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COUNTRY RISK ASSESSMENT External Debt Crisis Investment

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Title: COUNTRY RISK ASSESSMENT External Debt Crisis Investment


1
COUNTRY RISK ASSESSMENTExternal Debt
CrisisInvestment Opportunities-II-
  • April 2008

2
Various approaches to country risk assessment
  • Qualitative analysis
  • Quantitative approach rating and scoring
  • Econometric approach and modelization
  • Analytical approach crisis typology (Indosuez)
  • Principal Component Analysis (CDC)
  • Logit Analysis
  • Non-linear conditional analysis (threshold levels
    breaking points)
  • External debt analysis

3
US banks cut lending to EMCs... while improving
capital ratios!
US billion
Tier 1 capital
US Banks loans to EMCs
BAKER PLAN
BRADY PLAN
4
US Banks cross-border claims on EMCs end-2007
  • Total US banks claims US189 billion
  • O/w on India US28319 million
  • O/w US foreign office claims on India US25162
  • O/w claims on Indias banking sector US10097
  • OW claims on Indias public sector US6785
  • O/w Citibanks claims on India US17470 million
  • O/w
  • (1 of total assets or 20 of capital)

Source USFFIEC
5
The Brady Plan Menu-based debt restructuring
workouts
6
The 1989-2000 Brady Debt Reduction Plan
  • Debtor countries
  • Tough macroeconomic adjustment programs under the
    monitoring of the IMF/WB (SALs)
  • Cofinance LT debt repayment guarantees with
    purchase of zero-coupon bonds
  • London Club banks
  • Provide deep discounts through interest or debt
    stock reduction
  • Get accounting and regulatory incentives
  • Shift to specific purpose financing and voluntary
    lending (2003-2007)

7
The Brady Plan
  • Objective defaulted sovereign London Club bank
    loans would be exchanged for collateralized,
    easily tradeable 30-year bonds, with bullet
    repayment
  • London Club banks would grant some amount of debt
    relief to debtor nations, in some proportion of
    secondary market discounts.
  • The new Brady bonds would be guaranteed by
    zero-coupon US Treasury bonds which the
    defaulting nation would purchase with financing
    support from the IMF/World Bank.

8
Brady Bonds
  • Brady Bonds are named after former U.S. Treasury
    Secretary Nicholas Brady.
  • Brady bonds have their principal guaranteed as
    well as x semi-annual interest payments, whose
    guarantee is rolled over.
  • Bullet repayment is collateralized by 30-year
    zero coupon bonds, with a specific-purpose issue
    of the US Treasury, the Banque de France or the
    BIS.
  • Cross-default clause

9
The Brady plan in action
Debt cancellation backed up by commercial banks
reserves for loan-losses with regulatory
incentives
35
65
SENIOR DEBT
New debt with long-term maturity,
principal collateralization, rolling interest
guarantee, and cross-default clause
10
Brady Bonds
Default on interest payments would trigger
exercise of interest guarantee
and of principal collateral guarantee
Bullet Payment at maturity
Prime rate or LIBOR Spread of 13/16
ZCB
t20
t30
t10
t0
11
How to assess and calculate the market value of a
collateralized Brady Bond?
  • Brady bonds comprise defaulted London Club debt,
    repackaged and backed by 30-year US Treasury
    bonds as collateral, often including a rolling
    18-month interest guarantee.
  • 1. Strip the bond by separating the risk from the
    no-risk elements (interest and principal)
    risk-free discount rate
  • 2. Calculate the risk-adjusted NPV of the
    guaranteed and non-guaranteed streams of interest
    payments and the principal payment at maturity

12
Brady Bonds
  • In February 1990, Mexico became the first country
    to issue Bradys, converting 48.1 billion of its
    eligible foreign debt to commercial banks.
  • US200 bn of Bradys from 18 countries in Asia,
    Africa, Eastern Europe and Latin America
  • Mexico, Brazil, Venezuela Argentina accounteed
    for more than 2/3 of Brady Bonds issued.

13
  • Market-driven menu of options
  • new money loans discounted buybacks exit
    bonds debt conversion debt restructuring
    bonds
  • Official Support up to US 25 billion to
    support the Brady initiative from the IMF World
    Bank RDB OECD creditors

14
Financial components of a Menu
  • I. Buying back debt at a discount, either
    formally or informally, enables developing
    countries to reduce debt by exploiting the
    discount on commercial bank loans in the
    secondary market.
  • The effectiveness of a buyback depends on how it
    is financed whether it be by a loan or donation
    and on its impact on the future debt servicing
    profile. For highly indebted countries, one aim
    of buying back debt is to enable small banks to
    exit before a restructuring plan.
  • For low income countries with little debt, the
    purchase can be used to eliminate commercial bank
    debt in its entirety. However, the purchase of
    debt raises legal and legislative issues.
    Restructuring agreements require the legal waiver
    of restrictive clauses prohibiting buybacks or
    conversions.

