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Argentina will pay $5.9bn mature Boden 15 bonds on Monday, and issue new debt

Saturday, October 3rd 2015 - 08:47 UTC
Full article 12 comments
Argentina targets raising $500 million in the auction of notes under Argentine law. The new Bonar 20 will carry an 8% coupon, minister Kicillof announced Argentina targets raising $500 million in the auction of notes under Argentine law. The new Bonar 20 will carry an 8% coupon, minister Kicillof announced
The Boden 15 capital and interest payment on Monday is set to take a large chunk out of foreign reserves that stand at $32.453 billion. The Boden 15 capital and interest payment on Monday is set to take a large chunk out of foreign reserves that stand at $32.453 billion.

Argentina on Monday will pay the $5.9 billion maturity due for its Boden 15 bonds in cash and issue new debt the following day, Economy Minister Axel Kicillof said on Friday. Argentina which is in technical default on some debt because of a legal fight with bondholders in the United States, targets raising $500 million in the auction of notes under Argentine law, Kicillof told a news conference.

 The new Bonar 20 bonds will carry an 8% coupon, said the minister who added the final amount to be sold would depend on market appetite.

Investors would likely demand costly double-digit yields, said Jorge Piedrahita, CEO at broker Torino Capital, in the global context of China's slowdown, volatility in emerging markets including neighboring Brazil and uncertainty over the timing of a U.S. interest rate hike.

Argentina's public institutions, like the pension funds, which hold Boden 15 notes, may offer softer terms for the new debt. “It has to yield double digits for investors to ”voluntarily“ buy it,” said Piedrahita.

The Boden 15 capital and interest payment on Monday is set to take a large chunk out of foreign reserves that stand at $32.453 billion. Argentina uses those reserves to pay debt, finance imports and prop up its currency.

Net foreign reserves, which exclude Argentina's currency swap with China and reserve requirements for private banks, are estimated by economists to be much lower - between $14 to 16 billion and less than three months imports cover.

The Boden 15 payout means net reserves could drop as low as $8 billion.

Piedrahita said the dollar-strapped government whose mandate ends in December may be willing to pay a high price to shore up those low foreign reserves. President Cristina Fernandez's government has also printed new pesos to finance extra spending ahead of the October 25 election.

Fernandez “is leaving a financial bomb for the next president,” said Piedrahita.

Whoever wins the presidency will have to resolve the decade-long legal-battle with “holdout” bondholders who rejected the restructuring terms after Argentina's record default in 2002 in order to improve the government's financing options.

Next week Argentine banking officials are scheduled to meet with their Beijing counterparts to agree on a new currencies' swap which should help the central bank prop its depleted reserves.

Top Comments

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  • Mendoza Canadian

    Kiss your ass good bye Argentina.

    Oct 03rd, 2015 - 11:42 am 0
  • Mick23

    Nobody wants or can afford Bonehead bonds... except maybe those people outside of Argentina, and they are already looking at the history the country presents to bondholders... Why do they even bother ... Not worth the paper its printed on... The word Putz comes to mind when you think of Kicillof ..!

    Oct 03rd, 2015 - 11:46 am 0
  • golfcronie

    Yield on bonds 8% inflation 25-30%, I will let you do the maths. Is it worth it?

    Oct 03rd, 2015 - 02:46 pm 0
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