gastronomo
Forumer storico
Argentina to IMF: no accord, no payments - paper
Wed Apr 13, 2005 10:21 AM ET
BUENOS AIRES, Argentina, April 13 (Reuters) - Argentine President Nestor Kirchner warned the IMF it will consider suspending payments to the lender unless his government reaches an accord with the Fund soon, the country's biggest-selling daily reported on Wednesday.
Kirchner, speaking on Tuesday during a trip to Germany, said he could place a higher priority on payments to bondholders who signed up for Argentina's massive swap of new bonds for defaulted debt.
"If we do not reach an agreement soon with the IMF, we are going to stop considering it as a preferred creditor and we're going to prioritize payments to bondholders who accepted the swap," the president is quoted as saying in El Clarin,
Preferred creditor status obliges debtors to place a higher priority to repaying the IMF over other creditors, according to the Fund's Web site.
Argentina owes a total of $13 billion to the IMF, ranking as the organization's third-largest debtor. It owes the IMF about $4 billion in 2005.
It suspended its agreement with the Fund in August 2004 to focus on its debt restructuring process with private creditors but has continued to repay the lender.
Kirchner hardened his stance against the IMF after the organization said last Friday that any future loan accord should include a strategy for dealing with the 24 percent of private creditors who rejected a debt swap on defaulted debt.
For the 76 percent of creditors who accepted the swap, it plans to issue $35.3 billion in bonds in exchange for $62.3 billion in old defaulted bonds, pending a U.S. appeals court hearing that has delayed completion of the exchange.
Kirchner said he plans no negotiations with the holdout investors during his administration, according to Clarin. Kirchner's term in office ends in December 2007.
"They (the IMF) cannot accept that Argentina does well without their recipes," he said.
The government is aiming for a two-year accord to roll over debt and continue paying interest, according to media reports. The target is to sign an accord in June, they said.
The IMF is curently conducting a review of Argentina's economy which will form the basis of any talks on any future IMF program with the country.
Wed Apr 13, 2005 10:21 AM ET
BUENOS AIRES, Argentina, April 13 (Reuters) - Argentine President Nestor Kirchner warned the IMF it will consider suspending payments to the lender unless his government reaches an accord with the Fund soon, the country's biggest-selling daily reported on Wednesday.
Kirchner, speaking on Tuesday during a trip to Germany, said he could place a higher priority on payments to bondholders who signed up for Argentina's massive swap of new bonds for defaulted debt.
"If we do not reach an agreement soon with the IMF, we are going to stop considering it as a preferred creditor and we're going to prioritize payments to bondholders who accepted the swap," the president is quoted as saying in El Clarin,
Preferred creditor status obliges debtors to place a higher priority to repaying the IMF over other creditors, according to the Fund's Web site.
Argentina owes a total of $13 billion to the IMF, ranking as the organization's third-largest debtor. It owes the IMF about $4 billion in 2005.
It suspended its agreement with the Fund in August 2004 to focus on its debt restructuring process with private creditors but has continued to repay the lender.
Kirchner hardened his stance against the IMF after the organization said last Friday that any future loan accord should include a strategy for dealing with the 24 percent of private creditors who rejected a debt swap on defaulted debt.
For the 76 percent of creditors who accepted the swap, it plans to issue $35.3 billion in bonds in exchange for $62.3 billion in old defaulted bonds, pending a U.S. appeals court hearing that has delayed completion of the exchange.
Kirchner said he plans no negotiations with the holdout investors during his administration, according to Clarin. Kirchner's term in office ends in December 2007.
"They (the IMF) cannot accept that Argentina does well without their recipes," he said.
The government is aiming for a two-year accord to roll over debt and continue paying interest, according to media reports. The target is to sign an accord in June, they said.
The IMF is curently conducting a review of Argentina's economy which will form the basis of any talks on any future IMF program with the country.