pago non pago?
The Fund, arrears, and Greek holdouts
 			Posted by 
Joseph Cotterill on Mar 27 08:35.  			 				So it turns out that we won’t know, for a little while longer,  who the holdouts are in Greece’s foreign law bonds – a remaining pimple  on the bottom of its debt workout.
 Greece has pushed back the deadline for foreign law bondholders to agree to a debt restructuring to April 4, as 
IFR reported on March 23. The deadline was meant to be March 23.
 While we all twiddle our thumbs, here’s some (really quite dull) IMF boilerplate:
 

 You can find almost exactly the same wording in any IMF report on a  country bailout; the above text just happens to be ripped from the 
latest one  on Greece. It means that, usually, the Fund is banned from lending to a  sovereign which is getting deeper into default on external debts by not  paying them off.
 On rare occasions the IMF can ‘lend into arrears’ when a sovereign is  in default, but is negotiating a settlement with bondholders. But it’s  not normal.
 No lending into arrears in the IMF’s €28.6bn share of the second  Greek bailout, of course. The Fund doesn’t think there will be any  arrears, because it currently doesn’t see a financing gap in the bailout  to cause them. (At the very least, 
it has a plan if or when a black hole does emerge). No financing gap for now. That’s important.
 But a bit dull, so far. So here’s the reason we bring it up…
 What might the IMF do in April, if Greece has to deal with (and  possibly default on) investors who do hold out from restructuring its  foreign law bonds?
 Would those arrears be OK with the IMF’s ‘normal’ rules? The question  was asked by Gabriel Sterne, economist at Exotix, in a note last week.
 This isn’t something we’ll know for a while, but it is worth asking.  There’s also an interesting question here about economic upside in the  Greek restructuring.
 
First, some background on holdouts
 Some 
69 per cent of these holders have 
already said they will tender into the exchange.
 You could say, “well, that number doesn’t make holdouts very likely,  does it” but there is a quirk here in these bonds’ collective action  clauses, which allow a majority of holders to vote to make a change of  terms binding. Greece’s domestic law bonds were all assigned the same  CAC before the restructuring, with the same threshold for a binding  vote. The foreign law debts all have their own unique CACs with  differing rules between each… so “triggered or not” becomes a  bond-by-bond question. If a CAC isn’t triggered, it becomes 
possible to hold out (because there’s no 
sudden death of being bound by other holders).
 We go into the CACs at some length because they already present an  obstacle to being sure of holding out, never mind the economic merits of  the trade.
 Assuming it’s possible, it’s 
profitable to hold out on the  foreign laws, based on whether you are correct that the Greek threat not  to pay out on the foreign law bonds is an empty one. Instead Greece has  the economic assets and 
the inclination to pay you at par, or negotiate to somewhere between your purchase price, and par.
 The threats have been that the Hellenic Republic ‘does not  contemplate the availability of funds’ to pay them after PSI, and also  that there shall be ‘no further opportunity’ for holdouts to benefit  from the credit enhancements of the new bonds after the offer closes.  Bluntly, how onerous will it be for Greece to service holdout foreign  law debts and not make good on these threats, versus having to make  fewer budget cuts, etc.
 
Back to the IMF
 But whose inclination to pay matters? According to Sterne, it might be the IMF:
 
The IMF/Troika and Greece will need to conduct a cost-benefit analysis of whether or not it is worth paying out the bonds. We  think ongoing DSA will be a key determinant of IMF attitudes. A key  consideration is that it would be very uncomfortable for the IMF to  sanction a build up of external arrears in the case there were no  identified financing gaps in the programme.
 It is feasible that the IMF could continue to  lend to Greece while arrears are building up, in accordance with its  lending to arrears policy, by which it could lend to Greece so  long as there was evidence that Greece continued to negotiate in good  faith with outstanding creditors. See any recent IMF review of its Iraq  programme for examples of text that were included to justify lending in  spite of Iraq continuing to be in arrears to creditors such as the  Kuwait government. For example the following statement is included in  the 
March 2011 second review of Iraq’s programme.
  “Staff furthermore believes that Iraq  continues to make best efforts to reach bilateral agreements on its  arrears to non-Paris Club creditors and that the authorities have been  negotiating in good faith to resolve the remaining arrears to private  creditors”
But if the IMF does not identify financing gaps  in the programme, then in our opinion it is difficult (though not  impossible) for the Fund to justify allowing Greece to build up arrears.  So, in our judgment, if the programme stays on track, then we  think there is a strong likelihood of hold-out on foreign law bonds  being paid eventually.
 Two things jump out here. First, it 
is about economic  upside; Sterne also says there’s more value in Greece’s GDP warrants  (growth-linked securities attached to the new bonds) than
 generally thought.
 Second, though, this might be another area where the IMF ends up  thinking very differently to its fellow official creditors. Lending into  arrears is one of those Fund functions which isn’t taken very lightly.
 All of this assuming, of course, that holdouts emerge on April 4.