martes, 19 de mayo de 2015

RPT-Cuba debt holder hangs on as demand builds for defaulted loans

RPT-Cuba debt holder hangs on as demand builds for defaulted loans
(Repeats Monday's story without changes)
By Karin Strohecker

May 18 (Reuters) - A historic breakthrough in U.S.-Cuba relations has
set investors clamouring to buy the Caribbean island's long-defaulted
debt but one of the biggest private holders of the distressed loans is
refusing to cash in yet.

Following five decades of Cold War confrontation between the United
States and Cuba's communist government, President Barack Obama surprised
the world in December, announcing Washington would restore diplomatic
ties with Havana and lift some economic sanctions.

Events have moved fast since: Cuba is to come off the U.S. list of state
sponsors of terrorism, Obama shook hands with Cuban President Raul
Castro in April, and the Paris Club of wealthy creditor nations is
working on expediting debt talks.

That has increased interest in all Cuban assets, including debt that has
been in default since the 1980s and which is now largely in the hands of
specialist distressed debt funds.


"All sorts of people are ringing us up who want to buy Cuban debt,"
Nicholas Berry, chairman of Stancroft Trust, who built up his stake in
defaulted paper more than a decade and a half ago, told Reuters.

Berry holds around 120 million pounds ($190 million) worth of Cuban debt
at face value without deferred interest but he paid between 1.5 and 9
cents in the dollar for the securities. He says he is not selling as
expects the bonds will rise further as relations between the countries thaw.

"We have held it for 16 years, we can hold it for another 16 years - for
us it is just a great store of value."

Cuba is seeking foreign investment and is hungry for fresh credit, but
it is customary for a country in default to cut a deal on outstanding
debt before returning to the markets.

In April, Stancroft Trust and two other parties formed a London Club
committee to negotiate debt held by the private sector. The three funds,
according to their own estimates, hold almost half the country's debt
obligations to commercial creditors.

While it is hard to assess the 'recovery value' of these defaulted bonds
is any debt workout, Berry reckons 25-35 cents (in the dollar) now
represents "a good balance between the potential of the situation which
is very big, and the reality, which is not so hot."

He was referring to many issues still to be solved and previous false
starts - for instance in 2005 trading volumes on the bonds spiked on
news of Fidel Castro's poor health, according to EMTA, the emerging
markets debt trading and investment industry trade association.

Discovering just how much the debt is worth now remains tricky because
so few of the loans ever change hands.

Oliver Butt, partner at distressed debt brokerage City & Continental,
says he recently brokered a deal for a yen-denominated bilateral loan to
Cuba that changed hands for 17-1/2 cents in the dollar.

Butt estimates "higher quality" debt would change hands for 20-25 cents,
and that some investors might be tempted to sell in the 25-30 cents range.

"The original holders of the debt have sold a long time ago...and (those
who bought it) have waited and waited and waited, the market has become
very thin in recent years," he said. "Though prices have also steadily
gone up."

Hard data about Cuba's debt, or indeed any other economic aspect of the
11-million-strong nation, are hard to come by.

Cuba last reported its "active" foreign debt, accumulated after it
declared a default in the late 1980s, as $13.9 billion in 2011. It no
longer reports its "passive" debt from before the default, which
economists estimate at $8 billion.

Ex-Cuban central bank official Pavel Vidal, who now lives in Colombia
but follows the country's finances closely, estimates foreign debt
"somewhere between $25 billion and $30 billion".

The chief of the Paris Club, Bruno Bezard, estimated during a visit to
Havana in March that the Caribbean island owed $15-16 billion to wealthy
creditor nations, with France being the largest of the 15 creditor nations.

Some of the defaulted issues have already been dealt with.

In the past four years, Cuba has restructured its debt with China,
Japanese commercial creditors, Mexico and Russia, each time obtaining
substantial reductions in what it owed in exchange for payment plans it
can meet.

Berry said he expected negotiations between Cuba and its creditors to
take months, if not years, adding his focus as a private creditor was to
get an instrument that would reap him the rewards of Cuba's economic
potential in the decades ahead.

"We need an instrument for us, an instrument linked to future growth,"
he said. "I want to see America rebuild Cuba."

($1 = 0.6378 pounds) (Reporting by Karin Strohecker; Editing by Toby Chopra)

Source: RPT-Cuba debt holder hangs on as demand builds for defaulted
loans | Reuters -
http://www.reuters.com/article/2015/05/19/cuba-debt-idUSL5N0Y941F20150519

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