Argentina wants bond payment unfrozen if debt talks to go on

Reuters

Published Jul 02, 2014 21:15

Argentina wants bond payment unfrozen if debt talks to go on

By Hugh Bronstein

BUENOS AIRES (Reuters) - Argentina will press a U.S. judge to unfreeze a coupon payment to holders of the country's restructured debt as a condition for negotiating with 'holdout' creditors suing for full repayment, a government official said on Wednesday.

Latin America's No. 3 economy has been pushed to the brink of a fresh default by a string of U.S. court decisions that have forced it to negotiate with holdout investors who declined to restructure their bonds after the country's 2002 debt crisis.

More than 92 percent of the country's investors agreed to receive less than 30 cents on the dollar in bond restructurings carried out in 2005 and 2010.

The holdouts rebuffed those terms and want 100 cents on the dollar, but say they are willing to negotiate.

The government is sending a team to New York next week to set conditions for talks by way of a court-appointed mediator.

"These conditions will naturally include our objective of respecting the restructuring of 92.4 percent of our debt and generating fair conditions for all creditors," Cabinet Chief Jorge Capitanich told a news conference. "We are going into the meeting with this objective."

Argentina tried to make a coupon payment on its restructured debt due on Monday but payout was blocked by U.S. District Court Judge Thomas Griesa, who says the government must settle with the holdouts before any more payments can be made on restructured bonds.

The payment was in limbo after being deposited with transfer agent Bank of New York Mellon but not paid out.

Griesa wants the $539 million (£314 million) deposit returned to Argentina's accounts, but the government claims the cash now belongs to holders of its restructured bonds. If the cash is sent back but rejected by Argentina, holdout fund Aurelius Capital Management has formally requested it be deposited with Griesa's court while negotiations continue.

Argentina has until the end of the month to strike a deal. If it fails, the country risks tumbling into its second sovereign debt crisis in 12 years.

This would sap already thin central bank reserves and prolonging Argentina's banishment from the global bond market just as the country needs foreign financing to rebuild its grains export infrastructure and develop its nascent shale oil and gas sector.

Capitanich said Argentina will stress the need to respect its two restructurings as a basis for a deal with the holdouts, who the government regularly denigrates as vulture funds circling the remains of the country's 2002 debt crisis, which pushed millions of middle-class Argentines into poverty.

The holdouts, led by Elliott Management Corp, seek $1.33 billion plus accrued interest.