Site icon the janus observer

September 23 – September 29, 2016

Advertisements

Venezuela on the brink.

This post is number 52.  A full year down and I hope that you’ve found value in the Janus Observer.  Thank you for everyone that has been following this blog.    More to come.

Sincerely,

J. Duff Janus

Headlines

Briefs

Special Reports / Opinion Pieces

Graphics

Visual Capitalist – UBS Global Real Estate Bubble Index – Jeff Desjardins 9/27

FT – Rhode Island cuts its hedge fund program by two-thirds – Mary Childs 9/28

Featured

*Note: bold emphasis is mine, italic sections are from the articles.

Venezuelan oil major’s debt swap: the beginning of the end? Robin Wigglesworth and Andres Schipani. Financial Times. 25 Sep. 2016.

“The head of Petroleos de Venezuela (PDVSA) last week unveiled plans to swap more than $7bn of bonds maturing next year with longer-dated debts due in 2020. To sweeten the deal for investors, PDVSA offered up its US subsidiary Citgo Petroleum as collateral.”

“S&P (the ratings agency) said it would constitute a default by PDVSA, and many analysts see the move as a curtain-raiser the move as a curtain-raiser for an inevitable restructuring of Venezuela’s national debts.”

“S&P last week lowered its grade on the affected bonds to triple-C, one of the lowest rungs possible, and said that if the swap goes through it would be considered a ‘distressed exchange’ and therefore a formal default. This would not directly affect the country’s creditworthiness, but S&P warned that a ‘sovereign default seems inevitable.'”

“PDVSA’s proposed debt swap is also complicated by the proposal to offer up to 50.1% of Citgo as security of bondholders who agree to the deal. Firstly, it is already the state oil company’s main ‘seizable’ asset in case of default; secondly, if it is fully pledged to underpin the bond swap then it would in practice deprive other bondholders of their main security.”

“Lawyers say this would therefore probably fall foul of the ‘negative pledge’ clause in PDVSA’s existing bonds. Tellingly, the 442 pages of documentation on the debt swap lists no law firms or investment banks involved.

“If the deal collapses, then it worsens Venezuela’s predicament. Absent a deal, the country and PDVSA will jointly have to come up with some $15bn over the next 14 months for debt repayments. Although the government does not guarantee PDVSA’s debts, some lawyers say that in practice it would be hard to disentangle a full default and restructuring of the oil company from its parent, the state.”

“The country’s reserves are ‘critically low’ at $11.9bn, S&P notes, down from $16bn at the start of the year. And most of the reserves are in gold, which are hard to liquidate in a hurry without crashing prices.”
Other Interesting Articles

The Economist

Bloomberg – Blackstone’s Top Dealmaker Says Now Is The Most Difficult Period He’s Ever Experienced 9/27

Contra Corner – Dangerous Bubbles in Plain Site 9/27

Economist – Italy’s constitutional referendum 9/28

FT – China’s economic fate rests on its housing market 9/22

FT – How to value (worthless) Venezuelan oil bonds 9/23

FT – Wounds from the 2008 financial crisis are still bleeding 9/23

FT – Perry Capital to shut down after 28 years 9/26

FT – InterContinental drops on Airbnb fears 9/26

FT – China cities move to halt housing market frenzy 9/26

FT – Stretching the truth in Chinese literature 9/26
FT – How would a Fed rate hike affect consumers? 9/27

FT – Evergrande: never more 9/27

FT – Deutsche Bank and Twitter are lost in the past 9/28

FT – How the BlackBerry phone era came to an end 9/28

NYT – An Online Education Breakthrough? A Master’s Degree for a Mere $7,000 9/28

WSJ – The Looming Storm in Insurance 9/23

WSJ – Another $10 Billion Hong Kong Stock Market Mystery 9/26

WSJ – Chinese Insurers’ Short-Term Strategy Is Getting Old 9/28

Exit mobile version