Elaine Moore
Ukraine is preparing to meet international
creditors in San Francisco this week as the war-torn country warns it is
prepared to impose a debt moratorium in September unless a restructuring deal
is struck.
According to Ukraine’s Ministry of Finance, the
meeting on Wednesday represents the last opportunity for the two sides to reach
full agreement in advance of a $500m bond due to mature on September 23.
In the absence of a deal Ukraine has stated it
will seek “alternative options for financing its International Monetary
Fund-supported programme”, which are understood to include a debt moratorium.
Ukraine hopes to reduce its debt burden by $15.3bn over the next four years as
part of a $40bn rescue plan designed by the IMF to stabilise the country as its
struggles with recession and pro-Russian separatism in the east continue.
However, negotiations have stalled over the
question of whether the country is suffering from a liquidity or solvency
crisis.
Kiev, which has continued to make interest payments on debt throughout negotiations, argues
that investors must accept a principal writedown for the country to meet the
terms of the IMF’s plan.
However, a committee of international creditors
with $8.9bn of the country’s debt, including US asset manager Franklin
Templeton, argue the problems are temporary and payments should be delayed, not
written off.
Following months of fruitless talks, the
committee recently offered to accept a 10 per cent writedown on their holdings,
suggesting that a compromise was possible.
Ukraine rejected the offer, which came with
conditions including a potential reversal if the country’s situation improved,
and sent a counterproposal that is understood to include a lower haircut than
the 40 per cent the country originally sought.
International commentators have advised the two
sides to reach a deal.
In a comment piece published last week, Nathan
Sheets, US Treasury undersecretary for international affairs, told creditors
they had the opportunity to be part of a solution that would advance their own
interests as well as Ukraine’s economic and geopolitical fortunes, urging them
to move swiftly to reach an agreement that satisfies the IMF’s rescue plan criteria, including debt-sustainability targets.
One possible outcome is for the maturity date of
the September bond to be pushed back, providing both sides with more time to
reach a deal on the rest of the country’s outstanding stock of debt.
According to analysts at Bank of America Merrill
Lynch, the risks of a hard default in Ukraine are high.
“To
restructure the September 23 eurobond without a hard default, in our view
Ukraine would need an agreement with bondholders by the end of August or so,”
said Vadim Khramov, Ukraine chief economist at BofA.
Prices for a $2.6bn bond issued by Ukraine and
due for repayment in 2017 have dropped in the past three days as hopes for a
deal recede, falling from 59 cents on the dollar to 56 cents.
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