Puerto Rico debt fix unlikely to resemble
Detroit's
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[September 06, 2016]
By Nick Brown
NEW YORK (Reuters) - The federal appointees
tapped to help map Puerto Rico's economic future are technocrats more
than political actors, and that could make the U.S. territory's fiscal
turnaround look more like a corporate restructuring than a politically
charged municipal bankruptcy in the vein of Detroit.
The law known as PROMESA, which created the board when it passed the
U.S. Congress in June with bipartisan support, envisioned a pragmatic
solution for an island combating $70 billion in debt, 45 percent poverty
and a brain drain as residents bolt in droves for the mainland United
States.
Its members, four Republicans and three Democrats appointed last week,
were chosen by Republican and Democratic lawmakers and President Barack
Obama. The board has broad powers to help stabilize the island's
economy, from investigating Puerto Rico's government to working with
that government on projects to spur economic growth.
It must also approve the island's annual budgets, and will eventually
facilitate debt-restructuring talks with creditors. In the latter
endeavor, it will have to navigate a minefield of competing interests.
The island has 18 separate debt issuers, backed by different revenues
streams, as well as $18 billion in so-called general obligation debt
backed by the "full faith and credit" of the territory's government.
While that promise is legally weak in a bankruptcy setting, it is a
sacrosanct pledge in municipal debt markets.
Holders of all that debt will jockey for payouts against government
vendors and beneficiaries of the island's public pensions, which have
less than $2 billion in assets to cover some $45 billion in liabilities.
Detroit’s bankruptcy, which ended in December 2014, treated city
pensions much better than its outstanding bonds, which were largely
insured. Some Puerto Rico creditors, still suffering Detroit flashbacks,
feared Puerto Rico could look similar - especially since Governor
Alejandro Garcia Padilla has pushed big haircuts and railed against the
idea of reducing government services.
But the makeup of the Puerto Rico board has offered some reassurance,
said Nader Tavakoli, chief executive officer of Ambac, which insures
$2.2 billion of Puerto Rican bonds and also insured some of Detroit's
bonds. "These board members are technocrats, and it gives us confidence
that this is not going to be overly politicized," he said.
Deal makers also feature prominently, with an ex-bankruptcy judge, a
banker and a hedge fund operator in the mix.
Republicans, generally seen as creditor-friendly, nominated a bankruptcy
academic who favors restructuring the island's debt, David Skeel. And
Democrats nominated a banker, Jose Ramon Gonzalez, and a Democratic
finance expert in Ana Matosantos who directed California's budget under
former Republican Governor Arnold Schwarzenegger.
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Tourists stand inside a souvenir shop in San Juan, Puerto Rico,
August 3, 2015. REUTERS/Alvin Baez/File Photo
Experts see the group as likely to push a solution that sees all sides
share a burden, a typical approach for companies restructuring under
Chapter 11.
"There are no ideologues in the group," said Keefe Bruyette & Woods
analyst Chas Tyson.
That does not mean there are not drawbacks. For one, the board will have
to navigate a testy local political climate with residents who largely
revile a panel they see as an extension of colonial rule. Island voters
broadly unhappy with the Garcia Padilla administration in November will
elect a new governor as well as members of the legislature and scores of
mayors.
"There are still politics here," said veteran bankruptcy attorney
Richard Levin, who is following the situation. "The governor and
legislature retain some authority."
For Height Securities analyst Daniel Hanson, the board is short on
expertise in economic development. Any real solution for Puerto Rico
requires fundamental economic changes, including at its underperforming
education department, and it's unclear whether the board can facilitate
such change.
But from a financial perspective, at least, the board seems less
inclined to promote a political agenda than figure out a collaborative
fix and then get out, said Matt Fabian, partner at Municipal Market
Analytics.
"The board is not being installed to fight with Puerto Ricans or to
impose some kind of federal view," Fabian said. "They just want these
troubles to be fixed."
(Reporting and writing by Nick Brown; Additional reporting by Hilary
Russ; Editing by Dan Burns and Andrew Hay)
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