Background: 
http://louisproyect.org/2012/12/20/argentina-vulture-funds-and-thomas-griesa/

NY Times August 23, 2013, 9:05 pm
Hedge Funds Win Ruling in Argentina Bond Case
By PETER EAVIS

A dogged group of hedge funds secured a significant victory in a federal 
appeals court on Friday in a case that is likely to have far-reaching 
effects on international bond markets, parts of the banking system and 
the struggling nation of Argentina.

The hedge funds, including one affiliated with the investment firm of 
the billionaire Paul E. Singer, bought a handful of bonds that 
Argentina’s government defaulted on early in the last decade. Their aim 
was to buy the debt for pennies on the dollar and then sue Argentina to 
press it to pay the bonds in full. A lower court judge ruled in their 
favor, and a three-judge panel of the United States Court of Appeals for 
the Second Circuit in New York upheld his decision.

The funds may not be in line for a big financial return on their 
high-risk bet, even after the court victory on Friday. But even if their 
wager never pays off, the funds’ litigation strategy is bringing 
important changes to the international market in which many countries 
borrow to finance their deficits and support their economies.

The litigation could also create a situation in which Argentina, led by 
President Cristina Fernández de Kirchner, chooses to default on billions 
of dollars of bonds, a move that would deepen the country’s economic 
problems. Argentina has employed prominent New York lawyers to fight its 
case. Mrs. Kirchner has often commented combatively on the case, calling 
the hedge funds “vultures.”

“This is legal history in the making,” said Arturo C. Porzecanski, a 
professor of international economics at the American University in 
Washington. “The ruling, as well as the entire Argentina litigation, is 
really setting precedent.”

The appeals court decision has its roots in a dark period of Argentina’s 
recent history. Reeling from a harsh economic slowdown, Argentina 
defaulted on nearly $100 billion of debt in 2001. In the years 
afterward, many of the country’s bondholders agreed to deals in which 
they received new “exchange” bonds that were worth a lot less than the 
original ones. Argentina has kept up with the payments on the exchange 
bonds since it issued them.

But some investors, known as holdouts, refused to join the exchange 
deals and demanded full repayment. This included Mr. Singer’s firm, 
Elliott Management, which has sued other developing countries to make 
money on defaulted bonds. In the Argentina case, it even persuaded a 
court in Ghana to seize an Argentine naval vessel.

The funds demanded that they be paid in full on $1.3 billion of 
defaulted Argentine bonds, and Judge Thomas P. Griesa of Federal 
District Court in New York ruled forcefully in their favor.

His ruling contained two crucial features. First, he said Argentina had 
to pay the holdouts on their defaulted bonds whenever it next made 
payments on the restructured bonds. And in a move that has few 
precedents, Judge Griesa came up with a way to potentially enforce his 
decision if Argentina chose to ignore it. He singled out the financial 
firms that pass the payments on the restructured bonds from the 
Argentine government to their holders. If these firms handled the 
payments, they could effectively find themselves in contempt of the 
court’s ruling.

Not wanting to break the law, the firms, like Bank of New York Mellon, 
would stop processing the bond payments. Mrs. Kirchner would then have 
to decide whether to pay the holdouts to clear the way for the 
payment-processing firms to funnel money to the holders of the exchange 
bonds or, in the alternative, default on the exchange bonds.

Though the appeals court sided with Judge Griesa, it delayed the 
enforcement of the decision while the Supreme Court decides whether to 
take the case.

“Today’s unanimous, well-reasoned decision appropriately condemns 
Argentina’s persistent violation of its obligations and its 
extraordinary defiance of the laws of the United States,” Theodore B. 
Olson, a partner at Gibson, Dunn & Crutcher, the law firm that is 
representing an affiliate of Elliott Management, said in a statement.

“This is another opportunity for my government to do what it should do 
and deal in good faith,” said Horacio Vázquez, a Buenos Aires native who 
leads a group of bondholders who want to be repaid in full.

Elliott bought some of its Argentine debt before the country’s 2001 
default, according to a person familar with the fund’s actions.

One big question is whether the appeals court decision will disrupt the 
sort of debt reductions that can ease the economic burdens of some 
countries. Investors might be emboldened to take a tough line after 
seeing Elliott’s legal successes.

But the appeals court argued that this Argentina case was narrow in 
nature, suggesting that it may not apply in other defaults. “This case 
is an exceptional one with little apparent bearing on transactions that 
can be expected in the future,” Judge Barrington D. Parker wrote in the 
decision.

Legal specialists who think the Argentina case won’t have a wide effect 
have also noted that many bonds now have a special feature that make it 
much harder for hedge funds to hold out.

Still, bonds continue to have a so-called pari passu clause, from the 
Latin for “on equal footing,” which has been crucial in this case. The 
clause provided the legal basis for the courts to demand that the 
holdouts be paid when the holders of the exchange bonds are paid.

“Everyone who has a clause like this had better look at it very 
carefully,” Mitu Gulati, a law professor at Duke, said.

Perhaps the most jarring development is that the appeals court upheld 
the provisions that are designed to stop banks from passing on payments 
on the exchange bonds. The government debt market lacks an authority, 
like a bankruptcy court, that can sort out disputes between creditors 
and debtors. By effectively tying the hands of firms like Bank of New 
York Mellon, the United States courts could become such an enforcer.

“This is the revolution in this case,” Mr. Gulati said. “For the first 
time in hundreds of years of sovereign debt, a court is saying, ‘We’re 
going to go out there and improve the market by helping you to enforce 
it.’ ”

The odds of Argentina getting the Supreme Court to rule on the case do 
not look strong.

“On the one hand, just looking at these questions as questions of law, I 
don’t think the Supreme Court is likely to take it up,” Henry Weisburg, 
a partner at Shearman & Sterling, said. “But you do have to balance this 
against the fact that sovereign states do get deference from the Supreme 
Court.”

In Argentina, Mrs. Kirchner is likely to keep up her strong opposition 
to the hedge funds for the foreseeable future, which means they probably 
won’t get paid in full any time soon.

But political analysts are starting to doubt whether she can win the 
2015 election. That could pave the way for a new president who may be 
more willing to settle with the holdouts.

Jonathan Gilbert contributed reporting from Buenos Air
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