Home » News » Argentina reaches an agreement to restructure 99% of its foreign debt

Argentina reaches an agreement to restructure 99% of its foreign debt

Last updated: Tuesday 13 Muharram 1442 AH – 01 September 2020 KSA 11:50 – GMT 08:50
Publication date: Tuesday 13 Muharram 1442 AH – September 01, 2020 KSA 05:41 – GMT 02:41

Source: Arab.net

Buenos Aires announced today, Monday, that it has reached an agreement to restructure 99% of its issued debts in accordance with the provisions of foreign law, amounting to 66.13 billion dollars, in a move that culminates in more than four months of arduous negotiations between Argentina and its creditors and that would lead the country out of a state of default. .

Argentine Economy Minister Martin Guzman said that under the agreement, “99% of the issued debt has been restructured in accordance with the provisions of foreign legislation.”

This announcement comes less than a month after Buenos Aires announced that it had reached an agreement with three groups of the country’s main creditors to renegotiate the terms of the debt, according to Agence France-Presse.

And Guzman added, with President Alberto Fernandez and Vice President Christina Kirchner standing by his side, that “thanks to the dialogue process, there was broad acceptance” of this agreement.

The minister explained that thanks to the agreement reached, his country will get an exemption from paying $ 37.7 billion in debt, while the annual interest rate will drop from 7% to 3.07%.

He added, “This gives us a sufficient economic time frame to develop sustainable policies that achieve development.”

The minister pointed out that this agreement removed from the country the specter of being prosecuted abroad by speculative funds, a nightmare that it had previously lived in the past.

In turn, President Fernandez welcomed the agreement, stressing that her country is able to fulfill its obligations contained in it. “We are out of the maze,” he said.

As for the rest of the dollar-denominated debt that is not covered by the agreement, amounting to 1% of the total of these bonds, Matthias Rachnermann, an analyst at Ecolatina, said, “This debt will definitely be repaid. This is a very small amount. $ 600 million is practically nothing for Argentina.”

Under the agreement, Argentina will pay these bondholders 54.8 cents for every dollar, a significant increase compared to the 39 cents it initially offered them.

These bonds represent roughly 20% of Argentina’s total $ 324 billion debt, which equates to 90% of the country’s GDP.

Argentina has been in default since May 22, when it had to pay $ 500 million in interest on these bonds.

The Argentine economy has been in recession since 2018 and will suffer more this year due to the Covid-19 epidemic, with gross domestic product shrinking by 9.9%, according to IMF projections.

Reaching this agreement will facilitate negotiations that the government launched with the International Monetary Fund last week to obtain a new loan.

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