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Tribune News Service
Tribune News Service
Business
Bruce Douglas and Abhinav Ramnarayan

Russia’s bond payment is in limbo as countdown to default begins

Russia’s Finance Ministry said that it has sent payment orders for the interest on its dollar bonds to its correspondent bank, giving incremental details on a debt settlement that has come to exemplify how Moscow plans to handle its future relations with creditors.

It sent the order for a $117 million coupon payment on March 14 to a correspondent bank that it didn’t identify, adding that it would issue a separate comment if the paying agent, Citibank’s London branch, has received the payment, according to an emailed statement.

So far, European bondholders of Russia’s sovereign debt have received no sign of the funds, although growing optimism that the bonds may be settled is spurring prices higher across maturities.

What happens next is unclear, but if Russia’s creditors don’t get the cash in dollars within the 30-day grace period that starts on Thursday, it would be the first time the nation defaulted on foreign-currency bonds since the Bolsheviks repudiated the czar’s debts in 1918. Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov said the nation has all the resources it needs to avoid a default.

If, however, it doesn’t meet its debt obligations, the outcome could reinforce Russia’s exclusion from global capital markets and raise its borrowing costs. The government and firms including Gazprom and Lukoil have about $150 billion of foreign-currency debt. Such amounts and the broader financial squeeze may not be enough to threaten a global financial crisis, but the strains are rippling through emerging markets and could deal shocks to a world economy undergoing a seismic transformation in the wake of the invasion of Ukraine.

“The Russian debt deterioration was very sudden and in a country where the fundamentals were strong, so it will definitely be more significant than, say, Argentina’s default,” Anthony Kettle, a senior portfolio manager at BlueBay Asset Management Plc, said. “It may lead to some further diversification of international reserves, with possibly more of a role for CNY, as the U.S. has used sanctions and the dollar reserve asset status so effectively in this case.”

As for the impact on Russia itself, while its economy has been devastated by measures such as freezing much of the central bank’s $640 billion in reserves, the country’s large current account surplus means it doesn’t necessarily need bond market access.

That said, there have also been signs of strains among some Russian corporate borrowers. Internet search engine Yandex, social-media network VK Co Ltd. and Ozon Holdings have already initiated talks with creditors. Also, payments due from EuroChem hadn’t been processed as of Wednesday evening, according to people familiar with the matter, and Severstal said it had “grounds to believe” its settlement wouldn’t be processed either. Citigroup is the paying agent for both bonds. The bank declined to comment on all of the interest payments.

“The biggest hit will obviously be on the flow of capital,” said Simon Harvey, head of FX analysis at Monex Europe, who expects money managers to become much more cautious around emerging-market credit. “Investors have now been woken up to the perils of investing in higher-yielding sovereign debt.”

In 1998, Moscow’s default on its domestic debt and moratorium on payment to foreign creditors rippled across the global economy, contributing to the collapse and subsequent rescue of hedge fund Long-Term Capital Management, an event cited by the World Bank’s chief economist in an interview on Tuesday.

“Remember LTCM? That wasn’t necessarily on anyone’s radar screen at the outset of the Russian default in August 1998,” said World Bank Chief Economist Carmen Reinhart. “Those things start to surface. Exposures are opaque.”

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