Surely all that was missing from this thread was a highly educated quality comment such as above. Vielen dank fur deinen beitrag.
Clearly you have some financial knowledge but your attitude is very unpleasant. I'm currently working from home, I'm taking a break, am logged into bloomberg terminal remotely. Let me know what you which rate you're looking at, I'll have realtime market data.
LIBOR is lower on previous months, as are rates in general. Sure, but markets were troubled initially on the back of risk sentiment. Yields are low because of QE and central bank intervention in markets. APP's are continuing in Europe, Fed has stepped in US markets, PEPP is a new programme from the ECB. This is the reason yields are low, there are wider macroeconomic trends that have lowered it historically, but nothing unique from the perspective that you're using here.
Also, why are you quoting LIBOR? We don't borrow anywhere near LIBOR, EURIBOR, etc. Our sovereign debt is still expensive, latest Iss price I see is 92.8863, with yield at 7.68%, don't mislead people by suggesting we're borrowing anywhere near a lowered LIBOR rate, PAKTB 2 years ago was being priced around the same. In fact, just having looked at some Q2 2018 zero cpn 6M PAKTB, issue yield then was 6.35% whereas the latest issuance has 7.845% yield. So what exactly are you claiming here? Borrowing is cheaper for us? It's clearly not, and where it is relative to another time period, it's for a whole host of reasons, none of which contribute to this argument.
I think you are trying to put a positive spin on this when in fact, it's just a case of IK doing what exactly other Pakistani government has done since time immemorial; borrow to finance when in need is pressing. It has nothing to do with false perceptions of ability to borrow really cheaply. Also, your quote of raw yields, are you a finance guy? If you are, I'm guessing you aren't in fixed income. Cheap and expensive is not in terms of raw yield, it's usually spread vs xyz, measure, whether that's mid-swaps, LIBOR/EURIBOR etc, or comparable sovereigns. Our debt is not cheap, and this borrowing has nothing much at all to do with low yields that have resulted from CB intervention in Europe and elsewhere.
@Nilgiri
Last of all, I'd ask you to tone down this sort of rhetoric:
Knowing something that others might not is not license to make such disparaging remarks. I have responded to your post without belittling you I hope, and keeping it respectful. Pls let's keep that for all members. Thanks.