15
Financial components of a Menu
  • II. Debt Exchange consists of converting old
    claims for more favorable instruments both for
    the creditor and the debtor country
  • Brady bonds (discount bonds, par bonds, and
    FLIRBs)
  • Debt/Equity conversion
  • Debt restructuring with new coupon and longer
    term maturity
  • (Pakistan, Russia, Ukraine in mid-1999)

16
  • Types of Brady Bond Instruments
  • Par Bonds Maturity Registered 30 year bullet
    issued at par Coupon Fixed rate semi-annual
    below market coupon Guarantee Rolling interest
    guarantees from 12 to 18 months Principal is
    collaterallized by U.S. Treasury zero-coupon
    bonds
  • Discount Bonds (DB) Maturity Registered 30 year
    bullet amortization issued at discount Coupon
    Floating rate semi-annual LIBOR Guarantee
    Rolling interest guarantees from 12 to 18 months.
  • Front Loaded Interest Reduction Bonds (FLIRB)
    Maturity Bearer 15 to 20 year semi-annual bond.
    Bond has amortization feature in which a set
    proportion of bonds are redeemed semi-annually.
    Coupon LIBOR market rate until maturity.
    Guarantee Rolling interest guarantees generally
    of 12 months available only the first 5 or 6
    years.

17
Brady Bonds
  • Debt Conversion Bonds (DCB) Maturity Bearer
    bonds maturing between 15-20 years. Bonds issued
    at par. Coupon Amortizing semi-annual LIBOR
    market rate. Guarantee No collateral is provided
  • New Money Bonds (NMB) Maturity Bearer bonds
    maturing 15-20 years. Coupon Amortizing
    semi-annual LIBOR. No collateral
  • Past Due Interest (PDI) Maturity Bearer bonds
    maturing 10-20 years. Coupon Amortizing
    semi-annual LIBOR. No collateral
  • Capitalization Bonds (C-Bonds) Issued in 1994 by
    Brazil in the Brady plan. Maturity Registered 20
    year amortizing bonds initially offered at par.
    Coupon Fixed below market coupon rate stepping
    up to 8 during the first 6 years and holding
    until maturity. Both capitalized interest and
    principal payments are made after a 10 year grace
    period.

18
  • Par, Discount and FLIRB bonds
  • may have principal collateralization, usually 30
    year U.S. Treasury zero-coupon bonds, and/or
    rolling interest collateralization (usually 12-18
    months)
  • may be excluded from further new money requests
    of the bond issuer in order to maintain the
    implicit seniority of the new debt
  • may be eligible for debt-equity conversions in
    the developing country.
  • bonds with recapture clause (Argentina, Nigeria,
    RCI) In some cases, the bonds carry rights to
    receive additional payments that are triggered by
    an increase in the price of the country's major
    exportable goods. The value recovery clause can
    be linked to the evolution of GDP, an index of
    terms of trade, or export receipts.

19
(No Transcript)
20
The market-based menu of debt restructuring
instruments
21
Brady Bonds
  • Arg Par 48.000  50.000
  • Arg FRB 41.000  42.000
  • Arg '27 31.000  33.000
  • Brz C 75.250  75.437
  • Brz '27 72.750  73.000
  • Bul IAB 85.000  85.500
  • Mex Par 93.000  93.250
  • Pol Par 75.250  76.250
  • Rus '28 107.750  108.000
  • Ven DCB 78.250  78.750
  • Vie Par 44.000  45.000

22
Market-based menu approach the importance of the
tax, accounting and regulatory framework
  • In June of 1999, the BIS launched a revision of
    the capital adequacy guidelines, known as the
    1988 Cooke ratio. The BIS 12 banking
    comptrollers were to edict new regulations to be
    applied by 2002, in consultation with the EUs
    commission.
  • The Cooke solvency ratio imposes an 8 proportion
    between risk-weighted assets and capital.
  • There are four risk categories, between 0 (OECD
    countries, IFIs) and 100 (EMCs risk).
  • In 1995, the BIS adopted a reformed Capital
    Adequacy ratio to account for investment and
    transaction financial instruments. The ratio also
    distinguishes between market risk and counterpart
    risks.

23
Market-based menu approach the importance of the
tax, accounting and regulatory framework
  • The Capital Adequacy ratio stipulates that
    various exposures to risk must be considered,
    including interest, counterpart, volatility,
    currency risks) and that capital requirements
    must be assessed by Value at Risk methods.
  • Capital comprises two categories
  • 1. Tier 1 capital, reserves, benefits, and
    FRBG
  • 2. Tier 2 reevaluation reserves, guarantees,
    public subsidies, subordinated debts under
    specific conditions.
  • The 2000 BIS reform aimed at adjusting the risk
    weighted assets to take into account (i) not the
    legal nature of risk but rather the underlying
    risk quality, (ii) risk mitigating tools
    (guarantees, collaterals) and (iii) risk ratings.

