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Crucial Russian sovereign bond payment received by JPMorgan, processed -source

File Photo: A view of the exterior of the JP Morgan Chase & Co. corporate headquarters in New York City May 20, 2015. REUTERS/Mike Segar

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NEW YORK, March 17 (Reuters) – Coupon payments on Russian sovereign bonds due this week were received by correspondent bank JPMorgan (JPM.N), processed and the bank then made an onwards credit to the paying agent Citi (C.N), a source familiar with the situation said on Thursday, an indicator that the country may have averted default.

The payment received was a U.S. dollar payment, the source said. After being credited to the paying agent, it would be checked and distributed on to various bondholders, the source said.

Russia said on Thursday it had made debt payments that were due this week. Russia was due to pay $117 million in coupon payments on Wednesday on two dollar-denominated sovereign bonds and some creditors had received payments, market sources separately told Reuters, also indicating it avoided what would have been its first external bond default in a century. read more

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The payments were widely seen as the first test of whether Moscow would meet its obligations after Western sanctions hobbled its financial dealings.

The source said that JPMorgan’s obligation as a foreign correspondent bank was to process payments, but that given the circumstances, also to check with authorities before doing so.

Sanctions imposed over Moscow’s invasion of Ukraine have cut Russia off from the global financial system and blocked the bulk of its gold and foreign exchange reserves, while Moscow has in turn retaliated – all of which complicate payments.

The bank checked with authorities before processing, the source said. Not to process the payment would have harmed bondholders, the source said.

Under the sanctions and restrictions announced last month, in response to Russia’s invasion of Ukraine, U.S. banks were prohibited from correspondent banking – allowing banks to make payments between one another and move money around the globe – with Russia’s largest lender, Sberbank, within 30 days. Washington and its partners also started barring some Russian banks from the SWIFT international payment system – a step that will stop lenders from conducting most of their financial transactions worldwide. read more

A March 2020 report by the Bank for International Settlements showed that correspondent banks have been “paring back their cross-border banking relations for the past decade.” The number of correspondent banks fell by 20% between 2011 and 2018, even as the value of payments increased, the report said.

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Reporting by Megan Davies;
Editing by Chizu Nomiyama and Andrea Ricci

Our Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles.

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Russia counts on sanctions help from China; U.S. warns off Beijing

A child holds the national flags of Russia and China prior to a welcoming ceremony for Russian President Vladimir Putin outside the Great Hall of the People in Beijing, China, June 25, 2016. REUTERS/Kim Kyung-Hoon

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LONDON, March 13 (Reuters) – Russia said on Sunday that it was counting on China to help it withstand the blow to its economy from Western sanctions over the war in Ukraine, but the United States warned Beijing not to provide that lifeline.

Russian Finance Minister Anton Siluanov said sanctions had deprived Moscow of access to $300 billion of its $640 billion in gold and foreign exchange reserves, and added that there was pressure on Beijing to shut off more.

“We have part of our gold and foreign exchange reserves in the Chinese currency, in yuan. And we see what pressure is being exerted by Western countries on China in order to limit mutual trade with China. Of course, there is pressure to limit access to those reserves,” he said.

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“But I think that our partnership with China will still allow us to maintain the cooperation that we have achieved, and not only maintain, but also increase it in an environment where Western markets are closing.”

Western countries have imposed unprecedented sanctions on Russia’s corporate and financial system since it invaded Ukraine on Feb. 24 in what it calls a special military operation.

Siluanov’s comments in a TV interview marked the clearest statement yet from Moscow that it will seek help from China to cushion the impact.

But U.S. National Security Adviser Jake Sullivan said Washington was warning China not to provide it.

“We are communicating directly, privately to Beijing, that there will absolutely be consequences for large-scale sanctions, evasion efforts or support to Russia to backfill them,” Sullivan told CNN.

