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		Puerto Rico authorizes debt payment 
		suspension; Obama signs rescue bill 
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		 [July 01, 2016] 
		By Nick Brown 
 SAN JUAN (Reuters) - Puerto Rico 
		authorized suspension of payments on its general obligation debt on 
		Thursday just minutes after U.S. President Barack Obama signed a law 
		creating a federal oversight board with authority to negotiate the 
		restructuring of the island's $70 billion in debt.
 The executive order issued by Puerto Rico's governor, Alejandro 
			Garcia Padilla, comes just one day before the U.S. territory was due 
			to make $1.9 billion worth of debt payments on July 1, including 
			some $780 million in constitutionally-backed, general obligation 
			bonds.
 It remains to be seen whether Puerto Rico will pay part of the GO 
			debt or any of the non-GO debt.
 
 "Under these circumstances, these executive orders protect the 
			limited resources available to the agencies listed in these orders 
			and prevents that these can be seized by creditors, leaving Puerto 
			Ricans without basic services," Garcia Padilla's administration said 
			in a statement.
 
 The flurry of activity represents the nadir of a decade-long 
			struggle by Puerto Rico, home to 3.5 million Americans, to stave off 
			economic collapse, reverse a 45 percent poverty rate and stem 
			rampant emigration that exacerbates the economy's decline.
 
 Garcia Padilla authorized the suspension of general obligation 
			payments under a previously enacted local debt moratorium law that 
			has already been challenged by a creditor lawsuit filed in U.S. 
			District Court in Manhattan.
 
		
		 In addition, Garcia Padilla also declared states of emergency at the 
			island's biggest public pension - the Commonwealth's Employee 
			Retirement System - which is more than 99 percent underfunded, as 
			well as the University of Puerto Rico and other agencies.
 Puerto Rico's benchmark 2035 General Obligation bond rose 0.44 
			points in price to trade at 67.19 points, pushing the yield down to 
			12.578 percent.
 
 OBAMA SIGNS PROMESA
 
 In Washington, Obama signed the Puerto Rico Oversight, Management 
			and Economic Stability Act, or PROMESA, in the Oval office on 
			Thursday, one of the few pieces of bi-partisan legislation to make 
			it to his desk.
 
 "I want to let the people of Puerto Rico know that although there 
			are still some tough work that we're going to have to do to dig 
			Puerto Rico out of the hole that it's in, this indicates how 
			committed my administration is to making sure that they get the help 
			they need," Obama told reporters before signing it.
 
 The law will allow the island access to a bankruptcy-like debt 
			restructuring process, but put its finances under the control of a 
			federally-appointed board — a condition that has riled many in 
			Puerto Rico, including Garcia Padilla.
 
		
		 
		
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			 President Barack Obama 
			signs into law S. 337: FOIA Improvement Act of 2016 and S. 2328: 
			Puerto Rico Oversight, Management and Economic Stability Act at the 
			Oval Office of the White House in Washington, U.S., June 30, 2016. 
			REUTERS/Carlos Barria 
            
             
			PROMESA, which passed the U.S. Senate on Wednesday, puts a stay, or 
			halt, on litigation in the event of a default. Puerto Rico has 
			already defaulted three times on portions of its debt in the last 
			year. 
			The stay is critical to keep Puerto Rico's financial restructuring 
			from devolving into a mess of long, costly court battles. The stay 
			is retroactive back to December 2015.
 The oversight board will have the authority to facilitate consensual 
			restructuring talks, or push Puerto Rico into a court-supervised 
			process akin to U.S. bankruptcy. It will also oversee and monitor 
			the implementation of sustainable budgets.
 
 Still, missed payments matter for the insurers who have to pay out 
			on claims should Puerto Rico not deliver the cash to its investors.
 
 MBIA's National Public Finance Guarantee insures about $173 million 
			in GO debt due on Friday, while Assured Guaranty covers another $184 
			million, and Ambac insures $40 million in GO or GO-guaranteed debt 
			due on Friday.
 
 The island's debt-laden semi-public power utility, PREPA, earlier on 
			Thursday announced it will make its full, $415 million payment due 
			Friday, under the terms of a restructuring agreement reached late 
			last year with the bulk of its creditors.
 
 PREPA, which had been on the brink of collapse under $8.3 billion in 
			debt, last year reached an exchange deal with most of its creditors, 
			which is being finalized. The payment will be made using operational 
			funds and proceeds from new bond sales.
 
 "Today's outcome is another step towards PREPA's transformation," 
			Lisa Donahue, the utility's chief restructuring officer, said in a 
			statement.
 
 (Reporting by Nick Brown; Additional reporting by Roberta Rampton in 
			Washington; Editing by Daniel Bases and Bernard Orr)
 
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