Liquid Intelligent Technologies (Liquid) has secured $660 million in debt financing, including a $300 million Eurobond that was two and a half times oversubscribed, highlighting investor confidence in Africa’s largest independent fibre network.
The pan-African technology group – providing digital infrastructure, fiber connectivity, data centers, and cloud/cybersecurity services across 14 countries on the continent – said the “2.5x oversubscription in a risk-selective market underscores the investment case for Africa’s largest independent fibre network”.
It said oversubscription of the bond “signified a meaningful vote of confidence in the continent’s digital infrastructure story.”
The bond, listed on Euronext Dublin and issued under Rule 144A/Regulation, formed the centre piece of a broader debt paydown and refinancing completed by Liquid, owned by Cassava Technologies.
“The transaction retires the company’s prior debt obligations, extends its debt maturity profile, and resets its balance sheet on terms that give management the financial headroom to accelerate the company’s growth and cement its leading position as a critical enabler of Africa’s digital transformation,” Liquid said.
“The demand of that scale, against a challenging capital markets environment, points to something more than routine refinancing,” it said, adding: “It suggests that a cohort of international institutional investors has made a considered judgement; that Liquid’s asset base, its 115,000-kilometre fibre network spanning more than 25 countries, its growing cloud and cybersecurity revenues, and its positioning at the intersection of connectivity and AI infrastructure, constitute a credit that warrants allocation.”
The bond was accompanied by syndicated ZAR and USD term loan facilities.
The US$210 million ZAR syndicated term loan, provided by Nedbank, Rand Merchant Bank, Standard Bank, and the International Finance Corporation, provides a natural currency hedge against Liquid’s substantial South African revenues.
“This is a structural refinement that addresses one of the more persistent concerns institutional investors have raised about African issuers,” Liquid said.
The USD 150 million syndicated term loan was provided by Ninety One, via its own funds and the Emerging Africa and Asia Infrastructure Fund and The Mauritius Commercial Bank Limited (MCB).
“Together with the US$195 million fresh equity injection by Cassava, these instruments retire our prior debt obligations, extend Liquid’s debt maturity profile and provide a natural ZAR currency hedge on our South African revenues, whilst placing net leverage on a firmly downward trajectory,” the tech company said.
Anchor orders in the Eurobond were placed by leading development finance institutions (DFIs), including DEG, the German DFI.
“DFI participation at this level…signal that institutions, whose mandate is explicitly tied to sustainable development in emerging markets, have assessed that Liquid’s infrastructure is consequential to that agenda.”
“Fitch Ratings upgraded Liquid ahead of launch,” Liquid said, further stating that “Moody’s has placed the issuer on Review for Upgrade”
“The convergence of two agency actions reinforces our improved financial profile and will be noted by investors who track African credit closely,” Liquid said.
J.P. Morgan, Rand Merchant Bank and Standard Bank acted as Joint Global Coordinators and joint bookrunners.
Hardy Pemhiwa, Liquid group weighed in: “This refinancing is a significant milestone, not just financially, but strategically.”
“A stronger, more sustainable balance sheet gives Liquid the platform it needs to pursue the full scope of digital transformation opportunities across Africa, from fibre and cloud to cyber security and AI-enabled infrastructure,” he said.
Pemhiwa said “the quality of the institutions that participated in this transaction is a statement of confidence in Liquid’s fundamentals and in Africa’s digital growth story.” – TML