The Borneo Post

US hedge fund seeks arbitratio­n over defaulted Peru bonds

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WASHINGTON: A US hedge fund took legal action Thursday to force the government of Peru to pay off US$1.6 billion worth of defaulted bonds issued by the country’s former military regime.

In a case echoing Argentina’s battle with US hedge funds over its defaulted bonds, Connecticu­tbased Gramercy Funds Management said the government had refused to negotiate with it over the debt it bought at a steep discount 10 years ago, hoping to win full repayment.

Gramercy said Lima had ‘ selectivel­y’ defaulted on the local-currency land bonds started in 1969 and continued in the 1970s to compensate owners of expropriat­ed land, while it makes payments on other debt.

It said that the government of President Ollanta Humala had interfered with Peruvian court decisions that supported repayment of the bonds revalued to account for years of hyperinfla­tion.

Gramercy also claims the support of Peruvian holders of the defaulted bonds also demanding payment on a court-designed scale accounting for inflation.

Gramercy issued a notice of arbitratio­n with a claim for the full value of the bonds, adjusted for inflation, under rules of the UN Trade Commission on Internatio­nal Trade Law and the US-Peru bilateral trade agreement.

“Peru’s stonewalli­ng and steadfast refusal to have any substantiv­e discussion­s has left Gramercy no choice but to commence and vigorously pursue this arbitratio­n and enforce its rights,” said Gramercy chief investment officer Robert Koenigsber­ger in a statement.

Gramercy, a specialist in investing in emergingma­rket assets, is seeking arbitratio­n in New York.

But last October, when Gramercy first said it might seek arbitratio­n, Peruvian Finance Minister Alonso Segura said his country would oppose any legal action outside its territory.

The move comes at the end of Humala’s tenure as president.

Peruvians go to the polls this Sunday in the second round of the presidenti­al election.

On Thursday, Peru’s Finance Ministry said in a statement that Gramercy’s move is ‘the latest attempt to discredit Peru after similar attempts in the past.’

It said the issue is proceeding through Peru’s courts and the latest action ‘seems to be designed only to call attention to Gramercy’s own interests at the current time.’

“Our country will firmly defend its position against Gramercy’s claims under the law,” it added. The case comes just months after Argentina gave up a 15-year fight in New York courts against hedge funds which had scooped up its defaulted dollar-denominate­d debt at huge discounts to face value. Even though Argentina had reached a restructur­ing deal in which nearly all of its creditors agreed to write off much of the debt, the hedge funds, which Buenos Aires labeled vultures sued for full repayment and won. The Argentina case raised questions about the ability of such bond investors to undermine internatio­nal efforts to help financiall­y weak g ove r n m e n t s restructur­e their debts. — AFP

 ??  ?? Ollanta Humala
Ollanta Humala

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