World Bank to issue $1bn in debut hybrid note this year
The World Bank is looking to issue up to $1 billion in a debut hybrid note on capital markets this year, as development banks face increasing pressure to find new ways to boost their lending.
The G20 group of major
economies has urged multilateral lenders to explore hybrid financing
structures in a push to try and maximise balance sheets and increase funding to
help developing economies cope with crises, including climate change.
The World Bank would be only the second multilateral lender to issue such an instrument after the African Development Bank (AfDB) sold its hybrid capital note in January - the first such financing of its kind from a multilateral lender.
When the AfDB sold this
deeply subordinated, debt-like equity instrument, it said it hoped to establish
this as a new asset class.
"We are working
towards a potential pilot transaction some time this calendar year," said
George Richardson, director of the capital markets and investment department at
the World Bank Treasury.
"It would be
interesting to see if we can find a new way of raising money. The proof is in
the pudding," said Richardson, adding the lender was talking to investors
about the issue and was also closely monitoring market conditions.
Looking at the ratings
that would be assigned to the new instrument, Richardson said the World Bank
was convinced that hybrid capital issued by multilateral development banks
would be a better credit, relative to senior, unsecured bonds, than currently
reflected in the rating agencies' methodologies.
"These state that
hybrid capital will be rated 3 to 5 notches below senior ratings," he
said, adding that Fitch was undergoing a methodology change and it remained to
be seen what changes the ratings agency would make on hybrid capital.
"We are not
commercial banks nor a corporate. Our governance and ownership structure makes
us better credits than commercial banks and corporates," he added.
Moody's assigned an AA3
rating to the AfDB issue, three notches below the bank's AAA rated bonds. The
AfDB hybrid issue traded at 97.6 cents in the dollar on Tuesday, according to
LSEG data, below its debut of just over 100 cents in the dollar in early
February.

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