Puerto Rico can't pay public debt

Domingo Halliburton

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basically PR is saying they can't pay the $355MM due tomorrow.

Puerto Rico Gov. Alejandro García Padilla on Monday said that he was still deciding whether to pay more than $350 million owed to investors as a Tuesday deadline loomed, in the latest twist in the U.S. commonwealth’s showdown with creditors.


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No Chapter 9 for Puerto Rico

Orrin Hatch just minutes ago....

"we should keep in mind that there are potential rule-of-law issues at stake here."

"Puerto Rico’s creditors entered into their contracts with various existing risks priced into the agreements in the form of interest rates"

"when we talk about legislative action to retroactively alter the terms of debt contracts."

Investors bought Puerto Rico bonds believing Chapter 9 restructuring was NOT available, and repayment was "constitutionally protected."
 

Domingo Halliburton

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Any updates on what happens next ?

They paid today. As far as I know they're saying they'll pay if they can but they're not going to cut off essential services. Bondholders are going to have to take a haircut or restructure these bonds to longer terms and/or interest only for awhile.

How an island of 3.5 million people ran up $72 billion in debt is :mindblown:
 

Domingo Halliburton

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Puerto Rico met its deadline for repaying $354 million in debt, the island’s development bank announced Tuesday, avoiding what some feared would be its first major default.

But it was unclear how long the payments would continue or whether the Commonwealth would meet other looming deadlines between now and Jan. 1.

The announcement of the repayments came as Gov. Alejandro García Padilla and other officials were testifying before the Senate Judiciary Committee, which is considering whether to give the island bankruptcy protection. The governor reiterated that Puerto Rico had run completely out of cash, and that as of Tuesday it was going to “claw back” certain revenues dedicated to paying debts, and use the money instead to provide government services and service general obligation bonds.

In his opening statement to the committee, the governor did not specify which types of debts would go unpaid as a result.









The statement from the development bank seemed to reflect the governor’s intentions.

“Today’s debt service payments reflect our commitment to honor our obligations notwithstanding the extreme fiscal challenges we face in an effort to facilitate a voluntary restructuring process with our creditors,” said the bank’s president, Melba Acosta Febo. “However, make no mistake, Puerto Rico’s liquidity position is severely constrained at this time despite the extraordinary measures the government has taken to improve it.”

The statement also said the governor had signed an executive order allowing the island “to begin redirecting certain revenues in light of recently revised revenue estimates and its deteriorating liquidity situation.”

“We have taken this difficult step in the trust that Congress will act soon,” Mr. García Padilla added, speaking slowly and clearly so his meaning would not be misunderstood. “But do not be misled. We have no resources left. Puerto Rico cannot keep this up longer.”









Tuesday’s hearing was the fifth so far this year in which various Congressional committees have taken testimony on what has caused Puerto Rico’s financial distress and what might be done about it. The Senate Judiciary Committee has jurisdiction over the federal bankruptcy law.

Puerto Rico owes roughly $72 billion to bondholders and at least $43 billion more to its governmental retirement system. Governor García Padilla has been saying since June that the government cannot pay that much debt and needs to restructure. But it cannot work out its debts in bankruptcy court because of its legal status as a territory. Governor García Padilla urged the Judiciary Committee to amend the bankruptcy law to give Puerto Rico that ability.

So far, the Republicans who control Congress have said they want to help Puerto Rico but cannot until it provides audited financial statements and reveals how much the assistance will cost.

The committee’s Republican chairman, Senator Charles Grassley of Iowa, said he had been “very troubled” to read in The New York Times on Monday that some of the governor’s advisers had been urging him to default, and said he wanted the governor to let him know whether that was true.
 

Domingo Halliburton

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The more I'm reading about this it doesn't sound good. Half their budget is commited to fixed obligations. You cant fix that with a bunch of administrative cuts.

These pension cuts could be catastrophic.
 

Domingo Halliburton

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Official: Puerto Rico Power Company Lacks $1B Due Creditors



Puerto Rico's troubled power company does not have the money to make more than $1 billion in payments due to creditors through July unless a restructuring deal is approved, officials said Tuesday.

