NY court eyeing Argentine swap offer in debt case

 
No Author Published: March 1, 2013    Comment on this article Leave a comment

BUENOS AIRES, Argentina (AP) — A New York court ordered Argentina on Friday to explain how it would issue new bonds rather than comply with a $1.3 billion cash judgment to resolve debts unpaid for more than decade.

photo - Argentina's President Cristina Fernandez, center, waves to supporters as she leaves the Argentine National Congress where she inaugurated the opening legislative session, in Buenos Aires, Argentina, Friday, March 1, 2013. Vice President Amado Boudou is pictured on far right. (AP Photo/Victor R. Caivano)
Argentina's President Cristina Fernandez, center, waves to supporters as she leaves the Argentine National Congress where she inaugurated the opening legislative session, in Buenos Aires, Argentina, Friday, March 1, 2013. Vice President Amado Boudou is pictured on far right. (AP Photo/Victor R. Caivano)

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Two days after a key oral hearing in NML Capital Ltd. vs Argentina, the appellate judges asked just how, when and at what interest rate Argentina would pay installments on these new bonds.

President Cristina Fernandez had long vowed never to pay anything to the plaintiffs she calls "vulture funds," which she accuses of trying to ruin Argentina's recovery from its 2002 economic collapse. But in a speech to Congress on Friday, she endorsed the compromise offer of a new debt swap, which had been floated in December by her Economy Minister Hernan Lorenzino.

She said Argentina would pay the plaintiffs, but at terms no better than those the vast majority of Argentina's defaulted debt holders accepted in two previous debt swaps. Those exchange bondholders agreed to provide Argentina with significant debt relief in exchange for new bonds, which her government has always paid.

"We have rigorously paid everything we've promised," she said. "And we are also prepared to pay these vulture funds, but not at terms that are better than the 93 percent who believed in and supported Argentina," she said.

Friday's court order suggests the appellate judges are at least giving Argentina another opportunity to explain how this might work.

"Because neither the parameters of Argentina's proposal nor its commitment to abide by it is clear from the record, it is hereby ordered that, on or before March 29, 2013, Argentina submit in writing to the court the precise terms of any alternative payment formula and schedule to which it is prepared to commit," the order reads.

The order further requires that Argentina explain "(1) how and when it proposes to make current those debt obligations on the original bonds that have gone unpaid over the last 11 years; (2) the rate at which it proposes to repay debt obligations on the original bonds going forward; and (3) what assurances, if any, it can provide that the official government action necessary to implement its proposal will be taken, and the timetable for such action."

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