Argentina’s Economy Minister Roberto Lavagna rejected calls by the International Monetary Fund to hold further talks with bondholders who turned down the country’s debt restructuring offer. An IMF spokesman on April 8 said Argentina should “develop a realistic strategy” to resolve the demands of non-participating bondholders. Argentina earlier this year agreed to swap $62.3 billion in defaulted debt for new securities, which the country says ends its three-year default. About 20% of bondholders rejected terms and some are suing the government in US courts to demand full repayment.
Category: Corporate & Sovereign Strategy
Standing Up to the Test
Mexico’s new bankruptcy law has seen – and survived – its first test, the reorganization of papermaking company Corporación Durango.
Very Rough Justice
If the crises of tomorrow are born in the bull markets of today, another Latin American government will default before the decade is out. Creditors beware.
Bankruptcy and Bank Spread – Web Exclusive
Sao Paulo-based law firm Pinheiro Neto Advogados explores the potential effects of Brazil’s new bankruptcy law – and the elements that could threaten its effectiveness. One of the major […]
Same Old Game
The debt exchange ending Argentina’s three-year default is now a fait accompli. But it doesn’t look like it will solve the country’s problems.
A Contender Again
Manuel Medina-Mora, the CEO of Citigroup in Latin America, lays out his plan for the bank’s future
in the region.
Testing the Waters
Telefónica de Argentina took a bold step in May, issuing something the country had nearly forgotten in the years since its 2001 default: a peso-denominated corporate bond. “We knew that […]
Beginning of the End
Nearly three long years after its default, the Argentine government is about to unveil the details of its “final” offer to bondholders.
Flying High
Latin America’s best-run airline, LAN, has marked its 10th straight year of profits. Enrique Cueto, LatinFinance’s CEO of the Year, is the man who made it happen.
Power of REITs
Roberto Ordorica, CEO of the Latin American arm of US real estate company Prudential Real Estate Investors, explains how REITs could help finance housing and commercial property projects.
