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House Passes Bill to Help Puerto Rico Stay Financially Afloat

Submitted by ckanon@abi.org on
With Puerto Rico facing a $2 billion debt payment in just over three weeks, lawmakers in the U.S. House of Representatives passed legislation on Thursday to ease the island’s crippling financial crisis, The Associated Press reported yesterday. The strong bipartisan vote was 297-127 for the legislation that would create a financial control board and allow restructuring of some of Puerto Rico's $70 billion debt. The measure heads to the Senate just three weeks before the territory must make a $2 billion payment. The bill had the strong support of President Obama, House Speaker Paul Ryan and Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi. The legislation would allow the seven-member control board to oversee negotiations with creditors and the courts over reducing some debt. It does not provide any taxpayer funds to reduce that debt. It would also require the territory to create a fiscal plan. Among other requirements, the plan would have to provide "adequate" funds for public pensions, which the government has underfunded by more than $40 billion.
 
For more news and analysis of Puerto Rico's debt crisis, be sure to visit ABI's "Puerto Rico in Distress" webpage.

 

Island Debt Package Faces Bipartisan Criticism

Submitted by ckanon@abi.org on
Puerto Rico voters sent a signal of displeasure this weekend with the debt rescue package now pending in Congress, but leaders on Capitol Hill are pushing ahead anyway, insisting the bipartisan compromise is the best deal for federal taxpayers and the island territory, The Washington Times reported yesterday. Conservative critics still fear that the bill will end up socking average Americans’ pockets, while liberals say that the deal is too harsh on Puerto Rico itself, making cuts to social services more likely. Puerto Ricans appeared to send that same message when Ricardo Rossello, who opposes the House bill, defeated Commissioner Pedro Pierluisi in a primary this weekend to see who the New Progressive Party’s candidate for governor will be this fall. The House is scheduled to vote on the rescue package today, and Speaker Paul Ryan has implored his Republican troops to rally around the bill he negotiated with the Obama administration, saying it is the best a divided Congress can do to help Puerto Rico restructure its $72 billion of debt without resorting to a taxpayer bailout. House Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi is also urging her Democratic troops to back the bill.
 
For more news and analysis of Puerto Rico's debt crisis, be sure to visit ABI's "Puerto Rico in Distress" webpage.

 

U.S. House Passes Puerto Rico Debt Bill

Submitted by ckanon@abi.org on

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U.S. House Passes Puerto Rico Debt Bill
The House this evening overwhelmingly passed a rescue package for debt-stricken Puerto Rico, clearing a major hurdle in the ongoing effort to bring relief to the U.S. territory of 3.5 million Americans, ABC News reported today. The strong bipartisan vote was 297-127 for the legislation that would create a financial control board and allow restructuring of some of Puerto Rico's $70 billion debt. The measure heads to the Senate just three weeks before the territory must make a $2 billion payment. In a rare display of bipartisanship, the bill had the strong support of President Barack Obama, House Speaker Paul Ryan (R-Wis.) and Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi (D-Calif.) "The Puerto Rican people are our fellow Americans. They pay our taxes, they fight in our wars. We cannot allow this to happen," Ryan said in imploring lawmakers, especially reluctant conservatives in the GOP caucus, to back the bill during debate. The legislation would allow the seven-member control board to oversee negotiations with creditors and the courts over reducing some debt. It does not provide any taxpayer funds to reduce that debt. It would also require the territory to create a fiscal plan. Among other requirements, the plan would have to provide "adequate" funds for public pensions, which the government has underfunded by more than $40 billion. Hours before the vote, the White House strongly endorsed the bill, saying that failing to act could result in an "economic and humanitarian crisis" in the U.S. territory beyond what the island is already facing.

Click here to read an op-ed on the legislation.

