The Borneo Post (Sabah)

Venezuela payments could alter default grade; not outlook

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WASHINGTON: If the crisis-stricken Venezuelan government manages to scrape together funds to make payments on its delinquent bonds, that would change the default designatio­n but not the nation’s prospects, a top ratings agency told AFP.

Standard and Poor’s declared Venezuela in ‘selective default’ on Monday after the government of President Nicolas Maduro failed to make the already-late payments on two state bonds within the grace period.

But Venezuela announced Wednesday a restructur­ing deal with Russia on a small part of the estimated US$150 billion in foreign debt held by the oil-rich but cash-poor nation, and says it has made payments on those bonds.

S&P managing director Joydeep Mukherji, who handles Latin American and Caribbean sovereign ratings, said even if those payments are confirmed, other debt service remains in doubt, including on four other bonds that already are overdue.

The agency also had declared state oil company PDVSA in selective default for non-payment on some of its obligation­s.

So even if the government manages to make a payment, it would “just go back to where you were before default. The larger picture hasn’t changed just because you managed to scrape together cash to pay the bonds.”

A default designatio­n would have legal ramificati­ons, allowing creditors to take action to demand payment, including potentiall­y seizing valuable assets, but it would not change the situation on the ground.

“They’ve been in dire straits for quite a while,” he said, and the ratings on the debt at “CC” is still “the closest you can get to the abyss without falling into default.”

Like other observers of the deteriorat­ing political situation in Venezuela, where the government has installed a constituen­t assembly to overrule the opposition-controlled Congress, and faces US economic and financial sanctions, Mukherji does not see prospects for the Maduro regime to change course.

“The economic policy has been the same for many, many years now... I have no reason to think, based on past performanc­e, that a big change is coming now.”

While lenders have seen many other defaults in Latin America, notably Argentina in 2002, Venezuela’s situation is unique in many ways, not least that the government promised to pay its debt but also called for a creditors meeting Monday to discuss a restructur­ing, where it failed to present any plan. — AFP

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