Small investment funds buy Venezuela bonds to pressure
Maduro and Guaido
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[October 13, 2020]
By Corina Pons, Luc Cohen and Mayela Armas
CARACAS (Reuters) - Three small investment
funds have started buying defaulted Venezuelan bonds as hopes of a
change of government are fading and the South American nation is
proposing a restructuring, according to sources and documents.
Canaima Capital Management, headquartered on the English Channel island
of Guernsey, Uruguay-based Copernico and Cayman Islands-based Altana
have bought heavily discounted bonds with face value of hundreds of
millions of dollars, according to eight finance industry sources in
Caracas, New York, Miami, Madrid and London.
The funds appear to be part of a small group of contrarian investors
bucking the broader market consensus, which maintains there is little
value in Venezuelan bonds that have not been serviced in nearly three
years amid an economic crisis.
The funds believe it is time to act and to evaluate legal options
instead of waiting for a friendly negotiation with allies of Juan Guaido,
who is recognized by more than 50 countries as Venezuela's interim
president, even though he still hasn't taken power.
The funds argue investors may be unable to recover missed interest
payment after 2020 due to a statute of limitations clause in the bonds'
covenants - an assertion flatly denied by the main committee for
Venezuela creditors.
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Nonetheless, the efforts to amplify these concerns has fueled
nervousness and increased the willingness of bondholders to sell their
notes, according to four Venezuelan finance industry sources.
Altana, which two sources said was offering to buy bonds this year, has
already taken legal action against Venezuela to try to force payment. In
an Oct. 8 complaint filed with the United States District Court for the
Southern District of New York, the fund demanded payment from Venezuela
on $108 million of defaulted bonds.
That came after investment funds Casa Express and Pharo Gaia Fund in
late September won a $400 million summary judgment on defaulted
Venezuelan bonds in U.S. courts, a setback for Guaido's team that could
prompt more bondholders to seek judgments rather than waiting for a
negotiation.
"If the only way to stop the statute of limitations is to sue, we have
to sue, unless we reach some kind of agreement," said Celestino Amore,
managing director of London-based firm IlliquidX, which is working with
Canaima Capital Management.
He added that emerging market investors are particularly attuned to
prescription clauses after they were invoked on some Argentine bonds in
2015.
Luke Allen, an independent non-executive director of Canaima, said in a
statement that the company "was pleased to have joined forces with
IlliquidX" and that the firm was "focusing on launching our dedicated
Venezuelan sovereign debt opportunity vehicle."
It was not immediately evident how much assets Canaima has under
management.
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Venezuela's President Nicolas Maduro speaks during an event with the
youth of Venezuela's United Socialist Party in Caracas, Venezuela,
June 22, 2020. Miraflores Palace/Handout via REUTERS
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Copernico, which according to its pitch document has $600 million in assets
under management, has accumulated Venezuelan bonds with a face value of between
$100 million and $500 million, according to three people familiar with the
matter.
Copernico did not respond to requests for comment.
U.S. sanctions prohibit American individuals and funds from buying Venezuelan
securities, but such rules do not appear to apply to Copernico, Canaima and
Altanta because they are based outside of the United States.
'BOLD MOVE'
Bonds issued by Venezuela's government trade near 7% of face value while those
issued by state oil company PDVSA fetch around 3%, according to Refinitiv Eikon
data.
The bonds do not generate income because Maduro's government stopped servicing
them in 2017.
Copernico and Canaima argue that investors are approaching a three-year statute
of limitations on lawsuits against Venezuela and PDVSA, per bond covenants.
Finance Minister Delcy Rodriguez repeated this argument in a September call for
investors to negotiate a restructuring, a call that was largely ignored because
U.S. sanctions prohibit dealings with members Maduro's government.
Venezuela's finance ministry said in a Monday statement that bondholders had
until Nov. 13 to respond to the offer, an extension of 30 days from the prior
deadline.
The Venezuelan Creditors Committee, which groups U.S. investors, has repeatedly
said the prescription clause is only triggered once Venezuela and PDVSA transfer
interest or principal payments to the financial institutions charged with
distributing them to investors.
Because this in most cases has not happened since 2017, most bondholders believe
the clause is irrelevant. In a statement this month, the committee reiterated
"its willingness to work towards an amicable restructuring."
Guaido's special prosecutor this month also said that the prescription clause
has not been activated.
But not all funds have been calmed by those statements. Discussions of the
statute of limitations issue has encouraged some nervous bondholders to unload
their notes.
"It was a bold move, one that favors these funds," said a financial adviser in
Caracas familiar with the case, referring to Rodriguez' reference to the
prescription clause.
(Reporting by Luc Cohen, Corina Pons and Mayela Armas, writing by Brian
Ellsworth; Editing by Nick Zieminski and Cynthia Osterman)
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