The Vulture Funds and the Argentine Sovereign Debt Default
EXCERPTS
RESTRUCTURING SAGA
THE SWOOP OF VULTURE FUNDS
After Argentina defaulted on its sovereign debt in 2001, a few “vulture funds” — most notoriously the hedge fund Elliott Management headed by the billionaire Paul E. Singer — saw Argentina’s travails as an opportunity to make huge profits at the expense of the Argentine people...
THE HOLDOUTS’ PROBLEM
Argentina stated that it had arrears of USD11.2 billion to the holdouts worldwide (including USD6.8 billion in principal past and coming due, and USD4.4 billion in past due interest through December 2010)...
BLURRED SOVEREIGN RATING
Argentina faced another problem of unclear sovereign ratings by the global rating agencies. The 2014 ruling by a District Court Judge Thomas Griesa that Argentina could not pay its bondholders unless it also paid the holdouts in full affected its sovereign ratings...
THE WAY OUT
Argentina was not in a precarious position as it took several steps toward normalizing the economy and its relations with the outside world...
EXHIBITS
Exhibit 1: Macroeconomic Indicators
Exhibit 2: Sovereign Debt Securities – Argentina
Exhibit 3: Sovereign Debt Securities Issued by Select Countries
Exhibit 4: Sovereign Default Rates
Exhibit 5: Sovereign Debt in Default as a Share of World Public Debt and World GDP
Exhibit 6: External Sovereign defaults since 1800
Exhibit 7: Sovereign Debt Restructuring
Exhibit 8: Sovereign Bond Defaults Since 2000
Exhibit 9: A Short History of Vulture Funds
Exhibit 10: Sovereign Debt and Credit Rating of Countries