Puerto Rico central government bondholders are opposing part of an Oversight Board motion to restart suits on Puerto Rico revenue bonds, Bond Buyer reported. Bondholder parties to the central government Plan Support Agreement (PSA) filed a “limited objection” to the board’s motion Wednesday afternoon in the Title III bankruptcy, asking the court to maintain the litigation stay on the issue of creditor priorities. The bondholder parties are investment funds holding general obligation and Public Building Authority bonds. On April 6 the board filed a motion to lift the stays in three similar adversary proceedings against holders of revenue bonds of the Highways and Transportation Authority, Puerto Rico Infrastructure and Finance Authority, and Convention Center District Authority. Attorneys for the central government bondholders told the court, “to the extent that the Oversight Board seeks to disallow proofs of claims asserted against the commonwealth because [revenue bondholder] defendants have no such claims, the PSA Creditors do not object to the Lift Stay Motion. Similarly, the PSA Creditors do not oppose the Lift Stay Motion to the extent the Oversight Board seeks to litigate issues that are not addressed in the Amended Commonwealth Plan [of Adjustment]. “The PSA Creditors do object, however, to any effort by the Oversight Board to litigate issues that are proposed to be compromised and settled under the Amended Commonwealth Plan, including the impact of [the Puerto Rico Oversight, Management, and Economic Stability Act] on relative creditor priorities governed by applicable Puerto Rico law,” the attorneys wrote. The attorneys, including Willkie Farr & Gallagher Partner Mark Stancil, represent the Lawful Constitutional Debt Coalition, the Ad Hoc Group of Constitutional Debtholders, Ad Hoc Group of Constitutional Debtholders, and the QTCB Noteholder Group. Stancil represents the Ad Hoc Group of Constitutional Debtholders. In early March the board presented a proposed plan of adjustment for the central government debt to the court. According to PSA Creditors, “the amended commonwealth plan [of adjustment] continues to incorporate a proposed global compromise and settlement concerning the allowance, treatment, and priority status of constitutional debt, including by allowing the commonwealth to use the relevant revenues to pay the claims of holders of constitutional debt.” (Subscription required.)
