Payment holiday parachute might COVID-proof government
bonds, top fund says
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[August 26, 2020] By
Marc Jones
LONDON (Reuters) - The option of a one-time
payment holiday during times of intense crisis might enable countries to
pandemic-proof their bonds, a prominent debt fund believes.
Economic fallout from COVID-19 has triggered a record number of
sovereign defaults in 2020, and managers at Boston-based GMO, heavily
involved in sovereign restructurings in recent years, have proposed
redesigning bonds so that countries can suspend or even wipe off debt
payments for up to a year.
Credit rating agency S&P has downgraded 51 countries this year, and four
- Lebanon, Ecuador, Argentina and Belize - have already defaulted,
beating a record set in 2017.
"In the case of Ecuador, it might have provided enough liquidity relief
to prevent a default," said GMO's Carl Ross, one of the payment holiday
plan's two architects and a negotiator in Ecuador's and Argentina's
restructurings.
He favours that idea over current approaches such the linking of debt
payments to economic fortunes chosen in 2012 by Greece, and the
"hurricane clause" - offering debt relief if a second catastrophic storm
hits - used in Grenada's 2015 restructuring.
"Our proposal is to revert to something much simpler," Ross said. "The
whole idea is to prevent countries getting into distress in the first
place".
Sui-Jim Ho, a partner at Cleary Gottlieb - the law firm that helped
draft Granada's hurricane clause - said discussion around temporary debt
suspensions was gaining traction.
However, he questioned how simple implementing them would be.
"We still need to figure out how the pandemic trigger event should be
drafted," he said "...Defined too loosely and it could be triggered too
easily. Defined too restrictively and you could end up with too little
too late."
Graphic: Bond prices plunge ahead of defaults
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GAME THEORY
Ross said the potential criticism that GMO's proposal could be abused by
politicians looking for creative funding options was a low risk.
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A man talks on his cell phone in Buenos Aires' financial district,
Argentina October 4, 2018. REUTERS/Marcos Brindicci
Bond markets would soon work out governments that tried to play the system, and
as the deferral option would only be available once - or perhaps once a decade
for long-term bonds - it was also likely to be used sparingly.
"Interactions between bond markets and governments are a 'repeated game' ... We
believe this dynamic would be a very effective self-policing mechanism," he
said.
His idea would need International Monetary Fund or U.S. Treasury support to take
off, and a country would also have prove it was workable.
Ross said he suggested it to Ecuador but the process was moving too fast by
then, and it wouldn't have prevented Argentina or Lebanon defaulting as their
debts had already spiralled out of control.
Countries hit by multiple crises wouldn't be saved either as having more than
one deferral or debt forgiveness option would ramp up their borrowing costs.
Ross and the proposal's co-author, Mustafa Ulukan, estimate that a single
one-year deferral option might only add 0.6% to the 8% a country with a low
B-grade rating might pay to borrow for 10 years.
The approach could also address 'freeriding' criticism private sector
bondholders are now facing for not following G20 governments and allowing the
world's poorest countries to suspend debt payments during COVID-19.
Pressure for that to happen is growing but creditors warn the rating agencies
would class it as a default, opening up a host of problems. That is something
GMO thinks its plan would avoid.
"This (deferral) option, if broadly used, would be extraordinarily valuable in
the current global environment," Ross said. "This year and 2021, we have a lot
of countries that are going to default."
Graphic: How much extra could the debt deferral option cost
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(Additional reporting by Karin Strohecker; editing by John Stonestreet)
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