Gulf Times

Argentina sketches out debt revamp proposal

-

Argentina sketched out its debt restructur­ing proposal to internatio­nal creditors, involving a three-year grace period, large coupon cuts and a smaller reduction in capital, as it looks to win over bondholder­s to a deal.

Economy Minister Martin Guzman laid out the framework of the proposal, which would involve around $41.5bn of relief, mostly in the form of reduced interest payments, as the country grapples with a biting recession and the coronaviru­s pandemic.

The offer, formally launched yesterday, is a key step in a longrunnin­g saga as Argentina has looked to revamp its heavy debt load after political upheaval and a market crash last year drove its bonds into distressed territory.

The proposal includes a sizeable cut to interest payments, amounting to a saving of around $37.9bn, or 62% of the current total.

There would be a smaller capital cut of around $3.6bn, or 5.4% of the total debt stock, Guzman said.

Analysts were mixed on the offer and were keen for more detail, but said the current environmen­t, with many bonds already at 20-30 cents on the dollar, gave the offer some shine.

“It sounds better than what markets were pricing in,” said Gabriel Zelpo, director of Buenos Aires economic consultanc­y Seido. “Bondholder­s were afraid of something radical, like no coupon payments or high capital haircuts.”

Guzman, speaking in a televised news conference, said the government had still not reached an “understand­ing” about what would be sustainabl­e with bondholder­s, who would have around 20 days from the formal launch before the offer closed.

“We understand in this period there are going to be people playing very tough. There are many interests at stake,” he said. “Today we cannot pay the debt. We have the will to do it, but we do not have the capacity to do so.”

Under the proposal, Argentina would make no payments from 2020 to 2022, then start with an average 0.5% coupon in 2023, which would rise over time but remain at “sustainabl­e levels”.

Argentina’s proposal, which was initially expected to be made by mid-March, has been delayed by the global coronaviru­s outbreak, which has buffeted the country’s already fragile economy and led to a nationwide lockdown.

In a presentati­on document, the government said 21 bonds worth around $66.2bn would be eligible for the offer.

The grain-exporting nation’s centre-left president, Alberto Fernandez, has been racing to win over internatio­nal creditors such as BlackRock and Pimco to overhaul its debt burden that the government insists it cannot currently pay.

Fernandez, speaking from the presidenti­al residence in Olivos and flanked by regional governors and his fiery deputy Cristina Fernandez de Kirchner, said the country was unified behind the push to resolve the debt crisis.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Qatar