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New Puerto Rico Bill Slated for Wednesday Rollout

Submitted by jhartgen@abi.org on

Lawmakers are planning to roll out a new bill to help Puerto Rico restructure its debt on Wednesday, MorningConsult.com reported yesterday. A legislative staffer said that the new language will be introduced under a new bill number. The current plan is to have Rep. Sean Duffy (R-Wis.) remain the bill’s lead sponsor. He sponsors the current bill, H.R. 4900. The new bill, according to the staffer, will contain new language to further clarify the existing legal and constitutional prioritization of Puerto Rico’s creditors, and the fiscal oversight board’s role in preserving that lineup. The Natural Resources panel, which has jurisdiction over Puerto Rico, will hold off on voting for the legislation until the following week, the aide said. That will give members of the committee time to go over the bill, understand its changes, and decide on possible amendments they want to offer at the markup. Read more

What are the next steps for Puerto Rico to resolve its financial distress? A panel of experts at ABI’s New York City Bankruptcy Conference on May 12 will examine potential remedies. Rates go up on Friday! Click here to register. 

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

Puerto Rico Debt Measure Pressed by Democrats, Citing Zika

Submitted by jhartgen@abi.org on
House Democrats are stepping up pressure on Republicans to advance legislation addressing Puerto Rico’s worsening debt crisis by issuing a report arguing that austerity cuts can’t be sustained and have made the island more vulnerable to the mosquito-borne Zika virus, Bloomberg News reported yesterday. Health care cuts in response to the $70 billion debt crisis have created a potentially “disastrous” outcome for residents and show how further sharp reductions in government spending can’t be a part of a legislative solution, according to the report released yesterday by Democrats on the House Natural Resources Committee. Puerto Rico has been particularly hard hit by the virus, and the rainy season that started last month is creating a breeding ground for mosquitoes — and more health-care demands. The disease can result in birth defects and miscarriages. The Obama administration is calling for urgent action after Puerto Rico didn’t make most of a $422 million debt payment on Monday, the biggest default so far in the U.S. territory’s intensifying debt crunch. Bigger problems are just around the corner. Congress has a handful of weeks to hammer out a legislative fix ahead of a second default on a $2 billion debt payment due on July 1. Read more

What are the next steps for Puerto Rico to resolve its financial distress? A panel of experts at ABI’s New York City Bankruptcy Conference on May 12 will examine potential remedies. Rates go up on Friday! Click here to register. 

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

 

Analysis: Puerto Rico Bank Debt Agreement Looks Easier Said Than Done

Submitted by jhartgen@abi.org on

Puerto Rico took the edge off this week’s debt default by announcing a tentative agreement with creditors of the island’s Government Development Bank, but that deal is far from a sure thing, according to a Bloomberg analysis yesterday. After Governor Alejandro García Padilla announced that the GDB wouldn’t make a $400 million principal payment due May 1, the bank said a group of hedge funds who hold $900 million of its debt conditionally agreed to defer payment and accept 47 cents on the dollar of the face value of their securities. The ad hoc group of bondholders agreed to keep discussions out of court for 30 days while they continue to negotiate. In order to finalize the accord, all GDB bondholders must agree to the restructuring terms. That may be difficult given that many individual investors hold the bonds and may not closely follow the bank’s changes, according to Phil Fischer, head of municipal research at Bank of America in New York. The GDB has about $4 billion in bonds. “It’s extremely unlikely that they will get 100 percent because the debt is held widely in individual accounts,” Fisher said. The GDB cautioned that the transaction would be “highly unlikely” to reach the required participation level without federal legislation that includes a provision to bind non-consenting creditors. Read more

What are the next steps for Puerto Rico to resolve its financial distress? A panel of experts at ABI’s New York City Bankruptcy Conference on May 12 will examine potential remedies. Rates go up on Friday! Click here to register. 

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

Puerto Rico Default: More Political Fallout Than Market Impact

Submitted by jhartgen@abi.org on

Officials in Washington, D.C., and San Juan have expected for some time that Puerto Rico would default yesterday on debt owed by its Government Development Bank. When it finally happened, the impact on the markets was muted, which means there may be less urgency to resolve a standoff in Congress over debt restructuring legislation, according to an analysis today on MorningConsult.com. The commonwealth made its default on the debt official over the weekend when Gov. Alejandro García Padilla declared a moratorium on the GDB debt payment and addressed the 3.5 million people of Puerto Rico on television. Importantly, the island did not default on all of the $422 million it owed to GDB creditors. An ad hoc group of creditors negotiated with the San Juan government before the default to allow some of its payment to be delayed. Under the plan, as described by the D.C.-based broker-dealer Height Securities LLC, Puerto Rico will hold off some payment to these creditors, meaning the unpaid amount comes to about $270 million in GDB debt. Read more

What are the next steps for Puerto Rico to resolve its financial distress? A panel of experts at ABI’s New York City Bankruptcy Conference on May 12 will examine potential remedies. Rates go up on Friday! Click here to register. 

