Last chance to avoid Argentina's debt default

Argentina’s government is to make another effort to reach a deal with US. creditors before a looming deadline that risks sending the country into its second default in 13 years.

Last chance to avoid Argentina's debt default

Argentina’s government is to make another effort to reach a deal with US. creditors before a looming deadline that risks sending the country into its second default in 13 years.

Cabinet chief Jorge Capitanich said an Argentine delegation would be in New York today to meet a court-appointed mediator , just a day ahead of the deadline.

“Argentina’s position is to reach a dialogue that establishes fair, legal and sustainable conditions for negotiation with 100% of the bondholders,” Mr Capitanich said.

But the mediator, Daniel Pollack, said while the Argentines would meet him, they had not yet accepted his recommendation of face-to-face talks with the plaintiffs in the dispute, led by New York billionaire Paul Singer’s NML Capital.

Those creditors bought Argentine bonds on the cheap and rejected the government’s restructuring offers following its record $100bn default in 2001. They are demanding payment in full of some $1.5bn in unpaid debts.

By tomorrow, Argentina has to make a payment to other creditors who accepted the restructured bonds or fall into default. But US District Judge Thomas Griesa has forbidden Argentina to pay them unless it also pays the hold-outs.

In June he ordered Bank of New York Mellon to return to Argentina $539m it had deposited to pay holders of restructured debt.

Argentinia’s Economy Ministry said the government had made a $642m payment on debt owed to the Paris Club of creditor nations. It was the first instalment in a plan it reached with those nations in late May for repaying a total of $9.7bn.

Argentina already is struggling with recession, a shortage of dollars and one of the world’s highest inflation rates. But the government says a new default would have no effect on most Argentines.

“There’s no link to the economic activity. It’s independent to the evolution of these restructuring processes,” Mr Capitanich said, adding that Argentina’s cash flow is guaranteed by the surplus in its trade balance and recent investment deals signed with China.

Many economic analysts and bond buyers agree that the effect of a default would be limited because, in contrast to 2001, Argentina is now solvent.

“Argentine authorities seem to have reached the conclusion that to default now and renegotiate later would be the less costly option,” said Carlos Caicedo, principal Latin America analyst at IHS Country Risk.

Full payment to the hedge funds would likely trigger lawsuits from other bondholders demanding to be paid on similar terms. While Argentina has nearly $29bn in foreign reserves, those include loans to other countries, deposits with the IMF and other assets that are not easily used.

Troubled countries often find investors willing to lend them money to pay other creditors. But Argentina has been locked out of the bond markets for more than a decade. Any money it could borrow would likely come at high interest rates – and at great political cost for the centre-left government that has rallied public support against paying what President Cristina Fernandez calls “vulture funds”.

Restoring Argentina’s sense of pride and sovereignty after the 2001-2002 economic collapse has been a central goal of Ms Fernandez and her predecessor and late husband, Nestor Kirchner.

The two negotiated or paid off most of Argentina’s defaulted debt, nationalised the pension system, kept energy cheap through subsidies and dug deep into the treasury to redirect revenue to the poor through handouts.

“A default would taint (the president’s legacy), but most important, it would seriously damage the chances of any presidential candidate being sponsored by her,” Mr Caicedo said.

“A group of leaders who received a country in default in 2003 and defaulted 11 years later are certain to be punished by voters.”

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