OCP Group Places $1.5B Hybrid Bond as EM Credit Appetite Resurfaces
Moroccan phosphate giant taps perpetual structure amid shifting allocator stance on frontier sovereigns and quasi-sovereigns.
OCP Group closed a $1.5 billion hybrid bond issuance on international markets this week, marking one of the largest perpetual placements from a North African corporate in eighteen months. The Casablanca-based phosphate and fertilizer producer—91% owned by the Moroccan state—priced the subordinated notes to institutional allocators across Europe, the Middle East, and Asia. No coupon or tenor details were disclosed at announcement, but the structure mirrors OCP's 2021 hybrid, which carried a 6.875% initial rate and a five-year call option.
The transaction follows a twelve-month drought in frontier-market hybrid issuance. Sub-Saharan and North African corporates pulled eleven planned perpetual deals between March 2023 and February 2024 as credit spreads widened beyond 450 basis points over Treasuries and allocators rotated toward investment-grade U.S. industrials. OCP's successful placement suggests that EM credit desks are rebuilding conviction in quasi-sovereign names with hard-currency revenue and strategic state backing. The company generates roughly 70% of revenue in U.S. dollars through phosphate rock and derivative fertilizer exports, insulating cash flows from dirham volatility.
This matters because hybrid bonds sit in capital-structure no-man's-land—junior to senior debt but senior to equity, with coupons that issuers can defer without triggering default. Allocators demand steep premiums for that subordination risk, especially from frontier names. OCP's ability to clear $1.5 billion at undisclosed but presumably viable pricing indicates two shifts: first, that credit investors are differentiating between weak frontier credits and operationally solid state-backed exporters; second, that the phosphate super-cycle thesis—driven by food-security concerns and Russian supply disruptions—is giving allocators comfort on long-duration exposure. Global phosphate rock prices rose 22% year-over-year in Q4 2024, and OCP controls roughly one-third of global export capacity.
The timing also carries geopolitical weight. Morocco has positioned itself as a reliable fertilizer supplier to Sub-Saharan Africa and South Asia as buyers diversify away from Russian and Belarusian producers. OCP announced plans in late 2024 to expand production capacity by 12 million metric tons annually by 2027, requiring an estimated $13 billion in capital expenditure. This hybrid issuance likely funds a portion of that buildout without diluting the Moroccan state's equity stake or breaching senior debt covenants. The perpetual structure also keeps the $1.5 billion off OCP's net-debt-to-EBITDA calculation under most credit-rating methodologies, preserving headroom for additional senior borrowing.
Allocators should monitor three follow-on events. First, whether OCP discloses coupon and call terms in SEC or Luxembourg filings within the next ten days—those details will clarify the true cost of capital and whether the "success" narrative holds under scrutiny. Second, watch for copycat issuance from other North African quasi-sovereigns, particularly Egypt's state-owned fertilizer and petrochemical producers, which could test market depth for subordinated EM credit within the next quarter. Third, track phosphate spot prices through Q2 2025; if rock prices soften below $180 per metric ton, OCP's revenue assumptions and the hybrid's sustainability come under pressure.
The deal was oversubscribed, according to Moroccan financial press, though no order-book figures were released. That silence is its own signal—allocators came, but the pricing was work.