24
International banks reserves against LDCs claims
in the mid-1990s
25
Basles II regulatory guidelines
  • Came in operation in 2007 the new guidelines
    force banks to allocate more capital against
    loans to countries (and companies) that are lower
    rated or not rated at all.
  • In addition to credit and market risk, the
    operational risk capital charge rests on a basic
    indicator approach, a standardised approach and
    an advanced risk-sensitive measurement approach.
    This risk stems from inadequate or failed
    internal processes.

26
Basles 2 Tax, accounting and regulatory framework
  • Impact of new capital adequacy guidelines on EMCs
    capital market access?
  • Negative impact on OECD countries with ratings AA- higher capital requirements (Mexico,
    Turkey, Korea) 100
  • Non OECD countries with ratings capital backing
  • Non OECD countries with ratings BB lower
    capital backing from 100 to 50 or even 20
    and 0 (Taiwan and Singapore)
  • Growing risk of procyclicality of banks internal
    risk rating systems

27
Tax, accounting and regulatory framework
28
  • Commercial banks which include general reserves
    in capital (France and the United States) might
    be reluctant to enter debt reduction schemes
    owing to the related upfront capital loss.
    Buybacks and discount bonds will probably meet
    strong opposition from the creditor banks. These
    banks will tend to prefer par bonds with
    temporary reduced interest rates in order to
    stretch the accounting loss in the income
    statement over the life of the loan.
  • Commercial banks which must reserve against new
    money credits (e.g., France) face an additional
    cost compared to banks which have the discretion
    of increasing or maintaining reserves at existing
    levels. Finally, banks which benefit from very
    limited tax deduction on loan-loss reserves
    (e.g., in Japan) prefer selling discounted LDC
    claims in order to shrink their new money base
    and improve asset/capital ratios.

29
The Secondary Market of Emerging Markets Debt
30
The Secondary Market of Emerging Markets Debt
  • The secondary market for commercial bank claims
    is the market where buyers and sellers trade
    sovereign debt. Since the late 1980s, the debt of
    many developing countries sells at below its face
    value on the secondary market, the discount
    reflecting the risk associated with holding such
    debt.
  • An active secondary market in LDC debt began to
    emerge in 1983-84 in which banks traded their
    portfolios on an inter-bank loan swap basis in
    order to consolidate or diversify their claims or
    to take advantage of accounting and tax benefits.
    The market expanded significantly in 1987-88
    owing to the rise in reserves and a growing
    number of debt-equity conversion programs and
    portfolio rebalancing strategies.

31
  • Secondary market trading has been dominated by
    Latin American country debt, in particular debt
    from Brazil, Mexico, Argentina and Venezuela,
    accounting for close to 70 of volume. Many
    investors consider the Mexican par bond as a
    benchmark as it is one of the most liquid markets
    in the world after the US Treasury market,
    reportedly.
  • Outside Latin America, the debt of Nigeria,
    Russia, Morocco, the Philippines, Bulgaria and
    Poland is traded in a market which is considered
    reasonably liquid. Privatization programs and
    conversion schemes which are active in several
    countries such as Argentina, Venezuela, and
    Brazil have stimulated trading of sovereign
    country debt.

32
  • Asset Trading Definition and purposes
  • Asset trading is the exchange of claims on
    emerging market countries between creditors and
    investors, for book rebalancing purposes. The
    claims are mostly in the form of syndicated
    loans, promissory notes, bonds, restructured
    debt, etc., which are traded at a discount from
    their nominal value.
  • The discount (i.e, 1 minus market price) is the
    key characteristic of the asset trading market.
  • Holders of claims sell their assets for enhancing
    their liquidity, for restructuring their
    portfolio, for benefiting from upward pressure on
    prices.

33
  • How Does Asset Trading Work?
  • Trading is typically conducted by specialists in
    commercial and investment banks, and in
    specialized institutions. Trades might be priced
    outside the available quoted price range.
    Occasionally, the market anticipates the
    possibility of debt restructuring negotiations or
    of government buybacks.
  • Trading has often a speculative element.
    Moreover, buybacks can occur on a formal or an
    informal basis, i.e. outside the framework of
    officially sponsored debt reduction workouts.
  • Often, they are also concluded by third parties
    working on behalf of the government, which are
    typically investment banks. The most active
    market makers in developing country debt are
  • ING Bank, FH International, JP Morgan, Santander,
    Bankers Trust-Deutsche Bank, BNP/Paribas,
    SocGen., Citibank and Salomon Brothers.

