C?te d ' Ivoire distressed dollar bonds rose to a four month high as Laurent Gbagbo said that he can leave the country, according to internationally recognized President, elect Alassane Ouattara loyal troops surrounded resident.
The west African country's 2032 bonds a year ago jumped 7.7% to 55.438 cents on the dollar, its highest level since Dec. 2, based on data from Bloomberg. 14 Percent in the past has blamed collected, two days after Gbagbo surrendered troops. Fighting was reported today to his residence.
The incumbent operator, their refusal, the results of the country's November 28 Elections led the war, C?te d ' Ivoire can leave, he said in an interview carried out last night and today on LCI, a Paris-based TV news channel. With Ouattara no political agreement has been reached, said he.
"Gbagbo exit looms, and I would say it is now a matter of hours or at most a couple of days", said Anne Fruhauf, Africa analyst for Eurasia Group in London, in a telephone interview. His departure not immediately order in Abidjan, which would restore the commercial hub, is a city "flooded with weapons, militias, a panic civilians and rebels, really, need for restraint", she said.
The country's $2.3 billion of bonds have since April, according to the 9 percent of their value fall up to 43 percent to 35 cents on 16 March lost. The country has been in default after missing, interest payment due end of January as Gbagbo and Ouattara a $ 29 million locked in a political standoff.
The UN put the death toll from violence after the elections on the 494 before the fight began after Abidjan. At least 800 more were killed in the Western City of Duekoue, according to the International Committee of the Red Cross.
Gbagbo began negotiating an exit after French and most of his army of heavy weapons destroyed United Nations troops.
The United Nations, the United States, the African Union and the European Union Ouattara recognize, 69, a former deputy managing director at the International Monetary Fund, as the winner of the Nov 28 Election. Gbagbo, 65, refuses to step down, claimed voter fraud.
The reporter on this story contact: Jason Webb in jwebb25@bloomberg.net in London.
The editor responsible for this story contact: Gavin Serkin at the gserkin@bloomberg.net
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