Perfil (Sabado)

BUENOS AIRES PROVINCE: DEBT SWAP WINS 90% SUPPORT FROM CREDITORS

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Buenos Aires Province has claimed success in its efforts to restructur­e more than US$7 billion of overseas debt, putting it a step closer to emerging from a 16-month default.

Investors holding more than 90 percent of the bonds agreed to swap their notes for new securities, the province said in a statement. The offer, which analysts estimate will hand investors a bit more than 50 cents on the dollar, is set to expire mid-day Friday in Buenos Aires.

La Plata and its creditors have been in months of negotiatio­ns over the bonds after the province stopped making payments in the early days of the coronaviru­s pandemic, and some investors have sued in New York courts. But earlier this month Buenos Aires’ biggest investor, Goldentree Asset Management, accepted the latest debt proposal put forward by the province and urged other creditors to sign on as well.

“It’s been a long 16 months post-default and a final chapter of debt restructur­ing across Argentina’s sovereign and quasi-sovereigns,” said Siobhan Morden, the head of Latin America fixed income at Amherst Pierpont Securities.

It wasn’t immediatel­y clear if enough investors had signed on to the deal to trigger collective action clauses (CACS) in all of the outstandin­g notes. If participat­ion levels don’t reach certain thresholds, so-called holdout creditors could refuse to participat­e in the deal and instead take their cases to court. A smaller group of creditors said last month that the proposed deal contained “deeply coercive elements.”

Home to almost 18 million people and accounting for two-fifths of Argentina’s gross domestic product, Buenos Aires has been in default on more than US$7 billion in overseas bonds since April 2020. Buenos Aires is one of the last of Argentina’s provinces to reach a deal with its creditors after the nation restructur­ed $65 billion in sovereign bonds almost exactly one year ago.

La Plata’s latest offer is valued at around 51.1 cents on the dollar, including past due interest, according to a report from Banctrust & Co. in Buenos Aires. The exchange offers bondholder­s new securities maturing in 2037, with coupons that increase to a maximum 6.6 percent by 2025.

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