34
EMC debt traders
  • Phase 1 (1980s) short-term speculation
  • Phase 2 (1990s) highly active, short-term
    traders, and investors for debt swap
    transactions
  • Phase 3 (2005-08) More stable buy-and-hold
    investors, life insurance companies, central
    banks, pension funds, retail investors, private
    investors

35
The EMTA
EMTA was formed in 1990 by the financial
community in response to the many new trading
opportunities created by the Mexico and Venezuela
debt reschedulings under the Brady Plan
In an effort to develop market mechanisms to tra
de nearly U.S. 50 billion face amount of newly
issued debt securities, a small group of debt
traders from major international financial
institutions formed the LDC Debt Traders
Association (changed to the Emerging Markets
Traders Association in May 1992).
EMTA is the principal trade group for the Emerg
ing Markets trading and investment community and
is dedicated to promoting the orderly development
of fair, efficient and transparent trading
markets for Emerging Markets instruments and to
helping integrate the Emerging Markets into the
global capital markets. EMTA also provides a for
um that enables market participants to identify
issues of importance to the trading and
investment community. . .
36
  • Volume Increase and change in product structure
  • Following an initial phase of bank portfolio
    re-balancing transactions, secondary market
    activities have diversified toward discounted
    debt repurchases, new money bond issues, and
    large-scale securitization. The overall size of
    the market rose to about US 225 billion at
    end-1991 --more than 25 times the trading volume
    in 1986. Volumes increased to US500 billion in
    1992 about US3000 billion in 1997, and to
    US6500 billion in 2007.
  • Market growth has been concentrated in Brady
    bonds, i.e., LDC bank loans repackaged as loans
    with IFIs-financed enhancements and guarantees,
    until the late 1990s.
  • Trading in Brady bonds rose sharply in 1993-94,
    representing about 61 of overall turnover. In
    1997, Brady bonds shared dropped to about 40 of
    total trading volume and to a mere 2 in 2007.

37
Emerging Market Debt Trading 1989-2007 (US
billion)
Source EMTA-London
38
The evolving structure in the secondary debt
market
Source EMTA 2006
39
Trading Volume by instrument in 2007 turnover
Bradys transactions which accounted for 50 of
debt trading in the mid-1990s have shrunk due to
early redemption, exchange offers and debt
buybacks
2
10
21
66
40
Share of Securities in Total External Debt
41
Trading Volume by Region
12
69
42
Trading Volume by Country (EMTA)
21
17
6
7
9
4
43
  • Weak Liquidity
  • Angola, Nicaragua, Cameroon, Albania, Congo,
    Tanzania, Zaire (Rep. Democr.), Zambia, Iraq,
    North Korea
  • Limited Liquidity
  • Algeria, Cuba, Egypt, Madagascar, Panama,
    Jamaica, Ivory Coast, Sénégal
  • Moderate Liquidity
  • Nigeria, Morocco, Costa Rica, Bulgaria, Peru,
    Jordan, Vietnam
  • Good Liquidity
  • Brady Bonds Argentina, Brazil, Russia, Ecuador,
    Mexico, Philippines, Poland, Venezuela. South
    Africa, Turkey

44
EMBI spread evolution 1997-2007
Average spread weighted by debt volume
Source CBONDS
45
Argentinas and Russias shrinking spreads
1997-2007
ARGENTINA
Bond crisis
RUSSIA
Oil price surge
46
Secondary Market Price of RCI s London Club Debt
1986-2008
of face value
Debt servicing suspension
Weighted average LDC debt price
Soro-Gbagbo alliance
CFA devaluation
47
Secondary Market Prices of Cubas London Club Debt
(1990-2008- in percent of face value)
48
Hyper-exotic Debt prices end-2007
  • Myanmar 20
  • Cambodia 20
  • Mongolia 28
  • North Korea 28
  • Cuba 14
  • Albania 38
  • Bosnia 50
  • Irak Bonds 60
  • Libya 65
  • Syria 10
  • Yemen 30
  • Angola 60
  • Ethiopia 10
  • Senegal 15
  • Sudan 13
  • Uganda 15
  • Zimbabwe 5

49
Instrument Diversification
  • The market has become more diverse in the variety
    of instruments available as well as the type of
    investors. For instance, the Venezuela Brady Plan
    included a complex menu of options, such as Debt
    Conversion Bonds (DCB) and Front-Loaded Interest
    Reduction Bonds (FLIRBs). The debt conversion
    bonds are bearer in form and as such they are
    more easily tradable and likely to be held by
    non-bank investors.
  • The investor base has widened over the past
    years. One estimates that more than US10 billion
    face value of sovereign debt is held by
    institutional investors. In addition, the
    fast-growing market in developing country debt
    has expanded in terms of region and in terms of
    instruments. Thus, Salomon Brothers issued two
    tranches of warrants on Poland's debt for about
    US100 million in August of 1992. Chase,
    likewise, issued a US15 million two-year CD for
    a Venezuelan bank guaranteed by Brady bonds (par
    bonds and FLIRBs). The face value of the
    collateral is more than 200 of the value of the
    CDs.

