Pakistan, Facing Debt Default, May Seek IMF Bailout (Update1)

By Khaleeq Ahmed

Oct. 19 (Bloomberg) -- Pakistan, perceived as the world's riskiest
borrower, may seek the help of the International Monetary Fund to
avoid default on its debt obligations, said Shaukat Tarin, financial
adviser to the prime minister.

The South Asian country may need as much as $6 billion to shore up its
foreign-currency reserves after they dwindled more than 74 percent in
the past year to about $4.3 billion. Pakistan has $3 billion in debt
servicing costs in the coming year. Standard & Poor's, doubting the
nation's ability to repay debt, cut the long-term foreign-currency
rating on Oct. 6 to seven levels below investment grade, and said it
may lower it again.

Pakistan may need as much as $4.5 billion to tide over the crisis and
is working on a few plans, including seeking loans from the World
Bank, the Asian Development Bank and U.K.'s Department for
International Development, Tarin said in an interview today.

``If I don't feel the comfort level with the multilateral agencies and
our bilateral friends in three to four weeks, then I'll have to write
to the IMF,'' he said via mobile phone. A default is ``out of the
question.''

A delegation from Pakistan will meet IMF officials in Dubai tomorrow
and Oct. 21 for a ``routine economic review,'' he said. Pakistan has
already presented its economic stabilization plan to the IMF,
including removal of subsidies, tighter monetary policy and steps
toward reducing the fiscal deficit, he said.

``If this plan is acceptable to them, only then we will have the IMF
program,'' he said.

Record Low

Pakistan's next interest payment on its dollar-denominated bonds is
due in December and the government is scheduled to repay $500 million
in February on a 6.75 percent note. Multilateral and bilateral aid may
not be timely enough, S&P said on Oct. 6. Surging import costs widened
the nation's balance of payments deficit, sending the local currency
to a record low last week.

The current economic crisis is the deepest faced by the nuclear-armed
nation since 1999, when it came close to defaulting on its debt and
reserves plunged to less than $1 billion. Pakistan ended its three-
year, $1.5 billion loan program with the IMF in December 2004.

``The balance-of-payments position is grim as some short- term
obligations are coming up,'' said Syed Suleman Akhtar, an economist at
Foundation Securities Pvt. in Karachi. ``There's been no concrete
commitment yet.''

China Rebuff

The global credit-market crisis triggered a capital outflow from
emerging markets, with Pakistan's benchmark Karachi Stock Exchange KSE
100 Index losing more than a third of its value this year. The bourse
kept trading restrictions in place and sought police protection to
thwart a repeat of violence on July 16, when hundreds of protesters
stoned the exchange and shouted anti-government slogans.

Pakistan faces the politically unpopular decision to seek an IMF
bailout after China rebuffed its neighbor's request for cash, the New
York Times reported yesterday. The U.S. and other nations are
preoccupied with the financial crisis, and Saudi Arabia, a traditional
ally, refused to offer oil concessions, the newspaper said.

China may offer a soft loan of $500 million to the nation, the
Financial Times reported, citing a finance ministry official it didn't
identify.

Pakistan has sought about $1.5 billion from the World Bank, $1.6
billion from ADB and about 500 million pounds ($864 million) from the
U.K.'s DFID, apart from a request for $500 million from the Islamic
Development Bank, Tarin said.

Widening Deficits

The South Asian country's balance of payments deficit widened to the
quarter to Sept. 30 to $3.95 billion from $2.27 billion a year
earlier, while the current-account deficit reached a record $14
billion in the year ended June 30, according to data provided by the
government.

Credit-default swaps on Pakistan's $2.7 billion of dollar- denominated
bonds outstanding have more than tripled since August to 2,453.7 basis
points, according to CMA Datavision.

That means it costs $2.45 million annually to protect $10 million of
the country's debt from default for five years. The cost reached a
record $3.07 million on Oct. 6.

To contact the reporter on this story: Khaleeq Ahmed in Islamabad at
[EMAIL PROTECTED]

Last Updated: October 19, 2008 03:22 EDT
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