FinObservatory

Sovereign haircuts / CIV

Cote d'Ivoire

3 concluded restructurings, between 1998 and 2012. The earliest default they settle began in 1983. The worst cost creditors 62.8% of the present value of their claim, in 1998. The longest gap between a default and its settlement was 15 years.

3
Restructurings
55.2%
Median present-value haircut
62.8%
Worst present-value haircut
0 of 3
Cut face value by zero
$16.24B
Debt treated (2020 $)

Every restructuring

Two measures of the same deals, never combined. The present-value haircut discounts what creditors got against what they were owed; the face-value reduction counts only principal written off.

020406080100199820102012Year the restructuring concluded
Present-value haircutFace-value reduction
DefaultSettledYears to settlePresent-value haircutFace-value reductionDebt treated (2020 $)Source
198319981562.8%60.2%$9.72BCruces and Trebesch (2013)
200020101055.2%20.0%$3.46BCruces and Trebesch (2013)
2011201216.1%3.8%$3.07BCruces and Trebesch (2013)

Source: Meyer, Reinhart & Trebesch (2022), Sovereign Bonds since Waterloo | Cruces & Trebesch (2013), Sovereign Defaults: The Price of Haircuts | Asonuma & Trebesch (2016) Debt treated is the amount restructured, deflated to constant 2020 US dollars in the source file. A negative haircut means the new instruments were worth more than the old claim. Methodology

Default spells

SpellFromToYearsRestructurings
CIV_1983-201219832012303

Source: Meyer, Reinhart & Trebesch (2022), Sovereign Bonds since Waterloo | Cruces & Trebesch (2013), Sovereign Defaults: The Price of Haircuts | Asonuma & Trebesch (2016) Duration counts both endpoints. The spells table also carries a cumulative-haircut column; it is not published here because it does not reconcile with the per-episode haircuts, see the methodology. Methodology

The Cruces-Trebesch record: a third measure and the discount rate

The Cruces-Trebesch file carries 3 restructurings here, and adds the market haircut (the new instruments against the face value of the old claim, undiscounted) and the exit yield used to do the discounting. The deal label is the file’s own and is finer than the country: it names the instrument class the deal covered. The two files were assembled separately, so a deal here need not line up one-to-one with a row above.

DealDatePresent valueMarketFace valueExit yieldStructureData quality
Cote d'Ivoire1998-03-0162.8%64.9%60.2%11.1%Brady deal4 / 5
Cote d'Ivoire2010-04-0155.2%52.3%20.0%9.9%bond exchange4 / 5
Cote d'Ivoire2012-10-016.1%19.3%3.8%8.4%bond exchange5 / 5

Source: Cruces & Trebesch, haircut dataset (2014 update) Data quality is the file's own 1-to-5 index of how well the deal terms are documented. Methodology

Debt still in default

The Bank of Canada-Bank of England default database records no debt in default for Cote d'Ivoire in its latest year.

Source: Bank of Canada-Bank of England Sovereign Default Database (CRAG) Bank of Canada terms (attribution). Includes domestic arrears, so it is not comparable with the debt-treated column above. Methodology

Methodology, the measures, and what this data cannot tell you