Venezuela, in 'selective default', signs debt deal with Russia
Caracas to pay back its debts over 10 years, with 'minimal' reimbursements for the first six years
MOSCOW:
Venezuela signed a debt restructuring deal with major creditor Russia on Wednesday, as ratings agencies declared Caracas in partial default.
The country is seeking to restructure its foreign debts, estimated at around $150 billion, after it was hit hard by tumbling oil prices and American sanctions. A Venezuelan delegation led by Finance Minister Simon Zerpa signed the deal restructuring $3.15 billion of debt taken out in 2011 to finance the purchase of Russian arms.
Under the agreement, Caracas will pay back its debts over 10 years, with 'minimal' reimbursements for the first six years, Russia's foreign ministry said in a statement. "The reduction of the burden of debt... will allow the utilisation of funds to develop the country's economy, improve the debtor's solvency and increase the chances of all creditors recovering loans already made," according to the statement on the ministry's website.
Maduro dismisses default possibility on eve of debt talks
"These are very favourable terms that Venezuela can honour. This deal strengthens the relations between our two countries," Venezuelan vice president for the economy Wilmar Castro Soteldo told a press conference in Moscow. But the goal of solvency seemed a distant one Wednesday after S&P Global Ratings said it had placed Venezuela's state-owned oil company PDVSA in "selective default" for failing to make interest payments on some of its debt.
The ratings agency this week declared the country itself in selective default after it failed to make $200 million in payments on two global bond issues. S&P managing director Joydeep Mukherji, who handles Latin American and Caribbean sovereign ratings, said even if the payments to Russia are confirmed, other debt service remains in doubt, including on four other bonds that already are overdue.
Fitch also downgraded PDVSA and cash-strapped Venezuela over delayed payments, but Caracas insisted it was in the process of paying up. "It's a respite, but a slight respite," Orlando Ochoa, a Venezuelan economist, told AFP. "It doesn't change the context, it doesn't help to stabilize the economy or substantially increase its ability to pay."
Caracas has only $9.7 billion in foreign reserves and needs to pay back at least $1.47 billion in interest on various bonds by the end of the year, and then about $8 billion in 2018. Russia and China are the two main creditors and allies of Venezuela, which owes them an estimated $8 billion and $28 billion respectively.
The Chinese foreign ministry on Wednesday expressed confidence that Caracas could "properly handle" its debt crisis, adding that financial cooperation was "proceeding normally". In response to the downgrading by ratings agencies, Communications Minister Jorge Rodriguez said Venezuela was already catching up on the payments.
"Today, we have begun interest payments on Venezuela's foreign debt and last week, PDVSA made its debt interest payments," he said on state television Tuesday. "We pay our debts, despite what the ratings agencies, the US Treasury, the European Union or (US President) Donald Trump say."
A committee of 15 financial firms meeting in New York meanwhile put off a decision for a third straight day on whether to declare a "Failure to Pay Credit Event" at PDVSA. They were to reconvene Thursday to determine whether holders of PDVSA debt with default insurance - known as credit default swaps - can collect payment.
PDVSA is vulnerable to creditors potentially moving to seize crude shipments or refinery assets abroad, particularly from its US subsidiary Citgo. If a selective default spreads to other bond issues, particularly the nation's sovereign debt, the South American country would probably be declared in full default.
A full default - recognition that Venezuela is unable to repay its massive debt - would have enormous consequences for the country, whose population is already suffering severe food and medicine shortages because of a lack of money to import them. President Nicolas Maduro has formed a commission to restructure Venezuela's sovereign debt and PDVSA's obligations.
But participants in a first meeting in Caracas Monday said officials had given no concrete details on its plans. Though the government declared the meeting a "resounding success" the Eurasia research group is more skeptical.
EU slaps sanctions on crisis-hit Venezuela
"The lack of substance at the 13 November meeting with bondholders suggests that the government lacks a strategy for debt talks and is looking to buy time and relief from creditors," it said. A default can be declared by the major ratings agencies, big debtholders or the government itself.
Maduro is also under fire internationally for marginalising the opposition, which controls the legislature, and stifling independent media. Like other observers of the deteriorating political situation in Venezuela, Mukherji of S&P does not see prospects for the Maduro regime to change course.
"The economic policy has been the same for many, many years now," he said. "I have no reason to think, based on past performance, that a big change is coming now."
The United States called an informal meeting of the UN Security Council, where US Ambassador Nikki Haley slammed Venezuela as an "increasingly violent narco-state" that poses a threat to world security.
