Argentina is not on the mend. The outcome of April’s presidential elections fought with traditional weapons – populism, patronage and partisanship – holds little hope for a meaningful recovery. It […]
Category: Argentina
Cooking Up a New Solution
As Argentina gears up for negotiations with the bondholders it stiffed 18 months ago, other sovereign issuers and banks are experimenting with a new generation of bonds that could profoundly reshape the debt market for years to come.
The Costs of a Neo-Populist Experiment
One of the most remarkable features of Argentina’s debt debacle is the government’s attempt to shift the burden of adjustment away from the domestic economy, transferring wealth from creditors to debtors, and from future generations to current ones. Guillermo Mondino says the long-term consequences of such a strategy are serious and warns other countries to take heed.
Bradesco’s Efficient Capital Raising
Raising money for Latin American banks in 2002 required a good dose of skill and imagination. International banks, stuck with heavy losses in Argentina and fearful of more trouble in […]
Failure and Success
Last year, the late Rudiger Dornbusch said outside intervention was needed to save Argentina and suggested an international commissioner be appointed to run the country’s finances. This January, Guillermo Calvo, […]
Playing for High Stakes
Argentina’s financial crisis has affected the region’s
markets far more deeply than many expected. It has changed the way investors and banks approach risk in Latin America.
Business & Banking
IntesaBci Cedes Control of Argentine Subsidiary IntesaBci, Italy’s largest bank, is spending $150 million to recapitalize its Argentine unit and then cede control of it in a merger with Banco […]
Argentina’s Broken Bonds
Italian retail investor’s love affair with Argentine bonds ended abruptly when the sovereign left its creditors in the lurch. Angry Italians want someone to compensate them for their losses.
Cordoning Off Political Risk
After jumping through legal hoops, the Argentine oil company Tecpetrol successfully restructured $230 million in bank loans. Securitized revenues made the new debt palatable to creditors and the government.
