Wealthy Argentines Looks to Miami Real Estate
With Worldcrunch, you'll discover a new world of fresh perspectives from 30+ top news sources across the globe, all expertly translated into English for the first time....
Why the Argentine Government Owes $15M
If there's anything we've learned about the over $1.3 billion debt saga between a group of hedge funds and Argentina it's that just when you think something is over......
Argentines Eye Miami Real Estate
With Worldcrunch, you'll discover a new world of fresh perspectives from 30+ top news sources across the globe, all expertly translated into English for the first time....
Kyle Bass, Founder of $1.7B Hedge Fund, is Big on Argentina
Kyle Bass, founder of the $1.7 billion hedge fund Hayman Capital, revealed Wednesday morning having recently taken a large stake in YPF, the Argentine oil company, as the best play on a new decade of...
Argentina Passes Law to Reclaim Default Debt From NY Hedge Fund
By definition, onerous debt was corrupt, imposed under false pretenses, and/or malevolent in intent - therefore, it may be repudiated with honor....
A Hedge Fund is Tango'ing with Argentine Assets
U.S. District Judge Cam Ferenbach ruled that NML Capital Ltd. has a right to information from companies owned by Lazaro Báez...
Will Argentina Go Down In Flames Even If It Pays Off The Hedge Funds?
That means rising interest rates, money printing, inflation, and a replay of the classic Argentine nightmare....
Argentina's Vulture Fund Crisis -- Global Implications
he United States Supreme Court issued a ruling on 16 June 2014 declining to hear Argentina's appeal against a lower New York court decision that had ordered it to pay suing hedge funds $1.33 billion, which is principal plus interest for holdout bonds. This was followed shortly by another decision by the Supreme Court to order the relevant financial institutions of the United States of America to turn over information to these hedge funds about assets that Argentina holds worldwide, including accounts held by entities of the Government of Argentina and by individual officials1.
These two rulings targeted at Argentina's 2005 and 2010 debt swaps, in the wake of its catastrophic 2001-2002 default on $100 billion bonds governed by New York law, resonate well beyond the borders of Argentina and the United States. The rulings are a resounding victory for the specific hedge funds that have held out on Argentine debt swaps. They also open the door for other "vulture" funds and holdout investors to come forward to request full payment on Argentine bonds, estimated at around $15 billion. If Argentina pays the holdout bond holders, it must extend full payment to the bond holders that accepted the 2005 or 2010 debt swaps, due to a "Rights upon Future Offers" clause in its law. This would amount to an estimated cost of over US$120 billion2. In fact, the rulings could open floodgates to other similar cases depending on interpretations given by courts under New York law, British law or other laws. Copycats will abound.
"Argentina or Vulture Funds"
<p dir="ltr">The fate of Argentina’s economy now rests on its ability to resolve a dispute with a group of bondholders led by a multibillion-dollar hedge fund. “Argentina’s professed willingness to negotiate with its creditors has proven to be just another broken promise,” said Jay Newman, a portfolio manager at Elliott Management Corp., a New York hedge fund that specializes in profiting off complex legal disputes that, like in the case of Argentina, often take years to resolve.</p>
Argentina vs. NY Hedge Funds
The dispute returned on Wednesday to the Federal District Court in Manhattan where the hedge funds, including a unit of Elliott Management, had previously gained important victories....