The warning came during a hearing in Washington, D.C., by the congressional Subcommittee on Energy and Mineral Resources on the financial situation of Puerto Rico's Electric Power Authority, the largest U.S. public power utility.

Lisa Donahue, the company's chief restructuring officer, said the $700 million due on fuel lines of credit and roughly $428 million due in principal and interest on outstanding bonds represent more than twice the amount of cash the company currently has available.

"(The company) will not be able to make up the difference with revenue from operations during this period," she said.

Puerto Rico recently defaulted on $37 million in interest on bonds and faces its first lawsuit over diverting funds to meet other bond payments amid an economic crisis.

Donahue said the power company already would have run out of money if it hadn't reached a restructuring deal in December with 70 percent of those who hold its debt. That deal still requires Puerto Rico legislators to approve a bill that would reform the company. Critics warn that would hurt cash-strapped clients by giving the agency too much power to hike rates, among other changes.

Puerto Rico's power bills are on average almost twice those in the U.S. mainland and have contributed to the island's economic crisis by scaring away potential investors and forcing some businesses to close or lay off workers.

Government officials including Pedro Pierluisi, the island's representative in Congress, urged Congress to provide Puerto Rico with a restructuring mechanism.

"If these hearings are merely a forum for Congress to criticize the Puerto Rico government, while disregarding its own contribution to the crisis, this is not a constructive exercise," Pierluisi said.

Donahue, however, acknowledged that she didn't know if a bankruptcy mechanism would lead to lower bills or boost the island's manufacturing sector.

Meanwhile, Republican Rep. Raul Labrador of Idaho asked why the agency was having trouble collecting money from customers including municipalities and urged officials to find their own solutions to the financial crisis.

"You don't need Congress to help you be responsible," he said.

Puerto Rico has been mired in economic stagnation for nearly a decade and faces $72 billion in public debt that the governor has said is unpayable and needs restructuring. The power company, which has come under scrutiny following numerous allegations of corruption, holds some $9 billion of that debt.
 

Domingo Halliburton

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Puerto Rico "Generously" Offers To Repay 54 Cents On The Dollar To Creditors Owed $70 Billion


Reuters reports, adding that "the new plan would reduce a $49.2 billion chunk of Puerto Rico's debt by about 46 percent, to $26.5 billion, by offering creditors payout reductions under a new, so-called "base bond" with better legal protections."

GO bond holders would take a 28% hit, COFINA holders would lose 51%, and everyone else would take a 61% haircut. Here's how the scheme will work:



On the bright side, creditors would receive "growth bonds" designed to make up for the losses. The payout on those securities will be tied to the island's economy and as you might recall, things aren't going so well. Here's a table from Moody's Analytics would should give you an idea about how valuable these "growth bonds" are likey to be:



"Interest payment on the base bond would begin in 2018 (so that's a two year moratorium), reaching 5 percent a year by 2021, while payouts on the growth bond would begin 10 years after the close of the offer," Reuters continues. The base would give creditors the rights to tax receipts as a security measure.

Obviously, this isn't likely to go over well with creditors, but then again, bond holders probably knew the proposal would be, to quote Height Securities' Daniel Hanson again, "laughable."

Of course no one will be laughing if the deal doesn't get done and the island crashes into a messy GO default triggering a nightmarish deluge of costly litigation.

We'll close the way we began - with a quote from Daniel Hanson:



"Puerto Rico debt restructuring proposal isn’t credible. The targets are “wholly unrealistic,” and require creditors to trust Puerto Rico will make good faith effort to repay them."

* * *

Full proposal

16 02 01FinalProposal-Revised





You can almost hear Paul Singer lining up his lawyers to sue as we speak.
 

88m3

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not very familiar with how that all this pans out but shouldn't there have been a limit on the amount of bonds they were able to issue and if not why? the whole thing is highly irresponsible.
 

Domingo Halliburton

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not very familiar with how that all this pans out but shouldn't there have been a limit on the amount of bonds they were able to issue and if not why? the whole thing is highly irresponsible.

yeah, lenders/bond investors deserve some of the blame as well. this much money should not have been extended to them.
 

KENNY DA COOKER

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F
GOLDMAN & SACHS with another one

:francis:

goldman-sachs-stealing.jpg
 
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