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23 Jan 2019, 12:06 pm by Mark Weidemaier
Mitu Gulati & Mark Weidemaier Last week, the Government of Puerto Rico, acting through the Financial Oversight and Management Board (and in conjunction with the creditors’ committee), filed a claims objection seeking to invalidate roughly $6 billion of its General Obligation debt. [read post]
6 Sep 2021, 6:03 pm by Mark Weidemaier
Mark Weidemaier and Mitu Gulati We’ve had lots of interesting responses to our earlier post on debt restructuring shenanigans engaged in by the Province of Buenos Aires. [read post]
16 Mar 2020, 3:15 pm by Mark Weidemaier
Mark Weidemaier & Mitu Gulati Our prior post expressed frustration with the drafting of Lebanon’s fiscal agency agreement, and particularly the collective action clause. [read post]
21 Apr 2020, 6:49 pm by Mark Weidemaier
Mark Weidemaier and Mitu Gulati COVID-19 has wrought an unprecedented economic crisis, which will most severely impact the poorest countries. [read post]
6 Nov 2019, 5:36 pm by Mark Weidemaier
Mark Weidemaier & Mitu Gulati Over the past week, we’ve discussed various uncertainties over how to interpret the new “uniformly applicable” standard added to aggregated Collective Action Clauses starting in 2014 (here and here). [read post]
24 Nov 2019, 8:15 am by Mark Weidemaier
Mark Weidemaier & Mitu Gulati Earlier this year, we wrote an article with Ugo Panizza and Grace Willingham about an unusual type of promise made by some sovereign nations, including Spain and Greece. [read post]
1 Feb 2020, 12:20 pm by Mark Weidemaier
Mark Weidemaier & Mitu Gulati Ben Bartenstein at Bloomberg has a provocative article on “prescription” clauses in Venezuela’s post-2005 sovereign bonds. [read post]
10 Sep 2019, 6:31 pm by Mark Weidemaier
Mark Weidemaier and Mitu Gulati We may be partly to blame for the fact that stories keep surfacing about whether the U.S. government might help holders of pre-revolutionary, defaulted Chinese debt monetize their claims. [read post]
8 Jan 2018, 3:30 am by Mark Weidemaier
Mark Weidemaier & Mitu Gulati Ricardo Hausmann, Harvard economist and former Venezuelan Planning Minister, has been a thorn in the side of the Maduro administration. [read post]
6 Dec 2019, 1:03 pm by Mark Weidemaier
Mark Weidemaier and Mitu Gulati For a while now, we have been meaning to write about “sovereign gold bonds,” or “SGBs,” which the Indian government has been marketing under domestic law to residents of the country since November 2015. [read post]
15 Apr 2022, 2:08 pm by Mark Weidemaier
Mark Weidemaier & Mitu Gulati We almost hate to post this, because it is so simple, and so fundamental, that it seems almost surely wrong. [read post]
19 Feb 2019, 1:54 pm by Mark Weidemaier
Mitu Gulati and Mark Weidemaier We have previously discussed how Euro area sovereign bonds with Collective Action Clauses or CACs (issued after Jan 1, 2013) and without CACs (issued prior to Jan 1, 2013) potentially differ in their vulnerability to debt restructuring. [read post]
29 Jan 2019, 4:39 am by Mark Weidemaier
Mark Weidemaier and Mitu Gulati Even by the eccentric standards of its ongoing debt crisis, weird things are afoot in Venezuela. [read post]
10 Sep 2020, 3:14 am by Jeremy Telman
Today, the Blog's virtual symposium on Contracts and COVID continues with a contribution from two authors who have been very active, separately and together, in the field. [read post]
12 Mar 2020, 8:06 am by Mark Weidemaier
Mark Weidemaier & Mitu Gulati After trying but failing to locate the fiscal agency agreements underlying Lebanese bond issues, we finally managed to get our hands on this one. [read post]
20 Jul 2020, 10:11 am by Mark Weidemaier
Mark Weidemaier and Mitu Gulati As negotiations between the Argentine government and its creditors have gotten increasingly acrimonious, some have begun talking about litigation. [read post]
16 Apr 2022, 8:06 am by Mark Weidemaier
Mitu Gulati & Mark Weidemaier After months of waffling, Sri Lanka’s head-in-sand government has finally acknowledged that it cannot pay its debts. [read post]