Russia looks to swerve default with last-minute dollar bond payment
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[April 30, 2022] By
Marc Jones and Andrea Shalal
LONDON/
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Russia made
what appeared to be a late U-turn to avoid a default on Friday, as it
made a number of overdue interest payments in dollars on its overseas
bonds, despite previously vowing to pay only in roubles as long as its
reserves remained frozen.
Russia's $40 billion of international bonds have become the focus of a
game of financial chicken amid sweeping Western sanctions - and
speculation about a default is likely to revive in less than four weeks,
when a U.S. license allowing Moscow to make payments is due to expire.
Russia's finance ministry said it had managed to pay $564.8 million in
interest on a 2022 Eurobond and $84.4 million on another 2042 bond in
dollars - the currency specified on the bonds.
A senior U.S. official confirmed Moscow had made the payment without
using reserves frozen in the United States, adding that the exact origin
of the funds was unclear.
Deputy U.S. Treasury Secretary Wally Adeyemo told Reuters that the
payments siphoned funds away from Russia's Ukraine war effort and were a
"sign of success" for U.S sanctions policy.
He declined to comment on the future of a Treasury general license due
to expire on May 25 that allows banks to process Russian debt payments.
"Our overarching goal is to try to starve Russia of the resources that
they're using to both prop up their economy and finance their war
effort, and to stop their invasion of Ukraine. So we're going to keep
making policy decisions with that in mind," Adeyemo said.
Russia said it had channelled the required funds to the London branch of
Citibank, one of the "paying agents" whose job it is to disburse them to
the bondholders.
Citibank declined to comment.
"The payments were made in the currency of issue of the corresponding
Eurobonds – in U.S. dollars," the Russian Finance Ministry said. "Thus,
the obligations to service sovereign Eurobonds are fulfilled."
Two holders of the bonds said they had not yet received the funds, but
the process can take days.
"I don't see a reason why they (the paying agent) cannot make that
payment," said Kaan Nazli, portfolio manager for the Emerging Markets
Debt team at Neuberger Berman, which holds Russian sovereign bonds.
Russia's Sberbank separately said it had paid coupons on two
subordinated eurobond issues in roubles because sanctions by the United
States and Britain prevented it from making payments to investors in
line with its initial commitments.
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Pedestrians walk past Russia's Finance Ministry building in Moscow,
Russia March 30, 2021. A sign reads: "Ministry of Finance of the
Russian Federation". REUTERS/Maxim Shemetov/File Photo
BONDS SOAR
Russia has not had a default of any kind since a financial crash in 1998 and has
not seen a major international or 'external' market default since the aftermath
of the 1917 Bolshevik revolution.
The risk of another one is growing, however, as Western countries have blanketed
Russia with sanctions in response to its invasion of Ukraine, which Moscow has
termed a "special military operation" to disarm Ukraine and root out what it
calls dangerous nationalists.
The interest payments were supposed to be paid earlier this month but a 30-day
'grace period' that government bonds often have in their terms meant Moscow's
final deadline was May 4.
Brokers said the announcement sent Russian government bond prices up as much as
15 cents, almost doubling their dollar value in some cases. Those belonging to
major still-unsanctioned companies such as Gazprom, Lukoil and telecoms firm
VimpelCom were quoted up 2-5 cents too.
BlueBay's Tim Ash called Russia's move "pretty extraordinary", pointing out too
that the key group of international banks and funds that judge whether a default
has happened had recently ruled that it had.
The prospect of a default by Russia was almost unthinkable before its invasion
of Ukraine. The billions of dollars it earns from selling oil and gas around the
world meant it had one of the world's lowest government debt levels and an
enormous stockpile of currency reserves.
However, Western sanctions have frozen a large chunk of those reserves, and mean
banks have needed special dispensations to make any Russian-related payments.
Andy Sparks, managing director at index provider MSCI, said the prospect of a
default still loomed large if the U.S. Treasury allows the Russian debt payment
license to expire on May 25.
Russia has another bond payment just two days after that which means that, if
the U.S. waiver is not extended, it will be almost impossible for Moscow to
avoid a default.
"The real question is whether this is just delaying the inevitable," Sparks
said.
"Most investors will take that date of May 25 very seriously and many will not
expect that exception to be extended."
(additional reporting by David Lawder in Washington, Davide Barbuscia and
Rodrigo Campos in New York, Sujata Rao and Karin Strohecker in London; Editing
by Toby Chopra and Daniel Wallis)
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