Venezuela seeks debt negotiations after U.S. sanctions

Venezuela seeks debt negotiations after U.S. sanctions

by Joseph Anthony
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Venezuelan President Nicolas Maduro: Worried over U.S. slams sanctions

President Nicolas Maduro has invited bondholders to unspecified “negotiations” over Venezuela’s foreign debt in coming days in response to recent U.S. financial sanctions.

With Venezuela deep in recession and its currency reserves at their lowest in more than two decades, the Maduro government and state oil company PDVSA have to pay about 4 billion dollars in debt and interest during the rest of 2017.

“All bondholders are invited to various rounds of negotiations over the next few weeks,” the president said in a speech to the new Constituent Assembly.

Maduro reiterated Venezuela would keep honouring debt, but said he wanted to talk with bondholders affected by sanctions recently imposed by U.S. President Donald Trump.

The president said Vice-President Tareck El Aissami, already under U.S. financial sanctions over drug trafficking allegations, and Finance Minister Ramon Lobo would coordinate talks and some “bilateral conversations” with bondholders had already begun.

In August, Trump, who brands Maduro a “dictator,” signed an executive order that prohibits Americans from dealing in new debt issued by the Venezuelan government or PDVSA.

That could complicate any debt refinancing attempts.

Washington has also sanctioned PDVSA’s finance boss Simon Zerpa, meaning U.S. businesses are barred from dealing with him, and even Maduro himself in measures intended to punish the Venezuelan government for alleged corruption and rights abuses.

“I will be announcing Venezuela’s definitive response to the financial aggression we – and the international investors – have suffered from Donald Trump and (opposition leader) Julio Borges,” Maduro said.

Borges, the head of the opposition-led congress whose role has been overridden by the Constituent Assembly, has been spearheading an opposition campaign for foreign financial institutions to put the squeeze on Venezuela’s government.

He met senior officials in Europe this week, including France’s President Emmanuel Macron, Spain’s Prime Minister, Mariano Rajoy and German Chancellor, Angela Merkel, to the fury of Venezuela’s government.

“Venezuela will take a position to defend the judicial and financial security of the republic and its investors or holders of financial instruments,” Maduro added in the address.

Maduro did not give more details of what his government wanted to discuss with bondholders or where talks would be held, though he did say 74 per cent were American or Canadian.

Three bondholders consulted by Reuters said they had not received any formal approach to dialogue, though two said intermediaries for the government had been communicating with some investors informally.

“We didn’t receive an invitation or anything like that. Even if we had we don’t think we would take it too seriously,” said one portfolio manager at a large New York firm that owns Venezuelan debt, asking not to be named.

In midday trade, Venezuelan government and PDVSA bonds were little changed in price.

In the same speech to the Constituent Assembly, Maduro said Venezuela would seek to “free” itself of the U.S. dollar and “implement a new system of international payments” using currencies such as the yuan, yen, rupee, euro and ruble.

The president did not, however, specify whether paying in a different currency was an option his government wanted to discuss with bondholders.

In an indication of financial strain with another creditor, Russian Finance Minister, Anton Siluanov, said on Friday that Venezuela is having problems meeting debt obligations to Russia.

“We have a request from our colleagues in Venezuela to do a restructuring,” he said.

Venezuela owed Russia 2.84 billion dollars as of September 2016.

International reserves stood at 9.873 billion dollars on Wednesday, compared with nearly 30 billion dollars five years ago, central bank data shows.

They are at their lowest level since 1995.

Most of the country’s reserves are tied up in gold that cannot be used in financial transactions without going through a certification process in another country.

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