Permanent council members Russia and China boycotted the talks. Venezuela's envoy to the UN, Rafael Ramirez, called the meeting a 'hostile' act of US 'interference'.
Venezuela signed a debt restructuring deal with major creditor Russia on Wednesday, as ratings agencies declared Caracas in partial default.
The country is seeking to restructure its foreign debts, estimated at around $150 billion, after it was hit hard by tumbling oil prices and American sanctions. A Venezuelan delegation led by Finance Minister Simon Zerpa signed the deal restructuring $3.15 billion of debt taken out in 2011 to finance the purchase of Russian arms.
Under the agreement, Caracas will pay back its debts over 10 years, with 'minimal' reimbursements for the first six years, Russia's foreign ministry said in a statement. "The reduction of the burden of debt... will allow the utilisation of funds to develop the country's economy, improve the debtor's solvency and increase the chances of all creditors recovering loans already made," according to the statement on the ministry's website.
Maduro dismisses default possibility on eve of debt talks
"These are very favourable terms that Venezuela can honour. This deal strengthens the relations between our two countries," Venezuelan vice president for the economy Wilmar Castro Soteldo told a press conference in Moscow. But the goal of solvency seemed a distant one Wednesday after S&P Global Ratings said it had placed Venezuela's state-owned oil company PDVSA in "selective default" for failing to make interest payments on some of its debt.
The ratings agency this week declared the country itself in selective default after it failed to make $200 million in payments on two global bond issues. S&P managing director Joydeep Mukherji, who handles Latin American and Caribbean sovereign ratings, said even if the payments to Russia are confirmed, other debt service remains in doubt, including on four other bonds that already are overdue.
Fitch also downgraded PDVSA and cash-strapped Venezuela over delayed payments, but Caracas insisted it was in the process of paying up. "It's a respite, but a slight respite," Orlando Ochoa, a Venezuelan economist, told AFP. "It doesn't change the context, it doesn't help to stabilize the economy or substantially increase its ability to pay."
Caracas has only $9.7 billion in foreign reserves and needs to pay back at least $1.47 billion in interest on various bonds by the end of the year, and then about $8 billion in 2018. Russia and China are the two main creditors and allies of Venezuela, which owes them an estimated $8 billion and $28 billion respectively.
The Chinese foreign ministry on Wednesday expressed confidence that Caracas could "properly handle" its debt crisis, adding that financial cooperation was "proceeding normally". In response to the downgrading by ratings agencies, Communications Minister Jorge Rodriguez said Venezuela was already catching up on the payments.
"Today, we have begun interest payments on Venezuela's foreign debt and last week, PDVSA made its debt interest payments," he said on state television Tuesday. "We pay our debts, despite what the ratings agencies, the US Treasury, the European Union or (US President) Donald Trump say."
A committee of 15 financial firms meeting in New York meanwhile put off a decision for a third straight day on whether to declare a "Failure to Pay Credit Event" at PDVSA. They were to reconvene Thursday to determine whether holders of PDVSA debt with default insurance - known as credit default swaps - can collect payment.
PDVSA is vulnerable to creditors potentially moving to seize crude shipments or refinery assets abroad, particularly from its US subsidiary Citgo. If a selective default spreads to other bond issues, particularly the nation's sovereign debt, the South American country would probably be declared in full default.
A full default - recognition that Venezuela is unable to repay its massive debt - would have enormous consequences for the country, whose population is already suffering severe food and medicine shortages because of a lack of money to import them. President Nicolas Maduro has formed a commission to restructure Venezuela's sovereign debt and PDVSA's obligations.
But participants in a first meeting in Caracas Monday said officials had given no concrete details on its plans. Though the government declared the meeting a "resounding success" the Eurasia research group is more skeptical.
EU slaps sanctions on crisis-hit Venezuela
"The lack of substance at the 13 November meeting with bondholders suggests that the government lacks a strategy for debt talks and is looking to buy time and relief from creditors," it said. A default can be declared by the major ratings agencies, big debtholders or the government itself.
Maduro is also under fire internationally for marginalising the opposition, which controls the legislature, and stifling independent media. Like other observers of the deteriorating political situation in Venezuela, Mukherji of S&P does not see prospects for the Maduro regime to change course.
"The economic policy has been the same for many, many years now," he said. "I have no reason to think, based on past performance, that a big change is coming now."
The United States called an informal meeting of the UN Security Council, where US Ambassador Nikki Haley slammed Venezuela as an "increasingly violent narco-state" that poses a threat to world security.
Permanent council members Russia and China boycotted the talks. Venezuela's envoy to the UN, Rafael Ramirez, called the meeting a 'hostile' act of US 'interference'.