“We will not allow that to go forward and allow there to be a lifeline to Russia from these economic sanctions from any country, anywhere in the world,” added Sullivan, who is due to meet China’s top diplomat Yang Jiechi in Rome on Monday. read more

Russia and China have tightened cooperation in recent times as both have come under strong Western pressure over human rights and a raft of other issues. Beijing has not condemned Russia’s attack on Ukraine and does not call it an invasion, but it has urged a negotiated solution.

Presidents Vladimir Putin and Xi Jinping met in Beijing on Feb. 4 and announced a strategic partnership they said was aimed at countering the influence of the United States, describing it as a friendship with no limits.

China is Russia’s top export market after the European Union. Russian exports to China were worth $79.3 billion in 2021, with oil and gas accounting for 56% of that, according to China’s customs agency.

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Reporting by Mark Trevelyan; Editing by Hugh Lawson

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Russia warns sovereign bond holders that payments depend on sanctions

Russian rouble coins are seen in this illustration taken, February 24, 2022. REUTERS/Dado Ruvic/Illustration/File Photo

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  • Some dollar bonds to be paid in roubles
  • Russian debt now rated ‘junk’
  • Russia could face first foreign debt default since 1918

LONDON, March 6 (Reuters) – Russia said on Sunday that sovereign bond payments will depend on sanctions imposed by the West over the invasion of Ukraine, raising the spectre of its first major default on foreign bonds since the years following the 1917 Bolshevik revolution.

Russia’s finance ministry said it would service and pay sovereign debts in full and on time but that payments could be hampered by the international sanctions.

“The actual possibility of making such payments to non-residents will depend on the limiting measures introduced by foreign states in relation to the Russian Federation,” the finance ministry said in a statement.

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That raises the possibility of a technical default on debt by Russia after much of its $640 billion in reserves were frozen by the West after President Vladimir Putin ordered what Russia describes as a special military operation in Ukraine on Feb. 24.

From now on, Russia will use roubles to make payments to residents on bonds denominated in foreign currency, the ministry said.

The finance ministry in Moscow also explicitly said that Russia might not be able to make bond payments because of restrictions imposed by the Russian government.

Russia in 1998 defaulted on $40 billion in domestic debt and devalued the rouble under President Boris Yeltsin because it was effectively bankrupt after the Asian debt crisis and falling oil prices shook confidence in its short-term rouble debt.

This time, Russia has the money but can’t pay because the reserves – the world’s fourth largest – that Putin ordered be built up for just such a crisis are frozen by the United States, European Union, Britain and Canada.

It could be Russia’s first major debt default in more than a century. Even when the Soviet Union collapsed, Russia assumed its foreign debt.

In 1918 Bolshevik revolutionaries under Vladimir Lenin repudiated Tsarist debt, shocking global debt markets because Russia then had one of the world’s biggest foreign debt piles.

With the bonds worth nothing, some holders of the Tsarist notes used them as wallpaper. The Soviet Union under Josef Stalin stopped servicing loans to the United States and Sweden after World War Two.

RUSSIAN DEFAULT

While Russia has only $40 billion in international bonds outstanding across 15 dollar or euro-denominated issues, its corporates have built up vastly more foreign debt.

The eurobonds have been issued with a mix of terms and indentures.

Notably, bonds sold after Russia was sanctioned over its 2014 annexation of Crimea contain a provision for alternative currency payments in dollars, euros, British pounds or Swiss francs, with the rouble listed as an alternative currency option for bonds issued since 2018.

On March 16 Russia is due to pay $107 million in coupons across two bonds, though it has a 30-day grace period to make the payments. The next full ‘principal’ repayment is a $359 million 2030 bond on March 31 and then a larger $2 billion maturity on April 4.

Russian gas giant Gazprom has a $1.3 billion dollar bond due for repayment on March 7.

According to JPMorgan, the OFZ bond market totalled 15.5 trillion roubles, or about $200 billion at January rouble rates, with foreigners holding a little less than a fifth of the bonds.

