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			 Latin America's No. 3 economy tipped into its second default in 12 
			years in July after U.S. District Judge Thomas Griesa blocked 
			payments to holders of issued under U.S. law that was restructured 
			following its record $100 billion default in 2002. 
 Griesa ruled that measures proposed by Argentina's president late on 
			Tuesday to make debt payments locally and push bondholders to bring 
			their debt under Argentine law violated past court rulings. But he 
			stopped short of holding the country in contempt.
 
 President Cristina Fernandez's measures, if enacted and executed, 
			would potentially allow Argentina to skirt Griesa's court orders and 
			thus resume interest payments on an estimated $29 billion in 
			restructured bonds.
 
 Argentine Cabinet Chief Jorge Capitanich said Griesa's choice of 
			words was "unfortunate, incorrect and even, I would say, imperialist 
			expressions".
 
			
			 
 Argentina defaulted after Griesa froze a $539 million interest 
			payment, saying restructured bonds cannot be paid unless U.S. 
			investment funds demanding 100 cents on the dollar, plus interest, 
			are simultaneously paid.
 
 Elliott Management Corp, a lead holdout investor suing Argentina via 
			its NML Capital affiliate, is preparing to subpoena a number of 
			international banks in its efforts to seize what it suspects are 
			embezzled Argentine funds, a source at the hedge fund told Thomson 
			Reuters IFR.
 
 Argentine bonds extended losses but the peso halted a two-day rout, 
			firming 0.2 percent on the black market to 13.880 per dollar. It 
			struck a record low of 14.000 on Thursday.
 
 Griesa's move not to level contempt charges against Argentina was 
			aiding the peso erase some of its cumulative 5.2 percent loss on 
			Wednesday and Thursday, market analysts said.
 
 The government has pulled no punches in its stinging criticism of 
			Griesa, accusing the judge of abusing Argentina's national 
			sovereignty.
 
 It said Griesa's remarks showed a "complete ignorance of the 
			functioning of democratic institutions".
 
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			On Friday, Argentine dollar-denominated Discount bonds due in 2033 
			traded 2.8 percent lower to bid 78.925 cents on the dollar.
 Fernandez's stance makes a resolution to the debt saga increasingly 
			unlikely before the October 2015 presidential election, in which she 
			is constitutionally barred from running.
 
 "What may change that dynamic is a significant deterioration in the 
			macro environment coupled with a meaningful further devaluation of 
			the peso," said Nasser Ahmad, chief investment officer of New 
			York-based hedge fund DA Capital.
 
 "That may force the current government back to the negotiating 
			table," he added.
 
 The peso's mid-week slump reinforced expectations that a drawn-out 
			crisis will fuel one of the world's highest inflation rates, sap 
			shrinking foreign reserves and deepen the country's recession.
 
 "If capital continues to pour out of the economy, the authorities 
			will probably have to devalue," wrote David Rees, emerging markets 
			economist at Capital Economics.
 
 (Additional reporting by Nishant Kumar in London and Davide 
			Scigliuzzo of IFR)
 
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