50
  • Various debt funds have emerged.
  • In December 1989, Banque de l'Union Européenne
    set up a Financial Investment Portfolio Company.
    The objective of the fund was to offer investors
    the opportunity to take advantage of the
    potential yields available on LDC debt.
  • In October 1991, SG Warburg set up a Latin
    America Extra Yield Fund, which has been
    described as the first fund targeted exclusively
    at Latin American debt securities.
  • In November of 1991, Citicorp Investment Bank
    launched an Argentine Debt Fund that invests at
    least 60 and up to 80 of its assets in
    Argentine debt.

51
  • ING Bank has also set up a similar LDC debt fund,
    the LFM Emerging Markets Capital Fund. It is an
    open-ended investment fund incorporated in
    Luxembourg.
  • The fund initially focused on the major Latin
    America economies of Mexico, Argentina, Chile,
    Brazil and Venezuela. Some investments are being
    made in Hungary, the Philippines and in other
    regions when appropriate.
  • The investor has a choice between capital growth
    and dividend distribution shares.
  • FH International launched in July 1992 the First
    African Asset Fund Limited under the laws of
    Jersey. The fund is managed by FH Carlson
    Investment Management. It had a life of two
    years, with the possibility of one further
    one-year investment program.

52
Institutional Developments
  • The combination of Brady debt restructuring
    agreements and officially supported privatization
    programs has strengthened the secondary markets
    in the mid-1990s.
  • New instruments have emerged such as new money
    bonds, exit bonds and interest reduction bonds.
    With the securitization of the LDC debt market,
    liquidity has improved. For example, Mexican and
    Venezuelan Brady bond transactions are processed
    through the Eurobond clearing institutions, and
    CEDEL.
  • In addition the major credit rating agencies have
    formalized ratings of LDC debt such as giving
    ratings to Brady bonds, both the floating rate
    (discount bond) and the fixed-rate (par bond).

53
Price Trends
  • Secondary market prices have kept fluctuating
    strongly over the last 20 years. The weighted
    average of prices dropped from 71 cents per US
    at end-1985 to about 35 cents per US in the
    beginning of 1991, reflecting deepening doubts
    regarding normalization of debtor-creditor
    relationships and further desire to reduce or
    eliminate country risk exposure.
  • An accentuation in declining trend can be
    observed following the announcement of the March
    1989 Brady initiative. Secondary market prices,
    however, showed an upward trend since the year
    1991. The market price index averaged 55 during
    the the year 1997 despite the impact of the
    Mexican peso crisis. Average prices dropped
    sharply since mid-1998 and the overall emerging
    markets crisis.
  • Gradual price increase over the period 2003-2007
    due to large global liquidity, IMF programs,
    large current account surpluses, FDI flows, and
    strong reserve assets.

54
Factor Affecting Prices
  • 1. Interest rate volatility
  • In 1993, the continuing decrease in US Treasury
    30-year bond rate has been a driving force behind
    the increase in fixed rate Brady par bonds. In
    late 1994, however, the upward trend in US
    Treasury bonds led to a decrease in Brady bond
    prices. In late 1998, the spill-over effect of
    the Asian and Russian crisis has severely hit the
    market with sharp drops in prices for all LDCs
    debts. In 2002-2004, the decline in US rates
    enhanced the value of fixed-rate discount bonds.
  • 2. Macro-economic situation
  • Factors such as reserves, balance of payments,
    privatization programs tend to affect price
    volatility. In addition, signing of an economic
    adjustment program with the IMF is also a
    positive factor behind price changes (Argentina
    in 2003). Likewise, a Paris Club rescheduling
    agreement is considered as a positive element
    towards a normalization of relationships with
    foreign creditors.

55
  • 3. Rating by SP and Moody's
  • A credit rating by credible international rating
    agencies is likely to lead investors to consider
    LDC debt as a meaningful investment opportunity
    SPs increase Argentine rating to B in 2006 and
    Moodys upgrading of Peru to investment grade in
    04/2008
  • 4. Securitization
  • The exchange of bank loans into long-term bonds
    with guarantees funded by international
    institutions enhances the quality of claims. In
    addition, Brady bonds can be traded on a fairly
    liquid market, thereby leading to the emergence
    of arbitrage opportunities as well as derivatives
    instruments.
  • 5. Deal-driven transactions
  • A debt-equity program will open the way for swap
    transactions adding liquidity to the market as
    well as investment opportunities in the domestic
    economy.

