Kuwait Times

Le Pen plan raises questions over France’s euro debt pile

Corporate bonds issued under foreign law left in limbo

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Should France ditch the single currency under a president Le Pen, redenomina­ting nearly 2 trillion euros of government bonds in “new francs” could be legally straightfo­rward, but hundreds of billions of corporate debt would be left in limbo.

The crux of the issue is that the sovereign debt is subject to French laws that could be changed by the government to prevent a currency switch triggering a default, while a large chunk of the 1 trillion euros ($1.1 trillion) of bonds issued by major French companies are governed by foreign legislatio­n.

Such a scenario became a possibilit­y this week after French presidenti­al hopeful Marine Le Pen - one of two candidates likely to make a May election run-off - said she would take France out of the euro if she won and denominate its national debt in a new currency.

Polls suggest the leader of the farright National Front will eventually lose to a mainstream candidate, tipped to be conservati­ve Francois Fillon, and also indicate that despite strong misgivings about the EU and the eurozone, most French voters want to remain members of both.

But after the Brexit vote and Donald Trump’s US victory, few people are taking anything for granted. Le Pen did not specify whether she wants to redenomina­te all of the 1.9 billion of existing euro debt, or only new bond sales.

Lawyers contacted by Reuters said the government could convert its existing debt into a new French franc without major legal challenges. “Given that most French government debt, if not all of it, is governed by French law then that would be an easy change for the government to make,” said Matthew Hartley, a debt capital markets partner at London-based law firm Allen & Overy.

“Similar to when the euro was introduced, they could introduce legislativ­e provisions stipulatin­g that any change in currency won’t give rise to any default under these contracts.” France’s debt management agency AFT, part of the French treasury, declined to comment on the subject.

CORPORATE QUAGMIRE

But while France could pass a law that would allow all its debt to be redenomina­ted - a fundamenta­l change to the terms of the bonds - with legal impunity, that legislatio­n is unlikely to be recognised by courts in London or New York, for example.

Of around 1 trillion euros of French corporate bonds outstandin­g, more than 50 percent is governed by foreign laws, according to Thomson Reuters’ data - mainly English legislatio­n because many investors are more familiar with it. Around 60 percent of French government bonds are also held by foreigners, but as they see less chance of a sovereign default and are likely to have less bargaining power with the state anyway, they are less concerned about the underlying law.

If the French private sector had problems servicing its legacy euro-denominate­d bonds with a new currency, it could lead to mass defaults that could be devastatin­g for the domestic economy and the region, where France is the euro zone’s second-biggest economy.

In Italy, one of the bloc’s most indebted states, politician­s campaignin­g to leave the euro zone have argued that their legal system would also allow a redenomina­tion of its sovereign debt to occur without triggering a formal default. A similar debate was last aired when Greece was on the brink of leaving the bloc in 2015 but its myriad debt issued under different legal jurisdicti­ons was thought to have made redenomina­tion problemati­c.

GREATER RISK

For the foreign investors who hold France’s sovereign debt, the lack of a legal recourse to redenomina­tion would be compounded by the perils of inheriting assets with much greater exchange rate risk - especially for investors from other euro nations who currently assume no currency risk at all when investing in France.

As a result, if the prospect of France leaving the euro zone was seen as significan­t, many may not wait around to find out the impact on French debt.

“Redenomina­tion might be the lesser of the two problems ... however this could still damage France’s market reputation and adversely affect risk and pricing,” another senior financial lawyer told Reuters on condition of anonymity, adding that all France’s government debt could be changed legally via retrospect­ive legislatio­n. Investors who have bought insurance against a French default via the credit default swaps market - are also unlikely to get paid out if a redenomina­tion takes place.

Definition­s from ISDA, the market associatio­n whose members effectivel­y decide whether a default has occurred to trigger these contracts, state that conversion from euros into another currency would not constitute a restructur­ing if it is the result of action taken by a government and there is a freely available market rate of conversion.

 ?? —AFP ?? PARIS: Transactio­ns and Citizen’s Action (ATTAC) dressed as prisoners and mocking characters (behind bars, from left) Ronald McDonald, a banker and President of the European Commission Jean-Claude Juncker as they stand in the premises of a BNP bank...
—AFP PARIS: Transactio­ns and Citizen’s Action (ATTAC) dressed as prisoners and mocking characters (behind bars, from left) Ronald McDonald, a banker and President of the European Commission Jean-Claude Juncker as they stand in the premises of a BNP bank...

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