Jorge Luis Moreno Félix, Jose Ignacio El-Mir Arnedo, Abraham Maldonado Zenteno and Iván Neftalí Hernández, PwC
This is an extract from the second edition of The Guide to Restructuring published by Latin Lawyer. The whole publication is available here.
Introduction
Roberto E Silva, Martín Campbell and Agustina M Ranieri, Marval, O’Farrell & Mairal
This is an extract from the second edition of The Guide to Restructuring published by Latin Lawyer. The whole publication is available here.
Introduction
Tomás M Araya and Lucía Carro, Bomchil
This is an extract from the second edition of The Guide to Restructuring published by Latin Lawyer. The whole publication is available here.
Introduction
Key Takeaways
Fernando Daniel Hernandez, Marval O’Farrell & Mairal
This is an extract from the 2020 edition of the Americas Restructuring Review, published by Global Restructuring Review. The whole publication is available here.
In summary
A bondholder of Argentine restructured debt filed for an injunction before the Argentine courts against the Bank of New York Mellon, as trustee under the exchange bonds. The plaintiff claimed the distribution of funds – frozen by a US court order – that Argentina had deposited into the Bank of New York Mellon's account to comply with the payments under those bonds. The Argentine courts dismissed the request, concluding that they lacked jurisdiction.
Argentina
The long-running dispute continues between Argentina, which defaulted on its sovereign debt for the second time in July 2014, and holdout bondholders from two previous debt restructurings.
Diaz Reus Partner Marta Colomar-Garcia, acting as Plaintiffs’ co-lead counsel overseeing eight separate class action lawsuits in Argentina’s 2001 $100 billion default, says that Plaintiffs have not been able to engage in genuine and substantive settlement discussions with Argentina in an attempt to resolve the litigation.
In a historic decision with the potential to end 15 years of litigation between the Republic of Argentina and holdout bondholders from the financially strapped South American nation’s 2005 and 2010 sovereign debt restructurings, Judge Thomas Griesa of the U.S.
The Republic of Argentina returned to global debt markets after a 15-year absence on April 19, 2016, when it sold $16 billion in bonds to fund a series of landmark settlements reached earlier this year with holdout bondholders from the South American nation’s 2005 and 2010 debt restructurings. This latest development in the more than decade-long battle between Argentina and the holdouts—led by hedge funds Aurelius Capital Master Ltd. (“Aurelius”) and NML Capital Ltd.