Earlier on Sunday, Moody’s cut Russia’s credit rating to Ca, the second-lowest rung of its ratings ladder, citing central bank capital controls that are likely to restrict payments on the country’s foreign debt and lead to default. read more

Moody’s said its decision was driven by “severe concerns over Russia’s willingness and ability to pay its debt obligations”.

The ratings agency said default risks had increased and that foreign bondholders are likely to recoup only part of their investment.

Moody’s and its peers Fitch and S&P Global had scored Russia at investment-grade levels of Baa3/BBB as recently as March 1. All three have since cut their ratings by several notches, sending Russia’s sovereign debt deep into so-called “junk” territory.

($1 = 121.0370 roubles)

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Reporting by Guy Faulconbridge
Editing by David Goodman

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Sanctions significantly increase chance of Russia international debt default, analysts warn

A sign outside JP Morgan Chase & Co. offices is seen in New York City, U.S., March 29, 2021. REUTERS/Brendan McDermid

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LONDON, March 2 (Reuters) – Sanctions imposed on Russia have significantly increased the chance of the country defaulting on its dollar- and other international market government debt, analysts at JPMorgan and elsewhere warned on Wednesday.

Russia has over $700 million worth of government bond payments due this month. While in theory it has ample reserves to cover debt, in practice a freeze on some assets and other measures could affect its ability to make payments. read more

“The sanctioning of Russian government entities by the United States, counter-measures within Russia to restrict foreign payments, and disruptions of payment chains present high hurdles for Russia to make a bond payment abroad,” JPMorgan said in a note to clients.

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“Sanctions … have significantly increased the likelihood of a Russia government hard currency bond default.”

The central bank and the finance ministry did not reply to a Reuters request for comment on the possibility of defaults.

The first crunch date, JP Morgan analysts said, is March 16 when two bond coupon payments are due, although like much of Russia’s debt these have 30-day “grace periods” built into them, which would push back any formal moment of default to April 15.

Russia has just under $40 billion worth of international market or “hard currency” debt as it is known. While it is a small amount for an economy of Russia’s importance, any missed payment will trigger a chain of events.

Major credit rating agencies like S&P Global, Moody’s and Fitch, which all had investment grade scores for Russia until last week, would downgrade it en masse.

JPMorgan estimated that some $6 billion worth of Credit Default Swaps (CDS) that bondholders have bought as insurance policies would also need to payout, although the process could be complicated in the case of further debt sanctions.

The default concerns follow a warning from the Institute of International Finance (IIF) this week, which flagged how roughly half of Russia’s $640 billion of foreign exchange reserves had effectively been frozen by international sanctions. read more

Capital Economics also warned on Wednesday of the growing default risks. It said it would primarily hit international investors – foreigners held $20 billion of Russia’s dollar- and rouble-denominated government debt at the end of last year, according to Russia’s central bank – though it also would further scar Moscow’s reputation in international markets.

“The likelihood that the government and companies are unable or unwilling to make external debt repayments has risen significantly,” Jackson said.

Russia international debt default looming
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Reporting by Marc Jones Editing by Karin Strohecker and Mark Potter

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Stocks break four-day winning streak as Tencent, Alibaba slip

  • Alibaba, Tencent fined over failure to report deals
  • Turkey is prioritising inflation control- FinMin
  • Kazakh dollar bonds hit after government resigns
  • Evergrande to seek delay in coupon repayment

Jan 5 (Reuters) – Emerging market stocks broke a four-day winning streak on Wednesday as regulatory fines hit heavyweights Tencent and Alibaba, dragging tech stocks, while worries about inflation and tighter U.S. monetary policy also weighed.

China’s tech sector (.CSIINT) slipped 2.8%, dragging the broader blue-chip index (.CSI300) down 1.0%. Hong Kong’s main index (.HIS) closed down 1.6% in its worst session in more than two weeks.

