Mozambique Tuna Bonds 2016 : The Business Plan Said $200M Revenue. Debt Service Was $260M. The Bond Was Oversubscribed — EP64 T1
In September 2013, Credit Suisse raised $500 million for a tuna fishing company in Mozambique called Ematum — incorporated weeks earlier, with no vessels, no catch history, and no operating revenue. The government guarantee was signed by Finance Minister Manuel Chang without parliamentary approval. The IMF did not know it existed. Fourteen donor countries funding a quarter of Mozambique's national budget did not know it existed. And the offering circular described $200 million in projected annual revenues against debt service requirements of $260 million. The bond was oversubscribed. By 2016, Mozambique had accumulated $2.2 billion in secret sovereign debt — equivalent to 12.5% of GDP — through three state-owned entities that had never been disclosed to parliament, the IMF, or any bilateral donor. The Kroll forensic audit found $500 million in loan proceeds that could not be accounted for. Kickbacks to Credit Suisse employees and Mozambican officials exceeded $200 million, embedded in the transaction fee structure from the first disbursement. This is the financial autopsy of the Mozambique Tuna Bonds — the hidden sovereign guarantee mechanism that converted a country's maritime security budget into a $2.2 billion concealed debt obligation, with Credit Suisse as active architect rather than passive intermediary. We dissect the full structure: the three state-owned entities (Ematum, Proindicus, MAM), the Privinvest contractor relationship, the Chang guarantee and its constitutional invalidity under Mozambican law, the kickback chain from Privinvest to Andrew Pearse to Surjan Singh, and the April 2016 disclosure that triggered simultaneous IMF program suspension, bilateral donor cutoff, sovereign downgrade, and metical collapse. We cover the criminal convictions of Pearse, Singh, and Subeva, the $475M Credit Suisse settlement, Finance Minister Chang's extradition and trial, and the accountability gap: the tuna fleet never generated meaningful revenue, the three companies remain largely inactive, and Mozambique — ranked 181st of 189 on the UN Human Development Index at the time — is still negotiating its debt restructuring. If you cover EM sovereign credit, allocate to sub-Saharan Africa, or conduct due diligence on sovereign-guaranteed instruments in frontier markets, this is the episode that establishes the hidden sovereign debt due diligence framework.
Financial Forensics Labs — Every collapse has a pattern. We dissect it. Layer by layer.
KEYWORDS Mozambique tuna bonds fraud, Ematum bond Credit Suisse, hidden sovereign debt Africa, Chang guarantee Mozambique, Credit Suisse Mozambique conviction, Andrew Pearse Credit Suisse kickback, Privinvest Mozambique fraud, sovereign guarantee fraud frontier markets, IMF program suspension Mozambique, $2.2 billion hidden debt Mozambique, Mozambique default 2017, tuna bonds Proindicus MAM, constitutional guarantee fraud Africa, sovereign debt concealment mechanism, EM sovereign credit fraud signal