Ukraine faces key test on debt freeze plan in bid to avoid messy default
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[August 08, 2022] By
Jorgelina do Rosario and Karin Strohecker
LONDON (Reuters) - Ukraine's creditors vote
this week on a government proposal to defer payments on the war-torn
country's international bonds for 24 months as Kyiv hopes to swerve a
$20 billion messy default.
Bondholders have until 5 p.m. New York time (2100 GMT) on Tuesday to
decide whether to back or vote down the proposal by Ukraine's
government, which faces a $5 billion monthly financing gap and liquidity
pressures following Russia's invasion on Feb. 24. Time is precious: the
country has a $1 billion bond maturing on Sept. 1.
Creditors will likely wait until relatively close to the deadline to
vote, said a person familiar with Ukraine's thinking. Investors are
expected to support the debt standstill, the person added.
When announcing its proposal, Ukraine's finance minister Sergii
Marchenko said it had "explicit indications of support" from some of the
world's biggest investment funds including BlackRock, Fidelity, Amia
Capital and Gemsstock.
Creditors of Ukravtodor and Ukrenergo, two state-owned firms that have
government guarantees on their debt, also have until Aug. 9 to vote on a
plan similar to the sovereign.
IS THIS A DEFAULT?
The two-year moratorium on external debt payments would allow Ukraine to
avoid a contractual or legal default, as any amendment on the bonds'
terms would have the creditors' backing, Rodrigo Olivares-Caminal,
professor of banking and finance law, at Queen Mary University of
London, told Reuters.
However, creditors could ask whether a default insurance known as credit
default swaps (CDS) should kick in, as a deferral of payments might be
considered a credit event by the International Swaps and Derivatives
Association (ISDA).
Investors are sitting on about $221 million of insurance on Ukraine’s
debt, according to Depository Trust & Clearing Corporation (DTCC) data
on the CDS.
Credit rating agencies might also classify this as a "selective default"
or "default".
"A contractual default, a credit event and a credit rating default are
three different albeit related concepts," Olivares-Caminal said.
"Incurring any of the three doesn't mean that the other two will
trigger."
While investors are expected to back the freeze it is unclear whether
the country may still need a debt restructuring in the medium term.
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Anti-tank constructions are seen in central Kyiv, Ukraine March 7,
2022. REUTERS/Gleb Garanich/File Photo/File Photo
"It is just a pause button - we do not know what shape Ukraine will be in a few
months or a few years down the line," said Luiz Peixoto, emerging markets
economist at BNP Paribas in London. "Investors are already preparing for a debt
restructuring."
The dollar-denominated bonds trade at deeply distressed, some as low as 17 cents
in the dollar.
Battered by the war, which Russia calls a "special military operation", Ukraine
faces a 35%-45% economic contraction in 2022, according to estimates from the
government and analysts, and is heavily reliant on foreign financing from its
Western partners.
Ukraine aims to strike a deal for a $15 billion-$20 billion programme with the
International Monetary Fund before the end of the year.
Ukraine restructured its debt in 2015 after an economic crisis linked to a
Russia-backed insurgency in its industrial east. The deal left it with a large
number of payments due annually between 2019 and 2027, and it returned to
international markets in 2017 with a $3 billion hard-currency debt issuance.
For the foreign debt freeze plan to be successful, the so-called consent
solicitation requires the support of investors holding two-thirds across the 13
Eurobonds maturing from 2022 to 2033, and at least 50% of the holders of each
note.
The government launched a separate proposal on its $2.6 billion of outstanding
GDP warrants, a derivative security that triggers payments linked to its
economic growth.
In late July, Ukraine's state-energy firm Naftogaz became the first Ukrainian
government entity to default since the start of the Russian invasion. Naftogaz's
bonds are not guaranteed by the sovereign.
(This story corrects first name in paragraph 12 to Luiz ..not.. Luis)
(Reporting by Jorgelina do Rosario and Karin Strohecker; Editing by Susan
Fenton)
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