56
September-October 1999 The debt default of
Ecuador occupies the limelight
  • Ecuador Brady bonds account for US6.1 billion
    in Ecuadors overall external indebtedness of
    US13 billion. The Brady bonds have been subject
    to a lot of financial engineering, including the
    stripping of the collateral out of the bonds.
  • IMFs position Ecuador needs to find out some
    US500 million to cover its balance of payments
    shortfall until the end of next year, and about
    US1 billion to cover its budget shortfall, and
    probably more since Ecuador has foreign currency
    denominated domestic debt.... For the first time
    in 55 years, the IMF is acquiescing in a
    countrys decision to default on its debts to the
    international bond markets.

57
Mexico whittles down its Bradys
  • September 2002 Mexico issues US1.75 billion
    with a 20-year global bond exchange with Brady
    par bons (JP Morgan Lead manager with CSFB)
  • Mexico exchanged US1.3 billion for Bradys and
    raised US450 million in new money bonds. The
    exchange released US651 million in collateral
    and produced NPV savings of US59 million.
  • January 2003 Mexico buys back US500 million of
    Bradys

58
COTE d IVOIRE-Debt Restructuring
59
COTE d IVOIRE-Debt Restructuring (end)
60
Market-Based debt exchange offers2000-2006
  • Argentina (2001 2005)
  • Mexico
  • Brazil
  • Venezuela
  • Peru

61
Argentinas Bonds
  • Total amount US94 billion 3/4 - denominated
  • Dollar bonds are traded at default discounts
  • All rating agencies have downgraded Argentinas
    bonds
  • Fitch downgraded Argentinean government bonds to
    a high risk CC rating, in effect making them
    junk bonds
  • Global Committee of Argentina Bondholders (55
    billion claims)
  • 2005 Request 75 write off of bonds nominal
    value

62
Argentinas Bonds
63
Voluntary Debt Restructuring - Swaps
  • May 2001 Argentina offered ? 30 bn debt swap
  • in exchange for old securities it issues four NEW
    GLOBAL BONDS and a NEW PAGARE

64
Voluntary Debt Restructuring - Swaps
  • Argentinas local banks, insurance companies and
    pension funds (that hold at least a third of
    Argentinas 95bn bonds) have already swapped
    more than 55bn in federal government debt for
    new obligations that carry lower interest rate
    over a longer period
  • The operation has reduced Argentinas debt
    service cost by 3.5bn per year

65
Voluntary Debt Restructuring - Swaps
  • Dec. 3 Argentina offered to swap another 60bn in
    locally owned bonds the new bonds are backed by
    futures tax revenues and will pay a maximum of
    7
  • Argentina hoped that voluntary exchange of local
    debt will be followed by similar foreign debt
    exchange reduced pressure on its budget

66
Trading of Official Bilateral Debt
  • During 1990, the Paris Club agreed on the
    principle of reducing debt through clauses
    stipulating the conversion of part of the
    obligations into local currency.
  • The Paris Club does not set a limit for
    conversions applied to development aid. However,
    a limit of 10 is applied to officially
    guaranteed commercial loans (for example those
    covered by COFACE, ECGD and Hermes).
  • Conversion is a voluntary option and should be
    ratified by each creditor government in Paris
    Club bilateral agreements.

67
  • The French Treasury started auctioning
    developing countries' debts with US20 millions
    of claims on the Philippines in September of
    1992.
  • The sales' objective is to fund viable and
    productive local projects in the tourism,
    infrastructure and industry sectors, with either
    French, foreign or local private investors.
  • A few large debtor countries are excluded from
    the list Russia, Mexico, Brazil, Argentina and
    Venezuela. The Treasury followed with Tanzania
    in November of 1992, and with Honduras during the
    first quarter of 1993.

68
  • The debt conversion operation for Tanzania was to
    be implemented by November 30, 1992. It involved
    FF 120 million of French government's claims.
  • The offer has reportedly not met with much
    investor interest. Accordingly, the Treasury
    contemplates offering claims in a less formal
    framework thereby negotiating discrete sales on a
    case-by-case basis.
  • In the case of Honduras, conversion involved
    about FF 55 million of claims by way of bids to
    COFACE with minimum offers of FF 5 million.

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  • In March of 1993, COFACE started auctioning
    about FF 550 million of claims on Egypt through
    the Treasury. Successful bidders were Egyptian
    investors reportedly.
  • In November of 1993, the French Treasury and
    COFACE announced a further offer of FF1 billion
    of claims on Egypt.
  • In April of 1994, COFACE auctioned off FF1.5
    billion of export credits. In September of 1994,
    Frances Credit National auctioned FF1.5 billion
    of official development debt.
  • Such claims were consolidated in the agreement
    dated September 12, 1991. The banks acted on
    behalf of local investors for pre-authorized
    projects Potential investors were to be
    represented by a banking intermediary and must
    have obtained an investment permit from Egypt's
    authorities. Successful bidders paid about 47.2
    of face value with the Paris-based bank UBAF
    purchasing nearly FF700 millions of Egyptian
    claims reportedly. CCF and BNP purchased the
    remaining claims.