Alibaba (9988.HK), Tencent (0700.HK) and Bilibili (9626.HK) dropped between 2.1% and 10.6% after the country’s top market regulator fined them for failing to properly report about a dozen deals – the latest act in Beijing’s crackdown on several industries that began last year. read more

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China stocks battered by Beijing clampdown

With e-commcerce firm Meituan (3690.HK) also sinking 11.2%, MSCI’s China-heavy index of emerging stocks (.MSCIEF) fell 0.9%, further away from three-week highs.

Stocks in Russia (.IMOEX), South Africa (.JTOPI) and Poland (.WIG) all fell between 0.1% and 0.3%, tracking weak Asian sentiment.

In Kazakhstan, violent protests over fuel price hikes saw its government resign – serving as a warning to other emerging markets policy makers trying to square the circle between tackling high inflation and resulting burdens on the population. read more .

Kazakhstan’s dollar-denominated sovereign bonds suffered sharp falls with the 2045 issue dropping around 3 cents to the dollar and many back to levels last seen in 2020, Tradeweb data showed.

Turkey is now prioritising a “sincere” fight against high inflation, Finance Minister Nureddin Nebati said on Wednesday. Inflation there rose to 36% in December after a series of interest rate cuts sought by President Tayyip Erdogan. read more

Turkey’s lira was last up 0.1% at 13.4 per dollar after having fallen up to 1.6% earlier in the session.

“We think that (Turkey’s) headline inflation will likely move towards 45% in the next couple of months and might increase further towards 48% or so in 2Q,” said Credit Suisse analyst Berna Bayazitoglu.

But the ongoing lira volatility leaves the margin of error wide, Bayazitoglu said, adding that recently announced increases in electricity and natural gas prices and minimum wage add to the inflationary pressures.

Most other emerging markets currencies made guarded moves against the dollar as investors priced in policy tightening in the United States, slating in the first of three rate hikes signalled, for May.

This sent U.S Treasury yields and the dollar higher overnight. On Wednesday, the dollar index (.DXY) held steady.

China’s yuan and South Africa’s rand were flat, while Russia’s rouble hit its lowest in more than five weeks.

Embattled China Evergrande Group (3333.HK) lost another 0.6% after it sought delay to onshore bond payment due on Saturday, which would be its first domestic bond payment miss. A bondholder meeting is scheduled for Jan. 7-10.

Bad loan company China Huarong (2799.HK) plunged 50% to a record low, on resuming trade following a nine-month hiatus. read more

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For a GRAPHIC on MSCI emerging index performance in 2021, see https://tmsnrt.rs/2OusNdX

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Reporting by Susan Mathew in Bengaluru;
Editing by Tomasz Janowski

Our Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles.

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China Evergrande bondholders in limbo over debt crisis

  • No sign of Evergrande paying dollar bond interest
  • Company has 30-day grace period before the bonds default
  • PBOC injects cash into banking system; Evergrande shares fall

SINGAPORE, Sept 24 (Reuters) – China Evergrande slipped toward a kind of limbo on Friday as time ticked away on an interest payment deadline which global markets are watching for signs of default, leaving investors on tenterhooks over the embattled property giant’s fate.

The company owes $305 billion, has run short of cash and markets are worried a collapse could pose systemic risks to China’s financial system and reverberate around the world.

China’s central bank again injected cash into the banking system on Friday, seen as a signal of support for markets. But authorities have been silent on Evergrande’s predicament and China’s state media has offered no clues on a rescue plan.

Evergrande (3333.HK) appointed financial advisers and warned of default last week, and world markets fell heavily on Monday amid fears of contagion, though they have since stabilised.

At its offices, furious small investors have protested to try and retrieve life savings sunk into its properties and wealth-management products.

Evergrande has promised to prioritise such investors and resolved one coupon payment on a domestic bond this week, giving markets a glimmer of hope. But it has said nothing about an $83.5 million offshore interest payment that was due on Thursday or a $47.5 million payment due next week.

It enters a 30-day grace period if it fails to pay Thursday’s dues and would be in default if that window passed without settling the debt. Bondholders are starting to think it might be a month or so before things become clearer.

