Angola’s JPMorgan Debt Extension Cuts Collateral by $200 Million

JOHANNESURG, Jan 28 – Angola has disclosed that the extension of its debt facility with JPMorgan included a $200 million reduction in collateral, following the partial replacement of pledged bonds with higher-rated securities.

The finance ministry said the Southern African nation agreed earlier this month to extend a $1 billion derivative-based financing arrangement with JPMorgan by three years, replacing the original one-year structure. The deal also unlocked an additional $500 million in financing. JPMorgan declined to comment.

As part of the restructuring, Angola substituted part of the original collateral with a higher-rated bond, reducing the total collateral value to $1.7 billion from $1.9 billion. Officials said the adjustment improved the efficiency of the arrangement while maintaining lender protections.

The facility is structured as a Total Return Swap, a derivative contract that has become an increasingly used financing tool among heavily indebted African sovereigns seeking alternatives to traditional Eurobond issuance. However, such instruments can carry significant risks.

Last year, Angola faced a $200 million margin call under the JPMorgan contract following a global market selloff triggered by U.S. trade tariff concerns. The episode drew attention to the volatility and potential cost pressures embedded in derivative-based sovereign financing.

The revised terms underscore both Angola’s efforts to manage debt more actively and the broader challenges facing African governments as they navigate constrained global capital markets, rising risk premiums, and limited access to long-term concessional funding.