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  • In September 1992, the United Kingdom export
    credit agency (ECGD) announced a fairly ambitious
    program of selling Paris Club debt.
  • In a period of around six months, the ECGD was
    very successful with such sales, selling around
    100 million (face value) of debt. The debts
    concerned are those which have been rescheduled
    under certain Paris Club and related bilateral
    agreements.
  • Although quoted in US dollars, both sterling and
    US dollar denominated debts are available in
    almost all cases. The ECGD will only sell debt
    if the price it will receive implies a higher
    level of income than the net present value of the
    expected recovery of the debt, within the
    framework of the Paris Club agreement and given
    the projections of the country studies department
    of the ECGD.

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  • The demand for ECGD paper has come from banks
    (who wish to act as an intermediary), and
    increasingly from end-users. The latter option
    reportedly allows for greater speed and a
    somewhat higher prices for the ECGD.
  • In January of 1993, ECGD auctioned off 48
    million of Egyptian Paris Club debt. The proposal
    did not include capitalized moratorium interest,
    which remains as debt within the bilateral
    arrangements.
  • In March of 2000, the French government and
    Morocco signed an agreement of debt conversion.
  • In July of 2000, Algeria and the Algerian
    government signed a debt swap scheme for the
    equivalent of some FF400 million. Algeria will
    have to set up a regulatory framework to
    implement the transactions within an adequate
    macroeconomic and legal framework.

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Part IIIDebt Conversion Transactions
  • Debt conversion constitutes the transformation of
    the legal and financial nature of a country's
    liability from a hard currency debt into some
    form of a domestic currency obligation. In other
    words, a debt conversion is a prepayment of debt
    at a discount in local currency.
  • The vehicle for such debt conversions is often
    the secondary market of commercial bank claims
    where bank and nonbank creditors can sell or swap
    their LDC assets, investors can obtain bank loans
    at a discount for subsequent conversion into
    domestic currency assets, and debtor countries
    can repurchase their own discounted debt.
  • Altogether, cumulative debt conversion volumes
    have reached about US45 billion, with an annual
    peak of US10 billion in 1990, owing to
    large-scale debt-equity conversion programs in
    Argentina and Chile.

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Debt Conversion a positive sum game?
Face value 1000
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Positive Sum Game!
  • Debtor debt cancellation with local currency
    payments while stimulating foreign direct
    investment and enhancing the role of private
    sector activity in the local economy
    (privatization)
  • Creditor cleaning up of portfolio with upfront
    cash payment while accounting losses get absorbed
    by loan-loss reserves
  • Investor access to local currency at a
    discounted exchange rate that boils down to an
    investment subsidy, thereby mitigating the
    overall country risk and the specific project risk

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Corporate debt swap transactions
  • 04/2001 South Koreas largest builder HEC
    (Hyundai Engineering Constr.) makes a debt swap
    with its creditors to reduce debt ratios from
    1240 to 250, by issuing new shares and bonds
    to creditors as a part of the rescue package
    after Hyundai reported losses US2.2 billion
    that wiped out its equity capital!

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Source OSF
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EXCHANGE OF DEBT CANCELLATION
  • There are various forms of local currency payouts
    in debt conversion transactions
  • i) local currency for local cost component of
    investment or operating costs (salaries)
  • ii) transfer of ownership of equity in a public
    company (privatization programs)
  • iii) local currency and/or financial instruments
    to fund humanitarian or environmental projects
  • iv) non-traditional exports or other domestic
    assets
  • v) tax vouchers, customs duties, oil exploration
    bonuses...
  • vi) monetary stabilization bonds

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  • Enabling legislation What are the various
    parameters of a conversion regulatory program ?
  • A key prerequisite in debt conversion and buyback
    transactions is the formulation of enabling
    legislation so as to waive various legal clauses
    which prohibit a debtor country from inequitable
    treatment of its debt obligations. In addition,
    restrictions on permissible assignees must be
    waived if creditor banks are to be able to sell
    debt to private investors. In particular,
    mandatory prepayment and "sharing" clauses in
    loan and refinancing agreements must be waived in
    order to open the door to debt conversion
    transactions.
  • A second prerequisite is the formulation of a
    regulatory framework in the debtor country. One
    can distinguish a number of critical variables of
    a debt conversion program

