Stalked by default fears, Venezuela calls creditor meeting

Venezuela on Friday called its foreign creditors to a meeting November 13 in Caracas aiming to restructure its estimated $150 billion debt, as the specter of default moved ever closer.


“I say to investors across the whole world and to holders of Venezuelan debt: I call you to come to Caracas on November 13 to start a process to refinance and renegotiate the external debt,” President Nicolas Maduro said.

His vice president, Tareck El Aissami, said the government is seeking “sovereign commitments” for a debt renegotiation.

El Aissami is leading a commission in charge of restructuring the debt in crisis-hit Venezuela.

Flanked by the ministers in charge of the economy, finance and energy, El Aissami confirmed the country had on Friday started to pay out nearly $1.2 billion due to service the debt of state oil company PDVSA.

Maduro announced Thursday that Venezuela would begin talks to refinance the debt immediately after that payment was made.

El Aissami, one of the Venezuelan officials sanctioned by the United States due to alleged ties to drug trafficking, said the talks with creditors will “establish the groundwork to renegotiate the terms of the foreign debt of the Republic and of PDVSA.”

“We will begin a sovereign renegotiation of our debt and we will continue to comply fully, transparently, as our government has done historically,” he said in a televised statement.

He noted that since 2014 Venezuela, which has the largest proven crude oil reserves in the world, has paid nearly $72 billion in principal and interest payments on the debt.

– Blasting US sanctions –

Maduro has repeatedly blamed the United States for the country’s woes, saying Washington is trying to strangle Venezuela with sanctions.

US sanctions imposed on Venezuela in August ban US trade in any new bonds issued by the Venezuelan government or PDVSA — a needed step in any restructuring.

El Aissami denounced the “continued aggression, permanent sabotage, blockade and financial persecution” he said US President Donald Trump has imposed on the people of Venezuela.

But he said the sanctions really hurt bondholders and financial institutions.

Much of Venezuela’s debt is held by China and Russia, to be paid off in oil — the resource that underpins the Venezuelan economy. The country has less than $10 billion in foreign currency reserves.

Credit-rating agencies are increasingly warning of the risk of a Venezuelan debt default. Analysts were pessimistic about Venezuela’s chances of successfully restructuring its debt.

“Venezuela’s options to keep up with its payments are shrinking rapidly, mainly because any restructuring needs to be matched with clear and credible economic reforms capable of winning the trust and support of bond-holders,” said Diego Moya-Ocampos, an analyst at London-based IHS Markit.

Another analyst, Asdrubal Oliveros, director of Ecoanalitica in Caracas, said that while investors had anticipated a debt renegotiation, they wanted “a plan of restructuring and reorganization, of putting accounts in order — this isn’t that plan.”

– Sinking economy –

Men work on the installation of a sign wishing merry Christmas in Caracas on November 2, 2017. Credit-rating agencies are increasingly warning of the risk of a Venezuelan debt default

According to estimates by private consultancies, Venezuela has a debt mountain of $150 billion, of which $45 billion is public debt, $45 billion is owed by PDVSA, $23 billion is owed to China, and $8 billion is owed to Russia.

A default could see investors try to lay claim to PDVSA assets, including tankers, oil in shipment and subsidiaries such as the Citgo refiner and service station network in the US.

“The government has mortgaged the future of Venezuelans in an irresponsible way,” said Stalin Gonzalez, head of a grouping of opposition lawmakers who dominate Venezuela’s parliament.

Gonzalez argued that it was constitutionally up to the parliament — the National Assembly — to approve any debt restructuring, even though the legislative chamber has been usurped by a new body — the Constituent Assembly — created by Maduro and stacked with his loyalists.

Venezuela’s economy is in dire shape, shrinking by 36 percent in the past four years, according to the IMF, and now suffering hyperinflation estimated to top 2,300 percent next year.

Production of its primary resource, oil, is declining, in large part because of rundown PDVSA infrastructure and neglected fields.

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