As Friday trade got underway in Hong Kong, there had been no announcements about a payment. A company spokesperson did not respond to requests for comment.

“Current market pricing estimates that investors in Evergrande’s dollar bonds are likely to recover very little,” said Jennifer James, a portfolio manager and lead emerging markets analyst at Janus Henderson Investors.

“The likeliest outcome is that the company will engage with creditors to come up with a restructuring agreement,” she said.

“How China handles Evergrande, and others, could be consequential. If mismanaged, then the loss of confidence could have contagion effects to other financial markets.”

PLAY FOR TIME

Global markets have begun a recovery following a sharp selloff, trading on the basis that Evergrande’s troubles can be contained.

Only some $20 billion of Evergrande’s debts are owed offshore. Yet the risks at home are considerable because a collapse could crash the property sector which comprises a quarter of China’s economy and is an important store of wealth.

“Housing sales and investments could inevitably slow further – this would knock nearly 1 percentage point off GDP growth,” analysts at Societe Generale said in a note.

“The longer policymakers wait before acting, the higher the hard-landing risk.”

Yet there have so far been few signs of official intervention. The People’s Bank of China’s 270 billion yuan ($42 billion) cash injection this week is the largest weekly sum since January and has helped put a floor under stocks.

Bloomberg Law also reported that regulators had asked Evergrande to avoid a near-term default, citing unnamed people familiar with the matter.

However the Wall Street Journal said, citing unnamed officials, that authorities had asked local governments to prepare for Evergrande’s downfall.

“Given the deliberate pace of Chinese policy making, the authorities may well choose to play for time,” said Wei-Liang Chang, a macro strategist at DBS Bank in Singapore.

He said they could extend liquidity assistance through the grace period on Evergrande’s coupon payments, given it had no dollar bond maturities looming until March 2022.

Evergrande’s shares handed back some Thursday gains on Friday and fell 3%, while stock of its electric-vehicle unit (0708.HK) dropped 18% to a four-year low. Its dollar bonds with imminent payments due , last traded around 30 cents on the dollar.

($1 = 6.4589 Chinese yuan renminbi)

Reporting by Tom Westbrook. Additional reporting by Clare Jim in Hong Kong and Andrew Galbraith in Shanghai; Editing by Stephen Coates

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Zambians vote in tight presidential election, internet restricted

  • Long queues point to high voter turnout
  • Challenger pitching economic fix to voters
  • Vote looks too close to call, say analysts
  • Zambia was Africa’s first pandemic-era default

LUSAKA, Aug 12 (Reuters) – Zambians voted for a new leader on Thursday with long queues pointing to a high turnout in an election showdown between President Edgar Lungu and main opposition rival Hakainde Hichilema that looks too tight to call.

But as millions cast their ballots, social media platforms were restricted in the country, internet blockage observatory NetBlocks said.

“Real-time network data confirm that social media and messaging platforms including Twitter, Facebook, Instagram and Messenger are now restricted in #Zambia on election day in addition to the earlier WhatsApp restriction,” NetBlocks said in a tweet.

Zambia Information and Communication Technology acting director-general Mulenga Chisanga did not answer calls for comment.

United Party for National Development (UPND) Presidential candidate Hakainde Hichilema looks on during a rally in Lusaka January 18, 2015. REUTERS/Rogan Ward

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The restriction of internet access could fuel tension and suspicion about the vote, which African and European observers said had been peaceful on Thursday.

Lungu and Hichiema, who voted at different stations hours apart, were both confident of winning the vote and the close contest raised the possibility of a run-off.

The electoral agency says it expects to declare a winner within 72 hours after polls close.

Zambia, Africa’s second-biggest copper producer, became the continent’s first country during the coronavirus pandemic to default on its sovereign debt in November. Its economy is flagging.

Writing by MacDonald Dzirutwe; Editing by Joe Bavier, Raju Gopalakrishnan, Elaine Hardcastle and Angus MacSwan

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