XM은(는) 미국 국적의 시민에게 서비스를 제공하지 않습니다.

Conflict, creditors and a car crash: How Ukraine clinched a wartime debt restructuring



<html xmlns="http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml"><head><title>Conflict, creditors and a car crash: How Ukraine clinched a wartime debt restructuring</title></head><body>

Adds no comment response from International Monetary Fund in paragraph 16

By Marc Jones and Karin Strohecker

LONDON, Sept 3 (Reuters) -Just a few months after Russia invaded Ukraine, the country's financial adviser, Rothschild & Co, handed Kyiv's debt chief a thick black folder detailing major sovereign debt restructurings of the past 30 years.

For Yuriy Butsa, 40, it would prove essential reading. He hadn't been involved in the debt rework Ukraine required in 2015 after Russia annexed Crimea and it wasn't long before he would need to draw on the expertise.

Facing an economy crippled by the cost and destruction of the war, by August 2022 Ukraine agreed with creditors to pause payments on its bonds. With no end to the conflict in sight, last week the nation sealed one of the fastest - and largest - debt restructurings in history.

Eclipsed in scale only by Argentina and Greece, the restructuring of more than $20 billion of debt will save Kyiv $11.4 billion over the next three years - crucial for both its ongoing war effort and its International Monetary Fund programme.

"A stable situation where no more question marks are out there can only benefit Ukraine," Arvid Tuerkner, managing director for Ukraine and Moldova at the European Bank for Reconstruction and Development, one of Kyiv's big multilateral partners, told Reuters.

This account of how Ukraine's agreement with bondholders came together is based on interviews with five sources on both government and investor side who were involved in the talks and agreed to speak with Reuters on the condition of anonymity.


REVIVING TALKS

Initial negotiations between the government and its lenders hadn't gone to plan.

Talks in June had broken down after a couple of weeks with the core committee of bondholders complaining that the writedown Ukraine was demanding was "significantly in excess" of the 20% most had expected and risked doing "substantial damage" to relations.

With less than two months till the August 2022 payment moratorium expired, Rothschild arranged face-to-face meetings at the firm's elegant Parisian offices on the leafy Avenue de Messine.

Early on July 16, representatives of some of the world's top asset management firms and their legal and financial advisers arrived in Paris, where they joined Butsa, Ukraine's long-term legal advisers White & Case and the Rothschild team.

A raft of meeting rooms, adorned with pictures of the famous Rothschild vineyards, had been reserved to allow for joint discussions and private strategising.

The mood was pragmatic from the start, sources on both the government and the creditor side said. Everyone had come in the hope of doing a deal - even though both sides were still far apart.

EXCEPTIONAL UNCERTAINTY

There was reason to be back in talks.

As well as the looming deadline, the IMF, providing Ukraine with $15.6 billion of support, had just updated its projections. They had reflected a worsening economic picture, but nevertheless gave a new base to work from.

Ukraine kicked off by setting out its proposal. Members of a key bondholder group, representing some of the world's biggest asset managers such as BlackRock and Amundi, got to explain their demands too: that Ukraine restart 'coupon' payments immediately, offer a path to a higher principal recovery and, importantly, "keep it simple".

Both the IMF and Rothschild declined to comment for this story but according to two sources, the IMF's experts were on call in both Kyiv and Washington during the negotiations in an exceptional arrangement.

That was vital for doing the labour-intensive modelling needed to work out what each proposed compromise would mean for Ukraine's longer-term debt sustainability.

By 4am on July 18 in Paris, or 5am in Kyiv and nearly 48 hours into the process, another request was made to the IMF teams to rerun the numbers. Some of those crunching the figures had barely slept.

The Fund's help was invaluable, its staff worked at breakneck speed and helped to overcome multiple obstacles.

Discussions around how to tap Russia's frozen assets and confusion around a new IMF policy designed to try and help it adapt to the realities of a full-blown war had meant talks hadn't been able to start at April's IMF Spring meetings as hoped, and were still causing issues.

Butsa's team and the IMF were also adamant that there couldn't be anything like the costly 'GDP warrants' used to sweeten its 2015 restructuring. Under their terms, Kyiv is required to stump up a large chunk of its economic output if nominal GDP exceeds $125.4 billion and annual growth hits 3%.

But Ukraine was providing an alternative in the form of a simpler GDP-linked bond, and creditors were also being offered the instant coupon payments that they had wanted, starting at a rate of 1.75% and eventually rising to 7.75%.

Structured to be eligible for the main bond indexes and therefore easier to buy and sell, it meant the gap between the sides had been as good as bridged. With just the fine print to finalise, those in Paris made their exits as the packed city put the finishing touches on its Olympics preparations.


CAR CRASH

The drama wasn't entirely over, however.

Driving back from the Polish airport where his flight had landed - the most reliable route since Russia's invasion halted flights from Kyiv - a driver turned across Ukraine debt chief Butsa's VW Golf.

No one was hurt, but Butsa was now sitting in an insurance office in Lviv filling out forms whilst taking calls to finalise the statement that the $20 billion restructuring had, in principle, been agreed.

The resounding final result from the bondholder vote was more than 97% support.


War worries War worries https://reut.rs/3LqQGlW


Reporting by Marc Jones and Karin Strohecker in London; additional reporting by Libby George; editing by Elisa Martinuzzi and Christina Fincher

</body></html>

면책조항: XM Group 회사는 체결 전용 서비스와 온라인 거래 플랫폼에 대한 접근을 제공하여, 개인이 웹사이트에서 또는 웹사이트를 통해 이용 가능한 콘텐츠를 보거나 사용할 수 있도록 허용합니다. 이에 대해 변경하거나 확장할 의도는 없습니다. 이러한 접근 및 사용에는 다음 사항이 항상 적용됩니다: (i) 이용 약관, (ii) 위험 경고, (iii) 완전 면책조항. 따라서, 이러한 콘텐츠는 일반적인 정보에 불과합니다. 특히, 온라인 거래 플랫폼의 콘텐츠는 금융 시장에서의 거래에 대한 권유나 제안이 아닙니다. 금융 시장에서의 거래는 자본에 상당한 위험을 수반합니다.

온라인 거래 플랫폼에 공개된 모든 자료는 교육/정보 목적으로만 제공되며, 금융, 투자세 또는 거래 조언 및 권고, 거래 가격 기록, 금융 상품 또는 원치 않는 금융 프로모션의 거래 제안 또는 권유를 포함하지 않으며, 포함해서도 안됩니다.

이 웹사이트에 포함된 모든 의견, 뉴스, 리서치, 분석, 가격, 기타 정보 또는 제3자 사이트에 대한 링크와 같이 XM이 준비하는 콘텐츠 뿐만 아니라, 제3자 콘텐츠는 일반 시장 논평으로서 "현재" 기준으로 제공되며, 투자 조언으로 여겨지지 않습니다. 모든 콘텐츠가 투자 리서치로 해석되는 경우, 투자 리서치의 독립성을 촉진하기 위해 고안된 법적 요건에 따라 콘텐츠가 의도되지 않았으며, 준비되지 않았다는 점을 인지하고 동의해야 합니다. 따라서, 관련 법률 및 규정에 따른 마케팅 커뮤니케이션이라고 간주됩니다. 여기에서 접근할 수 있는 앞서 언급한 정보에 대한 비독립 투자 리서치 및 위험 경고 알림을 읽고, 이해하시기 바랍니다.

리스크 경고: 고객님의 자본이 위험에 노출 될 수 있습니다. 레버리지 상품은 모든 분들에게 적합하지 않을수 있습니다. 당사의 리스크 공시를 참고하시기 바랍니다.