The Government Development Bank, Puerto Rico’s main fiscal agent,
announced the framework for a debt restructuring plan late Sunday.
Photo: Reuters/Alvin Baez/File Photo
Puerto Rico said Monday it reached a tentative debt
restructuring deal with some of its major creditors. The announcement
came just hours after the U.S. territory declared it would skip making a
$422 million bond payment due today.
The Government Development Bank, the island’s main fiscal agent, announced the framework
for the restructuring plan late Sunday. The plan will require both
legislation from the U.S. federal government and participation from all
of the bank’s creditors in order to work, the GDP said.
“This agreement represents a vital first step in the
Commonwealth’s path to economic recovery,” Melba Acosta Febo, the bank’s
president, said in a statement.
The GDB will discuss the plan with the group of creditors for the next 30 days, Reuters reported.
The creditors, who call themselves the Ad Hoc Group, hold roughly $935
million of GDB debt. The creditors said Monday they would not pursue
legal action during that period, although smaller investors could still
file lawsuits of their own.
Puerto Rico is struggling
to pay back its $72 billion of debt, a sum acquired during the island’s
decadelong recession and complicated by the territory’s unique
relationship with the mainland U.S. Unlike the 50 states, Puerto Rico is
excluded from Chapter 9 of the U.S. bankruptcy code, which allows
municipal governments and public agencies to restructure their debt
during a crisis.
The GDB last week said it reached a deal
with credit unions to avoid defaulting on about $33 billion of the debt
payments due Monday. The bank’s $422 million default is the most
significant yet for Puerto Rico, because the bank acts as the main
depository and liquidity source for the island’s infrastructure
authorities and other public agencies, Reuters noted.The development bank said it reached indicative terms of a deal with the Ad Hoc credit group holding about a quarter of the bank’s nearly $4 billion in bonds. The creditors would agree to a two-step debt exchange and ultimately recover only about 47 percent of what they are owed.
“The financial concessions contemplated by the proposed restructuring are intended to help stabilize the operations of GDB and to support the Commonwealth’s efforts to restructure its other financial obligations,” the creditors said in a statement cited by Reuters.
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