From Yahoo/AP:
“EXPLAINER: What's the latest
in Russia's dance with default?”
Russia appeared to dodge default
on its foreign debt by dipping into its scarce dollar reserves. But Moscow's
debt drama is far from over. Russia's finance ministry abandoned its proposal
to use rubles instead of dollars to make overdue payments on two government
bonds, saying Friday that it had transferred the money to an account at
Citigroup: $564.4 million for a bond due in 2022, and $84.4 million for another
due in 2042. A 30-day grace period on making the overdue payments was to expire
Wednesday. The government had claimed that U.S. sanctions freezing its massive
currency reserves held abroad meant it couldn't pay and that Russia wasn't to
blame for any default, the first on foreign debt since the 1917 Bolshevik
Revolution. Even if Russia is found to have made the most recent payments,
others are coming due. Plus, U.S. permission for American bondholders to accept
payment on Russian bonds is set to expire May 25, so even if Russia tries to
pay, investors would not legally be able to take the money.
Here are some of the issues
surrounding Russian debt:
WHY ARE PEOPLE TALKING ABOUT A
POSSIBLE RUSSIAN DEFAULT? Ratings agencies have said that if bonds specify
payment in dollars, then paying in rubles amounts to a failure to pay as
promised. One reason Russia would want to pay in rubles instead of its reserves
of foreign currency is that a large part of them have been frozen abroad. It
made Friday's payment by dipping into scarce internal reserves that sanctions
could not touch. Russia has not definitively avoided default unless the
money made its way from Citigroup through the banking system to bondholders
ahead of Wednesday's deadline. “Bondholders don't get paid until
Citigroup processes the payments” and pass them on to clearinghouses that
distribute payment to bondholders, said Jay S. Auslander, a top sovereign debt
lawyer at the firm of Wilk Auslander in New York. Banks are being
extremely cautious about any transactions with Russia and may want to check
with U.S. and UK authorities first. But “I think it's likely is that the funds
will make it to the bondholders, in which case, they will not be in default
this time," Auslander said.
HOW MUCH DOES RUSSIA OWE? About
$40 billion in foreign bonds, about half of that to foreigners. Before the
start of the war, Russia had around $640 billion in foreign currency and gold
reserves, much of which was held overseas and is now frozen.
HOW DO YOU KNOW IF A COUNTRY
IS IN DEFAULT? Ratings agencies can lower the rating to default or a court
can decide the issue. Bondholders who have credit default swaps — contracts
that act like insurance policies against default — can ask a committee of
financial firm representatives to decide whether a failure to pay debt should
trigger a payout, which still isn’t a formal declaration of default. The
Credit Default Determination Committee — an industry group of 14 banks and
investors that determines whether or not to pay on these swaps — said Friday
that they “continue to monitor the situation” after Russia’s payment. They were
scheduled to meet Tuesday.
WHAT CAN INVESTORS DO? The
formal way to declare default is if 25% or more of bondholders say they didn't
get their money. Once that happens, provisions say all Russia’s other foreign
bonds are also in default, and bondholders could then seek a court judgment to
enforce payment. In normal circumstances, investors and the defaulting
government typically negotiate a settlement in which bondholders are given new
bonds that are worth less but that at least give them some partial
compensation. But sanctions bar dealings with Russia's finance ministry.
And no one knows when the war will end or how much defaulted bonds could wind
up being worth. In this case, declaring default and suing “might not be
the wisest choice,” Auslander said. “You can't negotiate with Russia right now.
You're wading into a world where sanctions are constantly changing, where there
are a lot of unknowns. So you may see creditors decide at this point to keep
their intentions close to their vest and hang tight for now." Popular
sentiment is a consideration for investors, especially any who may have bought
bonds at knocked-down prices in hopes of profiting from a settlement. “Right
now is maybe not a good time to rush in and show that you were profiting off
distressed debt in Russian bonds,” Auslander said. “Will that time come in the
future? I suspect it will.” Once a country defaults, it can be cut off
from bond-market borrowing until the default is sorted out and investors regain
confidence in the government’s ability and willingness to pay. But Russia has
already been cut off from Western capital markets, so any return to borrowing
is a long way off anyway. The Kremlin can still borrow rubles at home,
where it mostly relies on Russian banks to buy its bonds.
WHAT IMPACT COULD A RUSSIAN
DEFAULT HAVE? The country is already suffering substantial economic impact
from Western sanctions, which have sent foreign companies fleeing and disrupted
trade and financial ties with the rest of the world. Default would be one more
symptom of that isolation and disruption. Investment analysts are
cautiously reckoning that a Russia default would not have the kind of impact on
global financial markets and institutions that came from an earlier default in
1998. Back then, Russia’s default on domestic ruble bonds led the U.S.
government to step in and get banks to bail out Long-Term Capital Management, a
large U.S. hedge fund whose collapse, it was feared, could have shaken the
wider financial and banking system. Holders of the bonds — for instance,
funds that invest in emerging market bonds — could take serious losses. Russia,
however, played only a small role in emerging market bond indexes, limiting the
losses to fund investors. While the war itself is having devastating
consequences in terms of human suffering and higher food and energy prices
worldwide, default on government bonds would be “definitely not systemically
relevant,” Kristalina Georgieva, head of the International Monetary Fund, has
said.
^ Sadly, Russia is going to avoid
a Default tomorrow, but they still owe Billions of Dollars and they are all
coming up soon so fingers crossed. If you think it's mean to hope Russia
Defaults (for the 1st time since after the 1917 Communist Revolution) than maybe
you should take the "Z" Nazi symbol off and start caring more about
the tortured, raped and massacred Ukrainian Men, Women and Children. ^
https://news.yahoo.com/explainer-whats-latest-russias-dance-151048407.html?fr=sycsrp_catchall
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