Sovereign Contingent Bonds

Executive Summary

In August 2020, as the global pandemic was straining emerging countries’ ability to make debt payments, we published a white paper – “Sovereign Contingent Bonds: How Emerging Countries Might Prepay for Debt Relief” – introducing the concept of “sovereign coco bonds,” a way for countries to structure bond agreements to allow for more flexible policy options in the face of a crisis. Though it didn’t gain traction then, two years later we believe this concept is still relevant and could be extraordinarily valuable to countries.

This update on the topic first summarizes our original idea, with a current example, and then republishes the full description of our proposal from our 2020 paper.


How Sovereign Contingent Bonds Would Work

In 2020, we suggested that issuers and investors should consider building contractual flexibility into debt agreements to provide financial relief in the event of a crisis. Applicable crises could be global like the Covid-19 pandemic or isolated like flooding in Pakistan. Our full idea is described in the “Our Simpler Proposal” section below. We proposed that these new “sovereign coco bonds” could feature payment-in-kind (PIK) and toggle options that would allow a country to defer or capitalize bond coupon payments at some point in the life of the obligation. It’s often the case that with one year of grace on debt service, a country might get through its shock, whatever that may be, and avoid a costly default.

Some versions of these “contingent” bonds have previously been issued by small, vulnerable countries, most recently by Barbados. But they always specify certain events where debt service suspension would be triggered. Our proposal was to make deferment triggers discretionary for the country, so that any shock would qualify. Clauses like the ones we propose would likely be welcomed by official creditors, who often point out that they provide debt relief (i.e., Debt Service Suspension Initiative (DSSI)), while bondholders do not.

One criticism of the idea is that the financial architecture makes it very difficult (perhaps impossible) to go back and retroactively insert these clauses into existing bond contracts, many of which still have a long way to maturity. But with all the countries defaulting these days, that is an opportunity to “reset” and harmonize bond contracts in the context of the debt restructuring process, which always involves extinguishing existing bonds for new bonds with more favorable negotiated payment terms for the country. It’s an excellent moment in history to think about this as a (at least partial) solution to future shocks.