By Daniel Bases and Nate Raymond
NEW YORK, Nov 17 (Reuters) - Argentina asked a U.S. judge
late on Friday to maintain his order blocking payment on
defaulted sovereign bonds to holdout investors until lingering
questions are settled in a higher court's appeals process.
Less than 15 minutes before a midnight deadline on Friday,
Argentina's lawyers filed their brief outlining why U.S.
District Judge Thomas Griesa should reject the argument by
holdout creditors to pay them in full on debt that has been in
default since 2002.
The arguments came three days after Argentina asked the U.S.
2nd Circuit Court of Appeals in New York to reconsider its Oct.
26 ruling that favored these holdout bondholders and rattled
financial markets in the process.
That decision upheld the ruling, that was made by Griesa,
that found the South American nation discriminated against
bondholders such as Elliott Management Corp's NML Capital Ltd
and Aurelius Capital Management. They refused to take part in
two debt restructurings as Argentina tried to recover from a
$100 billion default a decade ago.
Greisa had put his own ruling on hold pending the appeal and
Argentinia on Friday argued he should keep the freeze in place
until outstanding issues were settled.
"The Court should not accept the false urgency plaintiffs
are trying to create and allow the Republic and all potentially
affected third parties to prosecute their appeal rights before
any orders go into effect," Argentina said in its brief.
After the 2nd Circuit's ruling, Argentine officials were
widely cited in the media saying they would flout the court and
continue to pay investors who participated in the debt swaps but
would never pay the holdout investors.
That prompted Griesa to demand a direct government pledge to
comply with his orders.
National Director of Argentina's National Bureau of Public
Credit, Francisco Eggers, submitted a signed affidavit saying
the government would abide by the court's rulings and not seek
to evade its directives.
"As directed by the court, on behalf of the Republic, I
confirm that the Republic has complied, and will comply with the
terms...," Eggers said.
Last month's ruling led to fears U.S. courts could
ultimately inhibit debt payments to creditors who accepted the
terms of the restructuring, out of consideration for investors
who rejected Argentina's terms at the time.
This would trigger a technical default on approximately $24
billion worth of debt issued in the 2005 and 2010 exchanges.
"It is far beyond the bounds of equity to seek to enforce
the rights of one litigant by jeopardizing the rights of
others," lawyers representing a group of bondholders who
participated in the exchange, led by Gramercy Funds Management
LLC., said on Friday.
The briefs from Argentina and the exchange bondholders
addressed two questions that the appeals court had referred back
to Griesa for answers.
These were technical questions of how debt payments would be
calculated and how to treat the involvement of third-party banks
such as Bank of New York Mellon, which act as transfer agents
for money owed to exchange bondholders.
Argentine President Cristina Fernandez said immediately
following the October decision her country would not pay "one
dollar to the vulture funds". That is her term for holdout
investors who buy distressed or defaulted debt and then sue in
international courts to get paid in full.
Eggers' statement contrasted with Fernandez's vow to keep
making payments to other creditors.
Argentine bonds closed up 1 percent on average in
over-the-counter trading in Buenos Aires on Friday after
accumulating a loss of 4.1 percent in the previous three
sessions.
TELL US WHAT TO DO
Bank of New York Mellon, which transfers funds from the
Argentine government to the country's bond holders, argued in a
brief filed late on Friday to Griesa that it is not an agent of
the Argentine government and maintains an "arm's length"
relationship.
The bank said its "duty of loyalty runs to the Exchange
holders", that is, to enforce the rights of investors who
exchanged their bonds in 2005 and 2010.
"Punishing an innocent third party to try to obtain
compliance from an enjoined party goes beyond any legitimate
purpose for contempt," BNY Mellon said.
The bank said it could be put between a rock and a hard
place if Griesa rules they are to make payments to all parties
but are prohibited because Argentina does not transfer any money
through it.
"BNY Mellon will face a potential conflict between its
obligations to Exchange Holders under the Indenture and its
obligations to the Court," the bank argued.
In that case, the bank said, it needs guidance from Griesa
on what its duties and responsibilities would be.
Ultimately, the bank wants Griesa's order to remain in
place, leaving the the payments frozen until the 2nd Circuit
reviews and rules on his logic.
The judge is expected to make a speedy response as Argentina
is due to start making $3.3 billion worth of payments to
exchange bondholders starting Dec. 2. Griesa's ruling will
automatically return to the appeals court for review.
In a court filing this week, NML and Aurelius urged Griesa
to lift his Feb. 23 stay on payments pending appeal.
October's ruling by the appeals court largely upheld
injunctions issued in February by Griesa in favor of the
holdouts, which own roughly $1.4 billion of defaulted debt.
The holdouts said in their argument to Griesa that terms of
the swapped Argentine bonds may allow the country to circumvent
the United States by using subsidiaries in London and Luxembourg
to make debt payments.
VESTED INTERESTS
Weighing in on the arguments before the deadline were other
transfer agents, holdout investors and exchange bond holders.
The Clearing House Association, a banking association and
payments company, sent a letter to Griesa explaining that any
order should not apply to beneficiary's banks, funds-transfer
systems or other parties in a funds transfer.
The letter was obtained from a source with direct knowledge
of the case. It argued the ruling would cause "disruption of
payment systems and delays in processing legitimate payments"
made by Argentine entities that have nothing to do with the
case.
Law firm Duane Morris, representing about 100 mainly Italian
holdout investors with approximately $165 million in principal
and pre-judgement interest, sided with NML.
"Despite its proclaimed ability to pay, Argentina has
steadfastly refused to make payments that are due under the
defaulted bonds - even to the individuals who are not
"vultures", Anthony Costantini, a lawyer with Duane Morris wrote
in a brief to Griesa on Friday.
On the other side are bond holders who participated in the
exchanges who urged that NML not be allowed to collect on its
judgments.
Fintech Advisory Inc, a New York investment management firm
that gave up $698.9 million of the $1.052 billion it was owed by
Argentina during the two debt swaps, argued if the judge sided
with the holdout bondholders, Argentina would be in breach of
contracts with exchange bondholders like itself.
"There is no basis for any order to cause such a result,"
Fintech's lawyers wrote.
(Additional reporting by Alejandro Lifschitz and Jorge Otaola)
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