Inteligencia y Seguridad Frente Externo En Profundidad Economia y Finanzas Transparencia
  En Parrilla Medio Ambiente Sociedad High Tech Contacto
Economia y Finanzas  
 
12/09/2013 | New Chapter in a Clash Over Bonds in Argentina

Alexandra Stevenson

The United States Supreme Court could decide within weeks whether to take up a drawn-out battle between the Argentine government and creditors seeking repayment on bonds that Argentina defaulted on over 10 years ago.

 

The court will hold a private conference on Sept. 30 to decide whether to consider an appeal by Argentina of a ruling in favor of the creditors in October by the Second United States Circuit Court of Appeals. The Supreme Court could reach a decision as soon as Oct. 1.

The group of creditors, known as holdouts because they have refused to accept anything other than full repayment, includes Elliott Management, a hedge fund run by the billionaire Paul E. Singer, and Aurelius Capital Management.

Their case goes back to 2001, when Argentina defaulted on close to $100 billion in loans. Since then, the government has twice negotiated deals with the majority of bondholders to exchange the original debt for new “exchange” bonds worth a lot less.

The holdouts rejected these new bonds and instead have sued the Argentine government, arguing that the government is now capable of making full repayments. They have demanded to be paid more than $1.33 billion.

On Aug. 23, a three-judge panel of the United States Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit in New York upheld the lower court decision.

If the Supreme Court chooses not to consider the appeal, the Argentine government will be one step closer to paying the creditors in full.

Legal specialists have said that a final ruling in favor of the creditors could send waves across the international debt market used by countries to help finance their governments.

The case has pitted the creditors against Argentina’s president, Cristina Fernández de Kirchner, who has accused the holdout group of creditors of being “vultures.”

To help the group’s image, Mr. Singer joined the lobbying group American Task Force Argentina in bringing a small group of Argentine pensioners who are part of the holdout group to New York in January.

“There has been an enormous amount of gamesmanship of disproportion,” Anna Gelpern, a senior fellow at the Peterson Institute for International Economics, said in response to the back and forth between the holdouts and Mrs. Kirchner.

NY Times (Estados Unidos)

 


Otras Notas Relacionadas... ( Records 11 to 20 of 5721 )
fecha titulo
22/09/2018 3 Reasons Why the Monos Trial in Argentina Matters
06/09/2018 Argentina- La crisis dejó al descubierto las mismas miserias
03/09/2018 Precariedad emergente
02/09/2018 Argentina- El plan fue el no plan y fracasó
31/08/2018 Argentina- La fiebre del dólar pone contra las cuerdas al Gobierno de Macri
27/08/2018 Argentina- La oscura transparencia de la corrupción populista
25/08/2018 Pan y circo en una Argentina que se derrumba
06/08/2018 Argentina - ¿Hay luz al final del camino?
21/07/2018 El inversor argentino, en modo ''wait and see'' y a la espera de noticias
14/07/2018 Argentina: YPF suma riesgos y no hay consenso sobre si es momento de comprar sus acciones


Otras Notas del Autor
fecha
Título
27/09/2014|
19/09/2014|
19/09/2014|
31/07/2014|

ver + notas
 
Center for the Study of the Presidency
Freedom House