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

Puerto Rico to Miss Largest Payment to Date

Submitted by jhartgen@abi.org on

Gov. Alejandro García Padilla of Puerto Rico said yesterday that he had ordered a debt moratorium, blocking a $422 million payment due today, the New York Times reported. The missed payment is the biggest yet in a continuing series of defaults by the struggling United States territory, and a warning that Puerto Rico will probably default on even larger and more consequential payments due on July 1, unless Congress enacts rescue legislation before then. On that date nearly $2 billion is due, roughly $800 million of which consists of general-obligation bonds that carry an explicit guarantee by the Puerto Rican Constitution. Missing a major payment on such debt would not only set off a wave of creditor lawsuits, but it could also cast a shadow over America’s $3.7 trillion municipal bond market. Read more

What are the next steps for Puerto Rico to resolve its financial distress? A panel of experts at ABI’s New York City Bankruptcy Conference on May 12 will examine potential remedies. Click here to register. 

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

Washington Still Haggling as Puerto Rico Debt Deadline Looms

Submitted by ckanon@abi.org on
In December, House Speaker Paul Ryan instructed lawmakers to find a “responsible solution” to Puerto Rico’s debt crisis in the first three months of this year, giving the island plenty of time to prepare for a May 1 deadline on a $422 million debt payment, The New York Times reported today. That deadline is imminent, but Republicans in the House and Democrats in the administration are still haggling over the terms of a bill to rescue Puerto Rico. Missing the payment risks further destabilizing its shrunken economy. And there are concerns that the passage of any legislation could be delayed until the island nears the tipping point of its debt woes: a $2 billion debt payment due on July 1. The May 1 payment consists mainly of principal and interest due from Puerto Rico’s Government Development Bank. Its activities are so numerous and critical that analysts have worried for months that the bank’s failure would have untold ripple effects across the island. Puerto Rico Gov. Alejandro García Padilla, who has warned about defaults for months, has expressed frustration with Washington’s inability to act quickly.

Puerto Rico to Call Moratorium If May Bond Payment Isn't Delayed

Submitted by jhartgen@abi.org on

Puerto Rico plans to invoke a new law permitting the suspension of debt payments if the island fails to reach an agreement to defer $422 million in bond payments due May 1, Bloomberg News reported yesterday. The commonwealth, which is grappling with a $70 billion debt crisis, remains in talks with creditors, said Jesus Manuel Ortiz, a spokesman for Governor Alejandro Garcia Padilla. A default on the bonds issued by the Government Development Bank would be the largest yet by Puerto Rico, which has said that it has no choice but to renege on obligations because of its struggling economy and deteriorating finances. Garcia Padilla on April 6 signed the moratorium law allowing him to suspend principal and interest payments on a wide swath of debt, including the island’s general obligations. He has said that the U.S. territory can’t afford payments due in May and July. Read more

In related news, Pacific Investment Management Co. said that the U.S. House bill that would establish a federal oversight board for Puerto Rico and give it powers to reduce the island’s $70 billion of debt would be a “satisfactory resolution” to the commonwealth’s worsening crisis, Bloomberg News reported yesterday. Pimco, which doesn’t own any of the territory’s securities, said that the legislation wouldn’t trigger higher borrowing costs for other municipal issuers, a concern raised by some Republicans in Congress. The legislation is pending in the House Natural Resources Committee, which canceled a planned vote this month so that it could address criticism from lawmakers of both parties. The bill has also won support from Nuveen Asset Management and holders of Puerto Rico’s sales tax–backed bonds, while hedge funds that own the commonwealth’s general obligations have opposed it. Read more

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

House Republican Leader Sees Puerto Rico Bill Before July

Submitted by jhartgen@abi.org on

House Majority Leader Kevin McCarthy (R-Calif.) said yesterday that he is "hopeful" lawmakers can move legislation on Puerto Rico out of the House before the U.S. territory must make a $1.55 billion debt payment in July, Reuters reported. But lawmakers will not be able to address the island's fiscal crisis before May 1, when Puerto Rico is due to make a smaller $422 million payment that Governor Alejandro Garcia Padilla says it cannot meet, said the California Republican, who is second only to Speaker Paul Ryan in the legislative chamber. Puerto Rico faces $70 billion in total debt, a 45 percent poverty rate and a shrinking population, all of which threaten to cause its economy to collapse. "The May date, I don't see how we can get it done," McCarthy said. Congressional efforts to craft legislation to address the crisis have hit a series of roadblocks that McCarthy said he believes lawmakers could surmount before July 1, when Puerto Rico is scheduled to make the $1.55 billion debt payment. Read more

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

Puerto Rico Senate to Weigh in on Changes to Debt Moratorium Law

Submitted by jhartgen@abi.org on

Puerto Rico’s Senate plans to take up legislation today that would exclude bonds used to restructure public-corporation debt from the island’s moratorium law, Bloomberg News reported yesterday. The upper chamber is set to take up the measure passed by the House of Representatives last week, Senate President Eduardo Bhatia said yesterday. The Senate will change the House bill so general-obligation and sales-tax bonds would still be subject to the debt-moratorium law, Bhatia said. Governor Alejandro Garcia Padilla has said that the commonwealth needs the ability to skip payments on both classes of securities. Assets and revenue of municipalities and local cooperatives would be protected from the moratorium. A deal that would restructure about $9 billion of Puerto Rico Electric Power Authority debt would also be exempt from the moratorium law, Bhatia said. Read more

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