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  • 1. Amount and Pace of Conversion the Central
    Bank must monitor debt conversion owing to its
    potential impact on monetary and budget policy.
    The domestic monetary implications result from
    the release of local currency at the time
    external debt is redeemed. This may create
    inflationary pressure, hence an impact on the
    IMF's performance criteria. When the monetary
    effect is mitigated by the issue of
    local-currency bonds, the creation of additional
    domestic debt affects credit and budget policy.
    Sound macro-economic policy is thus a
    prerequisite for any lasting debt conversion
    program.
  • 2. Exchange rate (official or market rate)
    applicable for debt conversion. The exchange rate
    determined for the conversion has a direct impact
    on the actual discount that is obtained by the
    investor. The gap between the official and
    parallel market rates could be so large that it
    wipes out the discount the investor obtained in
    the secondary market transaction, thereby
    eliminating the implicit "subsidy" inherent in
    the conversion.

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  • 3. The eligibility criteria applicable to the
    type of debt The Central Bank has the following
    range of choices regarding the origin of the
    debtor's or guarantor's liabilities to be used
    for conversion
  • i) public sector external debt
  • ii) external debt of national government
  • iii) external debt guaranteed by a public sector
    entity
  • iv) private sector external debt with or without
    a public sector guarantee
  • v) original claims or secondary market debt
  • 4. Legal nature of debt Short term/Long-term,
    promissory notes, trade and suppliers credits,
    bank loans, official bilateral debt...

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  • 5. Quotas or ceiling on the annual (or quarterly)
    amount of debt to be swapped. The quota is to be
    determined in close relation the macro-economic
    policy objectives. Annual ceilings have been
    implemented in Tanzania, Argentina, Chile,
    Ecuador, the Philippines, and Mexico.
  • 6. Redemption rate Debt conversion boils down to
    discounted repurchase. The redemption fee
    represents a "second" internal discount. It helps
    the central bank "capturing" a portion of the
    discount, thereby sharing with the investor the
    benefit of the transaction. Indeed, by purchasing
    the debt directly in the market, the country
    could take the full market discount for itself
    instead of the redemption fee only, and in the
    process avoid problems of creating a preferential
    exchange rate. In an auction based situation, the
    redemption rate is determined by a market-based
    system potential investors bid by offering
    competitive discounts from the face value of the
    debt. The relationship between the discount rate
    and the redemption rate gives rise to the
    investor's pay-out ratio.

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  • 7. Fees taken by the local authorities and/or by
    the local intermediaries for the right to
    participate in a conversion.
  • 8. Degree of transparency in the program The
    issue of transparency (the disclosure of
    complete information) is important from the
    investor's standpoint, since the regulatory
    framework is officially defined and applicable to
    all investors.
  • 9. Specified parties eligible for use of the debt
    conversion mechanisms for instance, allowing the
    local nationals/residents to take part in the
    program (allowing residents to bid for local
    currency can be a way of encouraging capital
    flight repatriation).
  • 10. Procedure to be employed in assigning the
    right to convert debt the procedure can be
    quarterly ceilings of local currency, regular
    auctions of local-currency assets, case-by-case
    allocation with regard to sectoral priorities...

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  • 11. The form of the conversion proceeds Very
    few programs provide for an upfront cash, due to
    monetary implications. In most cases LDC
    governments create some sort of deposit account
    or alternative local currency denominated term
    debt. The Central Bank might also provide
    protection to the investors against inflation
    and/or currency depreciation. If conversion leads
    to the issue of local-currency assets, two ways
    are possible the investor can gradually redeem
    the "stabilization bonds" in local currency for
    investing the proceeds, or the investor has only
    access to the interest payment flow on the bond.
    This latter case is often use for NGOs involved
    in debt-for-nature swap.

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  • 12. Eligibility of local currency investment (or
    Additionality) Debt equity conversion could be
    used as a vehicle for mobilizing new foreign
    investment in priority sectors of the economy and
    for stimulating privatization. The program could
    also be designed (with appropriate restrictions
    on the sector eligibility) to promote export
    generation and import substitution. One of the
    objectives of the government is to prevent "round
    tripping", that is, access to local currency
    through the use of discounted bank claims without
    investing at home the local currency proceeds.
  • 13. Requirement of "matching funds" Most LDC
    governments prefer not to allow debt conversion
    proceeds to be used for any imported inputs.
    Hence, there is an implicit requirement of new
    money to cover imports. In the case of Argentina,
    debt conversion coupled with privatization
    required a combination of debt and new money.

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  • 14. The schedule of capital and dividend
    remittance Restrictions on capital repatriation
    and profit remittance vary widely across
    different programs. The repatriation guidelines
    are generally not on terms more flexible than
    those of the underlying debt.
  • 15. Restriction (if any) on the percentage of
    shares held in a company through debt equity
    conversion In general, investors must agree
    with the broader framework of the foreign
    investment legislation of the host country.
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