Argentina
Accuses US of Judicial Malpractice for Triggering Needless Default
Are
we watching the cartoons before the feature presentation? Can we just get to
the Main Event, please? I’m embarrassed for them just watching these jokers.
The
cabal doesn’t seem to realize how absurdly obvious their actions are. It’s
getting to be like slapstick comedy. Each outrageous trick has to top the
previous.
This
one, too, is utterly transparent. Any nation that doesn’t go along with their
plan for global domination pays the price in one way or another—or many.
And
we have a rerun, too. In N. Korea’s latest tirade, Kim Jong-un threatened AGAIN to use a nuke on the USA. It’s more theatre, I guess, since they
didn’t show up for their last act in the drama, as promised. (or as the
lamestream media promised)
In
fact, the word on the street was that it has actually been Kim Jong-un’s
GRANDMOTHER who has been running things. That’s why no one noticed when he
simply disappeared with tail between legs after his original threat.
You
know…if N. Korea’s target was very specific… like, just the White House… I’d
say go for it. And don’t forget Congress—while in session. Enough already.
Short of a miracle, I can’t see these kids playing nicely together in the sand
box any time soon.
Thanks
to American Kabuki for this. ~ BP
Argentina Accuses US of Judicial Malpractice for Triggering
Needless Default
Country threatens to take US to The Hague after defaulting
on its debts for the second time in 12 years
Ambrose
Evans-Pritchard By Ambrose Evans-Pritchard
7:56PM BST 31 Jul 2014
7:56PM BST 31 Jul 2014
Argentina
has threatened to take the US to the International Court of Justice for judicial
malpractice, accusing the country of gross incompetence for allowing two small
hedge funds to push the Argentine state into default, regardless of the mayhem
caused for other creditors and the damage to ordinary people.
The
bitter attack came after a New York court prevented Argentina paying $539m to
its creditors even though the Peronist government of Cristina Kirchner wants to
do so, in the latest bizarre development in the country’s long struggle to
regain access to global capital markets.
Judge
Thomas Griesa said Argentina must first pay $1.5bn in arrears to “hold-out”
investors who never accepted a restructuring deal following Argentina’s last
default 12 years ago, even though many scooped up the bonds for a fraction of
their face value during the crisis.
Standard
& Poor’s immediately declared the country to be in “selective default”
after a last-minute compromise collapsed and the deadline passed on Wednesday
night. Fears of a chain reaction set off panic in Buenos Aires, where the
Merval index of stocks fell 7pc and leading banks plunged 12pc. Other markets
suffered, too, with America’s Dow Jones Industrial Average down 1.6pc in late
trading. All major European markets fell, too.
“To say
that Argentina is in technical default is a ridiculous hoax,” said Jorge
Capitanich, Argentina’s cabinet chief, accusing Judge Griesa of acting as an
“agent” of speculative funds. “There’s been mala praxis here by the US justice
system, for which all three branches of the government are responsible.
Argentina has tried to negotiate in good faith,” he said.
Mr
Capitanich said Argentina is considering calling for a debate at the United
Nations and launching an appeal at the International Court of Justice in The
Hague. “We can’t have a global financial system that lets a miniscule group of
funds undermine the process of debt restructuring,” he said.
The
default will almost certainly push the country deeper into recession but is
nothing like the traumatic events of 2000-2002 when Argentina’s GDP contracted
by 11pc. Police lost control of the streets and president Fernando de la Rua
had to be rescued from the roof of his mansion, Casa Rosada, in an air force
helicopter. The country then defied the world, imposing a 70pc haircut on
bondholders in the biggest debt repudiation in history.
This
time Argentina is widely seen as the victim of sharp practice. “This has been
forced upon Argentina by predatory speculators. Paying the vulture funds would
be disastrous, making it harder for countries across the world to resolve
future debt crises,” said Sarah-Jayne Clifton, from the Jubilee Debt Campaign.
Axel
Kicillof, the economy minister, said Argentina has been paying interest
willingly to 92pc of bondholders who accepted deals to restructure the
country’s debt in 2005 and 2010, but could not settle with “vulture funds”
without setting off an avalanche of claims that could cost the country more
than $100bn.
So-called
RUFO (rights upon future offers) clauses in the restructured bond stipulated
that these bondholders must be offered the same terms as the hold-outs, though
some have already said they would waive their rights to help break the
deadlock. The hold-out funds NML Capital and Aurelius Capital Management say
they offered a compromise through a court-appointed mediator but Argentina
refused to give any ground.
In a
sign of how Baroque this saga has become, Argentina actually tried to wire the
payment to US banks in New York but the money was returned in order to comply
with a court order, leaving it unclear whether this will trigger credit default
swaps on Argentina’s debt worth $1bn. The Argentine press said the government
may pay the interest into an escrow account to maintain the goodwill of the
main bondholders.
Neil
Shearing, from Capital Economics, said the impasse is likely to last months,
with Argentina stuck in limbo until these RUFO clauses expire at the end of the
year. “The longer the dispute goes on, the greater the economic damage. Our
forecast is for GDP to contract 1pc this year,” he said.
The
interminable drama is a reminder of how difficult it can be for a country to
regain its footing in financial markets if it breaks the taboo and carries out
a unilateral default outside the auspices of the International Monetary Fund.
Countries
that turn to the IMF usually recover trust quickly. Uruguay was able to borrow
again within a year after defaulting in 2003 because it was seen to have
behaved honourably, even heroically. Argentina is still shut out of global
capital markets 12 years later.
Although
Argentina recovered during the global commodity boom – crucially after breaking
free of its deflationary dollar peg – it has been left far behind by
well-managed states like Chile. It has never been able to develop its shale
industry because it cannot borrow abroad, and remains stuck in a low-growth
trap.
The peso
was devalued by 20pc in January. Foreign reserves have fallen to three months
import cover, money is leaking out in capital flight and the current deficit is
nearly 3pc of GDP. The economy is now in the grip of old-style Latin American
stagflation, with GDP contracting even as prices rise by 2pc a month.
For the
country that was one of the five richest nations in the world in 1900 and once
seemed like Australia’s economic twin, the lurch from crisis to crisis since
the 1940s is a textbook study of bad government.
1 comment:
Why should the wealth of a nation be put at risk to cover the bad debts and bets made by some of it’s citizenry and corporations? Issuing bonds and securitization are both part of a mechanism to enslave. Greed is at the core of it all. The other 6 sins foster it in humanity's moral decline and increasing lawlessness. Bonds pertain to slavery and there is nothing secure about securitization considering how brutal the markets can be.
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