To view the full text of H.R. 5278 (PROMESA), click here.
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Jeb Hensarling Plan Rekindles Debate as Republicans Aim to Dismantle Dodd-Frank
A proposal by a senior House Republican to dismantle portions of the 2010 Wall Street reforms known as the Dodd-Frank Act has rekindled a partisan debate over the state of banking regulation eight years after the financial crisis, the New York Times reported yesterday. Representative Jeb Hensarling of Texas, chairman of the House Financial Services Committee, outlined the main parts of his plan Tuesday during a speech in New York and plans to introduce the legislation this month. The debate shows how divided Washington remains over how to supervise the financial industry, from big banks to small community institutions. Hensarling’s plan, called the Financial Choice Act, rolls back significant provisions and limits the role of regulators in overseeing the country’s biggest banks, but it also advocates stronger penalties for financial fraud and puts a focus on capital buffers for large banks. One of the plan’s central provisions would allow the country’s biggest banks to exempt themselves from capital and liquidity requirements and other regulatory standards if they held enough capital to surpass a certain threshold. Hensarling estimates that the biggest banks would be required to collectively raise “several hundred billion dollars in new equity” to benefit from the proposal. That is likely to dissuade many of the top financial institutions from offering broad support for the measure. The bill would also repeal the Volcker Rule, which restricts trading activities at banks, and replace the Dodd-Frank Act’s process for winding down a failing institution with a new chapter of the Bankruptcy Code.
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Analysis: CFPB Needs a Rule to Regulate Debt Collection
Debt collectors are facing increasing pressure from the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau through aggressive regulation by enforcement, according to an analysis inAmerican Banker yesterday. In the past few years, the CFPB has entered into consent orders with debt buyers, banks and other lenders. The orders limit debt sales, increase data requirements and forbid various collection practices. But without the agency offering an alternative to these commonly used tools, preferably through rulemaking, debt collectors resort to the next “best” alternative they know of to settle a debt: lawsuits. Clearly, it is those lawsuits that are of particular concern to the CFPB. In the last few years, collection suit numbers have soared, and the CFPB has responded by closing or fining what they call “lawsuit mills.” Still, most collection agencies follow the law and will still find a technological way to file large volumes of lawsuits without violating federal measures. According to the analysis, however, consumers will still end up losing by being subjected to aggressive yet absolutely legal tactics in the collection process.
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Regulators Fear $1 Billion Coal Cleanup Bill
Regulators are wrangling with bankrupt coal companies to set aside enough money to clean up Appalachia’s polluted rivers and mountains so that taxpayers are not stuck with the $1 billion bill, the New York Times DealBook reported Tuesday. The regulators worry that coal companies will use the bankruptcy courts to pay off their debts to banks and hedge funds, while leaving behind some of their environmental cleanup obligations. The industry asserts that its cleanup plans — which include turning defunct mines back into countryside — are comprehensive and well funded. But some officials say those plans could prove unrealistic and falter as demand for coal remains weak. Regulators and environmental groups in Appalachia have tangled with coal companies for decades over their mining practices, particularly mountaintop removal mining, which involves removing mountain summits to extract coal. But in the bankruptcy cases, West Virginia has been pressuring the industry’s lenders to share more of the responsibility for mine reclamation and water remediation, arguing that they exert great influence, if not outright control in some cases, over the bankrupt mining companies.
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U.S. Credit Card Debt to Hit $1 Trillion in 2016
Since 2010, when Americans actually paid more on their credit card bills than they charged, the amount owed on credit cards has steadily risen from $2.5 billion in 2011 to $71 billion in 2015. However, total credit card debt at the end of last year had reached $919.1 billion, and at current growth rates, should wind up 2016 at roughly $1 trillion, 24/7 Wall St. reported yesterday. In the first quarter of 2016, Americans paid down $33.8 billion in credit card debt, including a $7 billion charge-off. According to research at CardHub, however, that’s the smallest first-quarter pay-down since 2008 and almost 25 percent below the post-recession average. Average U.S. household indebtedness dropped to about $7,600 during the first quarter, which represents an increase of 6 percent in indebtedness compared with the first quarter of 2016. CardHub projects that average indebtedness will rise to more than $8,500 by the end of 2016.
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Puerto Rico Governor Candidate Favors Debt Talks to Court Fight

Submitted by ckanon@abi.org on
Puerto Rico should avoid a potentially prolonged legal battle with bondholders by negotiating a reduction to its $70 billion debt, Bloomberg reported yesterday. New Progressive Party gubernatorial candidate Ricardo ‘Ricky’ Rossello said that the Puerto Rico Electric Power Authority’s December deal with creditors — under which bondholders consented to a 15 percent loss — is a model for how the U.S. territory can reduce what it owes. Gov. Alejandro García Padilla has advocated for such a voluntary reduction, although he has pushed for power to cut the debt in court to put pressure on creditors. Rossello said that the commonwealth’s debt “can be paid” and clarified that the government should work on a “reasonable” payment plan once there’s a clearer picture of its finances. García Padilla’s administration has yet to file audited statements for the fiscal year that ended June 30, 2014. The current administration has made little headway toward that goal over the past year, and the path to resolving the crisis may already be set by the time the next governor is sworn in. The U.S. House of Representatives may vote as soon as this week on a bill, called PROMESA, to create a federal control board that would oversee the commonwealth’s budgets and manage any debt restructurings. The bill was approved this week by the House Committee on Natural Resources. Rossello has spoken out against the federal legislation because it doesn’t provide a path to statehood and allows the control board to force a restructuring in court if needed.
 
