Argentina asked a US judge on Monday to issue a stay of his ruling against the country in its case against “holdout” creditors, as it sought to avoid a new default that would further punish an economy already slipping into recession.
The move is the latest twist in a 12-year-old battle with investors who refused to take part in bond restructurings after Argentina failed to pay about US$100 billion of debt in 2002.
Without a stay on a ruling by US District Judge Thomas Griesa, Argentina would be legally barred from making a coupon payment on Monday next week on its restructured bonds unless it pays US$1.33 billion to holdouts seeking full payment of the debt they hold.
“We consider it essential that Judge Griesa issue a stay so that the Republic of Argentina can continue paying the holders of restructured bonds,” Argentine Economy Minister Axel Kicillof told reporters in Buenos Aires.
Lawyers for the Argentine ministry asked Griesa for the stay to “allow the republic to engage in a dialogue with the plaintiffs in a reasonable time frame for these kinds of negotiations.”
If the government does not make the payment on Monday next week, it has a 30-day grace period before falling into technical default.
A framework for talks between the holdouts and Argentina started taking shape when Griesa appointed New York financial trial lawyer Daniel Pollack as a special master to assist in the negotiations.
Pollack told reporters he plans on “moving as quickly as possible given the time constraints.”
The government also announced on Monday that the economy contracted in the first quarter after shrinking in the last three months of last year. The shrinkage was expected and local financial asset prices rose on Monday thanks to Argentine President Cristina Fernandez’s reversal of her policy of not negotiating with holdouts.
She has long portrayed them as “vultures” picking over the bones of the 2002 debt crisis, which thrust millions of middle-class Argentines into poverty.
The two-term leader has dialed back the rhetoric in her speeches lately, but her government splashed advertisements in leading US newspapers over the weekend accusing the holdouts of pushing the country to the brink of financial catastrophe.
More than 90 percent of bondholders have accepted the restructurings, which left them with less than one-third of the original value of their bonds.
Over-the-counter local bonds closed up 5.5 percent on Monday. The Merval stock index rose 8.7 percent and the peso strengthened 4.62 percent to 11.90 per US dollar in black market trade. The official exchange rate was nearly unchanged at 8.1325 to the dollar.
Restructured Argentine bonds, already higher on speculation a deal will be reached, added to gains after a flurry of headlines from Buenos Aires and New York.
The 2033 Discount Bonds traded up 9.99 points in price to bid 88.22, driving the yield down to 9.82 percent, according to Thomson Reuters data.
The Argentine Par bonds maturing in 2038 rose 2.01 points in price to bid 48.33, pushing the yield down to 9.08 percent.
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