Kenya repurchases 415 million dollars in Eurobonds

A $415 million Eurobond buyback just gave Kenya breathing room on its debt schedule while signaling investor confidence across East Africa.

Kenya's bond repurchase breakdown
  • Kenya bought back roughly $415 million worth of outstanding Eurobonds to ease future repayment pressure.
  • All tendered 2028 notes at 7.25% interest were fully accepted.
  • Demand for the 2032 notes massively exceeded what Kenya planned to repurchase.
  • A proration factor of 0.329471 trimmed the accepted 2032 bonds to about $324.8 million.
Fresh cash backing the whole operation
  • Kenya raised $2.25 billion through two new Eurobond issuances on 19 February 2026.
  • Proceeds are partly refinancing older, pricier debt to smooth the repayment timeline.
  • Settlement lands on 3 March, and repurchased bonds get cancelled after that.
What Kenya is paying per bond
  • The 2028 notes cost $1,035 per $1,000 of face value.
  • Accrued interest gets tacked on for both the 2028 and 2032 series.
  • The 2032 notes carry an $1,055-per-$1,000 price tag.
Bigger picture for East Africa's borrowing game
  • Kenya is the region's heaviest hitter on international debt markets.
  • Pulling off a $2.25 billion raise and a buyback shows global investors still trust the play.
  • Uganda, Tanzania, and Rwanda could benefit from that confidence spillover.
  • Credible debt-management strategies remain the key to keeping that investor door open.
 

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