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In a debt-for-equity swap, a company's creditors generally agree to cancel some or all of the debt in exchange for equity in the company. [3] Debt for equity deals often occur when large companies run into serious financial trouble, and often result in these companies being taken over by their principal creditors.
Bondholders who withhold their consent and retain their right to seek the full repayment of original bonds, may disrupt the restructuring process, creating a situation known as the holdout problem. The contractual terms for obligating all bondholders to accept a restructuring approved by some supermajority is typically spelled out in what are ...
Russia's finance ministry said on Monday it had sent an order to a correspondent bank for the payment of coupons on eurobonds amounting to $117.2 million which are due on Wednesday. The diplomatic ...
On 8 April, the credit agency S&P Global predicted that Russia will inevitably be in "selective default on foreign currency obligations" [10] (NR rating after CC rating [11]) because it tried to pay obligations on dollar denominated debt in rubles, which could not be converted into "dollars equivalent to the originally due amounts", since every ...
[citation needed] In 1996, Paris and Moscow signed an accord for Russia to repay a nominal value of between $80 and $100 for each of the 4 million czarist bonds believed to remain in circulation in France, for a total payout of around $400 million. [7] Russia paid but not nearly as generously as the descendants of French bond buyers hoped. [8]
Russia is due to pay $117 million in interest on two dollar-denominated sovereign bonds on Wednesday - the first such payments since its invasion of Ukraine which sparked a raft of sanctions from ...
Securitization is the financial practice of pooling various types of contractual debt such as residential mortgages, commercial mortgages, auto loans or credit card debt obligations (or other non-debt assets which generate receivables) and selling their related cash flows to third party investors as securities, which may be described as bonds, pass-through securities, or collateralized debt ...
If a government does not meet an obligation, it is in "default". As governments are sovereign entities, creditors who hold debt of the government cannot easily seize the assets of the government to re-pay the debt (though "Vulture funds" often find ways to do so). The recourse for the creditor is to request to be repaid at least some of what is ...