vienna-based fund manager at Erste Asset Management.
The issuance spree comes as spreads on dollar and euro debt hover near lowest levels in more than a decade, with the world’s largest central banks continuing to offer support given concerns over the stability of the global economy. Hungarian hard-currency bonds underperformed emerging-market peers this year, losing 2% in dollar terms
as the broad market rise 0.1%,
according to a Bloomberg index.
Hungary has yet to access to billions of euros in EU pandemic funds because of Prime Minister Viktor Orban’s stand-off with the bloc’s executive. The EU says it’s concerned about Hungary’s spotty record in fighting corruption, while the government in Budapest says the anti-LGBTQ law that forms part of Orban’s re-election campaign is the real reason for the delay.
Orban is facing parliamentary elections that will most likely take place in April 2022. It could be the most closely-fought Hungarian vote since he returned to power in 2010.
Hungary mandated BNP Paribas SA, Citigroup Inc., Goldman Sachs Group Inc. and JPMorgan Chase & Co. to arrange the bond sales. It last tapped the euro market in November, and hasn’t sold dollar bonds since 2014.
It’s a busy start to the week for emerging-market sovereign issuance, with Turkey and Indonesia also selling dollar bonds.