Argentina: Redefining The Gears Of Default And Restructuring

 | Sep 05, 2013 01:01AM ET

A lot has been happening of late in the matter of Argentine bonds. The bottom line is: Argentina continues to resist the prospect of having to pay the holdover bondholders. Since it continues its losing streak in the litigation on that subject, it is going to attempt to put its transactions outside the realm of the U.S. courts with … yet another exchange offer.

I have no idea how all this will turn out, my previous efforts at prediction have been off the mark, but it still smells as if the rules of the game in EM debt will have changed in an important respect when all of this is over.

The Story So Far
As our readers will recall, NML Capital, holding bonds Judge Griesa.

Further, they did so unanimously. The only hint of division within the panel was a footnote saying that Judge Rosemary Pooler disagreed with her two colleagues on a quite minor procedural matter. [All you really need to know is that the point was small enough that Pooler agreed that her difference of opinion would be confined to that footnote.]

The only element of the decision that may console the defendants is that it has stayed Argentina’s obligation to make ratable payments pending review by the U.S. Supreme Court.

The appeals court’s opinion pooh-poohed any concern that “the outcome of this case threatens to steer bond issuers away from the New York marketplace.” Wild speculation, the judges said. And soon after the opinion was issued, Argentina illustrated why the courts’ approach might do exactly that.

The new swap plan

On August 28, President Cristina Fernandez announced a new bond swap plan. Argentina will offer to swap its outstanding bonds, apparently either of the FAA or of the exchange bondholder vintage, with newly issued bonds that will not have the New York or U.S. law connections the older issuances did.

This is an obvious attempt at a workaround. As Felix Salmon has put it, “given the choice between working within the U.S. legal system and blatantly working against it, the country seems to have decided that it wants to do both at once.” Salmon also believes the exchange offer will find takers. The idea of getting under Argentine law and thus out of the 10-year-long controversy in New York will have appeal.

Fernandez’ Economy Minister, Hernán Lorenzino, has been explicit on this point. Speaking at an Argentine Senate hearing, he said that the purpose of the measure is to allow Argentina to keep paying the holders of the restructured bonds, while continuing to coax the holdouts to accept the same terms.

Blame the lock laws

Another intriguing wrinkle; the new offer as Fernandez lays it out will be open-ended (that is, there will be no offer-expires-by date). Thus, there will be no basis for the sort of “lock laws” that Argentina enacted in 2005 after the first bond exchange. Fernandez and Lorenzino see this as a concession.

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In a manner it is a concession, although the holdout plaintiffs will understandably regard it as a small one. It is not a concession to them precisely, but to some of the amici who have appeared in their case in its various stages. Some of these friends of the district and appellate courts have contended that the real violation of the pari passu clause in the original issuing documentation was neither the 2001 default itself nor the bond exchange programs of 2005/2010. The real problem (suggest such amici) is the lock law legislation.

Argentina’s proposal keeps this idea in play, and the U.S. Supreme Court may eventually adopt that view of the case itself. That would give a win to NML, but would do so on a sufficiently narrow ground as to redefine, not to threaten, the broad EM sovereign bonds market.

AllAboutAlpha

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