Pakistan’s dollar bonds are expected to extend their Asia-leading rally as recent credit-rating upgrades and plans to re-enter global debt markets lift investor sentiment, according to Bloomberg.
The government intends to issue yuan-denominated bonds later this year and to return to the Eurobond market in 2026 for the first time in nearly five years, a key milestone for a country that came close to default two years ago. The move could spur further gains in debt, according to Goldman Sachs Asset Management and UBS Asset Management.
These planned issuances highlight Pakistan’s effort to diversify its funding sources and curb reliance on the International Monetary Fund. So far this year, its dollar bonds have delivered a 24.5% return, the highest in Asia.
Danske Bank Asset Management, which bought Pakistan’s dollar bonds at the peak of its financial crisis two years ago, has increased its holdings several times this year, said Soren Morch, head of emerging markets debt. “We are optimistic that Pakistan will stay on the reform course, rebuilding buffers like higher dollar reserves and also getting market access and taking advantage of that,” he told Bloomberg.
S&P Global Ratings and Fitch Ratings have both upgraded Pakistan’s sovereign rating this year, pointing to better fiscal management and reform momentum under Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif’s International Monetary Fund(IMF) backed programmes. The government has obtained billions in IMF funding by raising taxes and keeping fiscal policy discipline.
“The outperformance will sustain as long as they’re sticking to the IMF policies, which we believe they have a strong commitment to do so,” said Shamaila Khan, head of fixed income emerging markets and Asia Pacific at UBS Asset Management.
A potential reopening of market access for Pakistan is another support, she added, because “then you really are not concerned about refinancing over the next two to three years.”
Even so, tensions with neighbours India and Afghanistan remain a risk for already sluggish economic growth, while higher energy prices could put pressure on public finances, given that oil makes up about 30% of total imports.
For now, though, investors remain positive. “In the next six to 12 months, we see rating upgrades as the first catalyst and market access as the next catalyst” for capital appreciation in markets like Pakistan, said Salman Niaz, head of global fixed income for APAC ex-Japan at Goldman Sachs Asset Management.