Ecuador Wins Bondholders Approval for Debt Restructuring
Ecuador
won the support of the majority of bondholders required to restructure
$17.4 billion in international debt, reducing the South American nations
obligations.To get more news about WikiFX, you can visit wikifx news official website.
President Lenin Morenos government will exchange 10 existing notes
maturing between 2022 and 2030 for three new bonds due in 2030, 2035 and
2040. Under the new terms, interest payments will resume at the
beginning of next year, while the earliest principal comes due in
January 2026.
“With this, we free up resources for social protection and economic recovery,” Moreno wrote in a tweet.
The debt accord gives Ecuador breathing room, well beyond when
Morenos term ends next May. Still, political opponents have criticized
the president and his finance team for not taking a more aggressive
approach in the restructuring talks. At the same time, they won praise
from key creditors who said Ecuador officials were more reasonable than
their counterparts in Argentina, where negotiations have dragged on for
months.
The Moreno government faced a late challenge when two creditors --
Greenwich, Connecticut-based hedge fund Contrarian Capital Management
LLC and Boston-based GMO -- asked U.S. District Judge Valerie Caproni in
Manhattan to block the restructuring, calling the nations tactics
“coercive in the extreme.” She denied that request on Friday.
Ecuador‘s Finance Ministry said it will extend the deadline for
creditors to participate in the debt offer until Aug. 7 to allow for
holders who didn’t vote yet. The target date for the bond exchange is
Aug. 12. The bond debt Ecuador is restructuring is close to a third of
foreign debt. Its also aiming to reprofile bilateral debt with China, as
well as to obtain new Chinese loans for $2.4 billion, and reach a
successor deal with the International Monetary Fund, which supported the
bond exchange, to the $4.2 billion agreement that collapsed amid the
COVID-19 crisis.
Ecuador embarked on a debt-sale spree in 2014 to
offset a decline in the price of oil, its main export. Mounting
financial trouble led the country to sign the pact with the IMF in early
2019. Its debt woes were exacerbated by the pandemic. Ecuador is
suffering one of the worlds highest death rates from the virus.
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