Ethiopia Eurobond restructuring reaches agreement in principle — 12% haircut, new warrant, and IMF backing signal market return. The post IMF-Backed Ethiopia EurobondEthiopia Eurobond restructuring reaches agreement in principle — 12% haircut, new warrant, and IMF backing signal market return. The post IMF-Backed Ethiopia Eurobond

IMF-Backed Ethiopia Eurobond Deal Offers Template for Frontier Debt Workouts

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The Ethiopia Eurobond restructuring has reached an agreement in principle that combines a moderate principal haircut with an innovative warrant instrument and support from official creditors and the International Monetary Fund.

The deal moves Ethiopia a step closer to resolving its 2023 sovereign default and rebuilding access to international capital markets.

A measured approach to debt sustainability

Ethiopia’s Ministry of Finance held restricted talks in June 2026 with an ad hoc committee representing holders of its US$1 billion 6.625% notes due in 2024.

The discussions produced an agreement in principle on a restructuring package centred on a new US$880 million bond carrying a 6.15% annual coupon and maturing on 15 July 2029.

The exchange implies a 12% reduction in principal while extending maturities and slightly reducing borrowing costs.

The government has also committed to normalising payments. Under the proposed terms, Ethiopia will pay three missed coupon payments from December 2023 to December 2024, totalling US$99.375 million. Bondholders who participate in the exchange will also receive a consent fee equal to 0.5% of the original face value of the 2024 notes.

The structure reflects an effort to balance debt sustainability with creditor participation. Investors absorb a moderate haircut, but they also receive compensation through arrears payments and additional incentives.

Crucially, the restructuring is aligned with Ethiopia’s broader debt strategy.

According to the Ministry of Finance, the terms of the proposed New Money Warrant were shared with the IMF, which confirmed that they are consistent with the Fund’s debt sustainability parameters for Ethiopia.

The Ministry also said the co-chairs of Ethiopia’s Official Creditor Committee have issued a non-objection to the warrant structure, subject to approval by the wider creditor group.

That alignment between commercial bondholders, official creditors and the IMF significantly reduces the risk of conflicting restructuring demands and should help facilitate a final agreement.

A warrant designed to bridge today’s constraints and tomorrow’s opportunities

The most innovative element of the Ethiopia Eurobond restructuring is the detachable New Money Warrant.

Under the proposal, bondholders will receive subscription rights to participate in a future Ethiopian sovereign bond issuance of up to US$1 billion on agreed commercial terms.

The instrument effectively gives investors a stake in Ethiopia’s eventual return to international markets without increasing the country’s immediate debt burden.

For creditors, the warrant provides upside participation if Ethiopia successfully stabilises its economy and regains market access. For the government, it preserves near-term liquidity while rewarding investors for supporting the restructuring.

Such instruments are relatively rare in African sovereign debt restructurings and could offer a new approach for balancing debt sustainability with investor recovery prospects.

The deal also carries significance beyond Ethiopia.

The country’s default followed its request for debt treatment under the G20 Common Framework, a process that has often been criticised for lengthy negotiations and limited transparency.

By reaching a creditor-backed agreement in principle supported by the IMF and official lenders, Ethiopia is demonstrating that Common Framework cases can deliver market-compatible outcomes when sovereigns, multilaterals and investors align.

For frontier markets facing external debt pressures, the restructuring may provide a useful template. The combination of a moderate haircut, arrears clearance and a warrant-linked pathway back to markets offers one model for reconciling debt sustainability with future financing needs.

The next phase will be critical.

Investors will closely monitor execution risks, the final documentation of the New Money Warrant and the progress of Ethiopia’s broader reform programme and IMF engagement.

If the transaction closes broadly on current terms and macroeconomic stabilisation continues, the Ethiopia Eurobond restructuring could mark the beginning of a durable return to international capital markets for one of Africa’s largest frontier economies.

The post IMF-Backed Ethiopia Eurobond Deal Offers Template for Frontier Debt Workouts appeared first on FurtherAfrica.

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