While the Cameroon government is celebrating a successful return to the international capital markets, financial analysts are sounding the alarm over the long-term sustainability of the deal.
On January 30, 2026, Finance Minister Louis Paul Motaze announced that the state successfully raised $750 million (approx. 416 billion FCFA) via a private bond sale in London.
The transaction, managed by JP Morgan, Citi, and Cygnum Capital, exceeded its initial $600 million target. Minister Motaze described the oversubscription as a “renewed vote of confidence” in Cameroon’s sovereign signature.
However, a deeper look at the numbers suggests that this “confidence” came at a steep price for the Cameroonian taxpayer.
While the headline interest rate is 8.875%, the government utilized a currency swap to convert the debt from US Dollars to Euros.
Because the franc CFA is pegged to the Euro, this move lowers the effective interest rate to 7.79 percent to mitigate exchange rate volatility.
Despite this, the yield offered to investors was a staggering 10.125 percent. This gap between the coupon rate and the yield acts as a “discount” to entice investors, signaling that the market views Cameroon as a high-risk borrower.
Annual Interest: Cameroon will pay roughly 32.5 billion francs CFA every year in interest alone.
By the time the bond matures in 2033, the state would have paid approximately 227.5 billion FCFA in interest alone.
The Bottom Line: To pay back the 416 billion francs CFA borrowed, the government will eventually shell out nearly 730 billion FCFA.
A significant point of contention is the vague destination of these funds. Historically, the Presidency has specified which infrastructure or development projects Eurobond proceeds would fund.
This time, the Ministry cited “settlement of outstanding payments” and “priority state projects” under the 2026 Finance Law.
Without a detailed breakdown, critics argue the lack of transparency invites mismanagement. “A blanket statement about ‘priority projects’ makes it impossible for the public to track accountability,” the report notes.
With Cameroon’s total debt currently hovering around 16 trillion FCFA, economists fear a “debt trap.” The economy remains hampered by corruption in the extractive industries and a slow transition toward high-value agricultural exports.
If the economy does not meet its growth targets, the government may be forced to take out new loans just to service the interest on this Eurobond—a cycle that could cripple the 2029–2033 budgets when the principal installments come due.
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