Read the full report of the House Committee on Natural Resources on PROMESA, H.R. 5278.

 

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Editorial: Chances of a Legislative Solution for Puerto Rico Are Growing Slimmer

Submitted by ckanon@abi.org on
Whatever Congress decides to do about Puerto Rico’s fiscal crisis, it isn’t likely to happen soon enough to keep the island commonwealth from defaulting on $2 billion worth of general obligation bond payments that are due July 1, and the chances Congress will agree on a plan at all appear to be growing slimmer, according to an editorial on Sunday by the Desert (Utah) News. Among the reasons for this is Bernie Sanders, the Democratic senator from Vermont who is running for president. He has become an ardent foe of the House rescue plan sponsored by Utah Rep. Rob Bishop. Sanders would give Puerto Rico bankruptcy protection, provide it with emergency loans and allocate billions for infrastructure improvements on the island, all in the name of providing jobs and economic development, and he could be a major impediment to quick passage of a solution. All of these things, according to the editorial, are exactly the wrong prescription. Congress is part of the reason that Puerto Rico got itself into trouble in the first place. Decades ago, it approved tax breaks to spur investments in manufacturing and pharmaceutical businesses on the island. This artificial prop lasted until the tax breaks ended completely in 2006. Then the businesses began to leave and unemployment began to rise. Tax revenues no longer were enough to cover the government’s obligations.
 
For more news and analysis of Puerto Rico's debt crisis, be sure to visit ABI's "Puerto Rico in Distress" webpage.

 

Puerto Rico Bill Faces Unclear Fate as House Floor Debate Nears

Submitted by jhartgen@abi.org on

The U.S. House plans to vote next week on a proposal to address Puerto Rico’s debt crisis, but it’s not clear the measure has enough support to pass despite the backing of Speaker Paul Ryan and Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi, Bloomberg News reported today. “It still has some hurdles,” said Representative Raul Grijalva, the top Democrat on the Natural Resources Committee, who backs the bill even though he says it’s imperfect. “I think it can pass, but it’s going to be a difficult process.” If the bill can’t clear the House, it would leave Puerto Rico and its bondholders in limbo with no clear road ahead on how to keep the island’s government functioning ahead of a likely July 1 default on a $2 billion debt payment. House leaders still want to move ahead with a vote next week, according to a Republican aide, as they try to figure out how to cobble together votes to pass the legislation. One question for Republican leaders is whether to allow debate on any amendments, and, if so, which ones. The bill, approved last week by the Natural Resources Committee, has been attacked from two sides: by conservatives who oppose anything resembling a bailout of Puerto Rico, and by liberals, including Democratic presidential candidate Bernie Sanders, who reject restrictions on the island’s government. Read more

For more news and analysis of Puerto Rico's debt crisis, be sure to visit ABI's "Puerto Rico in Distress" webpage

Virgin Islands Balks at Puerto Rico Rescue Proposal

Submitted by jhartgen@abi.org on

Congress’s plan to throw a lifeline to Puerto Rico is making waves in the U.S. Virgin Islands, Bloomberg News reported today. The measure that passed a House committee last week would allow for a federal control board to oversee the finances — and potentially restructure the debt — of any U.S. territory, even though Puerto Rico is the only one now asking for help. Virgin Islands Governor Kenneth Mapp and Rep. Stacey Plaskett have blasted the bill, warning that it may tarnish its standing with investors. That concern is already starting to materialize: Returns on its securities are trailing the $3.7 trillion municipal market for the first time since 2011. The Caribbean island, Puerto Rico’s closest American neighbor, has a sliver of the population — about 104,300 — and a fraction of the debt, with $2.4 billion across all issuers. But divvied up, that’s $23,000 of obligations per person, even more than Puerto Rico’s $20,000. The two Caribbean territories with a shared culture also have similar fiscal strains: declining populations, underfunded pensions, histories of borrowing to cover budget shortfalls and unemployment rates that are twice as high as the U.S. mainland’s. Virgin Islands leaders insist the government can and will pay what it owes, in part because of the way the bonds are structured.