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Montag, 7. Juli 2014

Holders of restructured Argentine bonds took to Belgian courts against Euroclear and the Bank ofNew York last week over their failure to pay out Argentina’s deposit, newspaper Tiempo Argentino reported yesterday, citing court documents signed by the funds’ legal counsel.

Monday, July 7, 2014

Creditors sue Bank of New York

Mediator Daniel Pollack leaves federal court on June 27.
European creditors took legal action last week after asking Griesa for clarification
Holders of restructured Argentine bonds took to Belgian courts against Euroclear and the Bank ofNew York last week over their failure to pay out Argentina’s deposit, newspaper Tiempo Argentino reported yesterday, citing court documents signed by the funds’ legal counsel.
“The holders of European bonds have taken legal actions in Belgium against Euroclear and the Bank of New York Mellon Brussels to obtain an order that confirms that the legal mandates (issued in the US) are not applicable in this territory,” the document was reported to read.
The central argument of the creditors demand is that the Belgian Parliament approved a law in 2004 that modified a continental accord, according to which trustees, or banks, cannot be restrained from distributing payments.
“The objective of the Belgian law is to uphold the liquidity of financial markets, guaranteeing freedom from obstructions to payment accounts,” Latham & Watkins elaborated.
“This court can avoid such complications by clarifying that Euroclear, Clearstream, BONY Brussels and BONY Luxembourg are exempt from the 
application
 of realm of legal actions, and making it clear that they were not aimed at the processing of eurobond payments, which only involve foreign parties,foreign currency and are based outside the US.”
Last Monday, the bondholders had sent Judge Thomas Griesa a request for clarification with regard to the impact of his pari passu (equal treatment) ruling on the repayment of their bonds.
“Lacking jurisdiction over those foreign entities (European banks through which Argentina pays bondholders), this Court should now clarify that they are not subject to the injunctions either directly or by operation,” read the motion drafted by Latham & Watkins, a New York law firm.
Apparently not receiving or waiting for a favourable response from Griesa, the restructured creditors were proactive last week in demanding that the payment made to a BNY Mellon account of the Central Bank in Luxembourg should be sent to a Belgian entity in Frankfurt and finally to investorsthrough clearinghouses in Europe, and payment shouldn’t be disrupted by a ruling based on US jurisdiction.
Following the country’s failed attempt to transfer the funds to pay its bondholders on June 30, the Bank of New York Mellon asked US District Court Judge Thomas Griesa on Wednesday to clarify his previous order to return the money since it still holds the US$539 million sent by the federal government and fears “litigation risks” if it complies with the magistrate’s ruling.
“The trustee has significant concerns regarding the plaintiff’s order to return the funds to Argentina. Ordering the trustee to do that could expose the trustee to litigation risk particularly outside of theUnited States,” Eric Schaffer, a lawyer for the bank, said in the letter to Griesa.
Griesa has yet to respond to the Bank of New York.
Restructured creditors’ lawsuit in Europe last week is an example of the litigation Schaffer refers to that could begin to hit banks if they fail to transfer funds deposited by the country, an apparent grey area left by the jurisprudence of Griesa’s ruling.
Christopher Clark of law firm Latham & Watkins in New York, who signed the filing, didn’t immediately reply to voice and e-mail requests made outside normal business hours made by Bloomberg yesterday for comment on the legal actions; nor did Martin Gregson, a Euroclear spokesman.
Knighthead Capital Management (NLY), Redwood Capital Management (RWCB), Perry Capital, VR Global Partners, Monarch Master Funding, Silver Point Capital, QVT Fund, Quintessence Fund, and Centerbridge Partners are among the funds suing Euroclear and BNY Mellon.
Herald staff with Télam

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