Hedge funds may sue Greece if it tries to force loss | 
       
      Date:  Thursday, January 19, 2012
      Author: The Economic Times    
LONDON:
Hedge funds 
have been known to use hardball tactics to make money. Now they have come up 
with a new one: suing 
Greece in a human rights court to make good on its bond payments. 
The novel approach would have the funds arguing in the European Court of Human 
Rights that Greece violated bondholder rights, though that could be a multiyear 
project with no guarantee of a payoff. And it would not be likely to produce 
sympathy for these funds, which many blame for the lack of progress so far in 
the negotiations over restructuring Greece's debts. 
The tactic has emerged in conversations with lawyers and hedge funds as it 
became clear that Greece was considering passing legislation to force all 
private bondholders to take losses, while exempting the European Central Bank, 
which is the largest institutional holder of Greek bonds with 50 billion euros 
or so. 
Legal experts suggest that the investors may have a case because if Greece 
changes the terms of its bonds so that investors receive less than they are 
owed, that could be viewed as a property rights violation - and in Europe, 
property rights are human rights. 
The bond restructuring is a critical element for Greece to receive its latest 
bailout from the international community. As part of that 130 billion euro 
($165.5 billion) rescue, Greece is looking to cut its debt by 100 billion euros 
through 2014 by forcing its bankers to accept a 50 percent loss on new bonds 
that they receive in a debt exchange. 
According to one senior government official involved in the negotiations, Greece 
will present an offer to creditors this week that includes an interest rate or 
coupon on new bonds received in exchange for the old bonds that is less than the 
4 percent private creditors have been pushing for - and they will be forced to 
accept it whether they like it or not. 
"This is crunch time for us. The time for niceties has expired," said the 
person, who was not authorized to talk publicly. "These guys will have to accept 
everything." 
The surprise collapse last week of the talks in
Athens raised the 
prospect that Greece might not receive a crucial 30 billion euro payment and 
might miss a make-or-break 14.5 billion euro bond payment on March 20 - throwing 
the country into default and jeopardizing its membership in the eurozone. 
Talks between the two sides picked back up Wednesday evening in Athens when 
Charles Dallara of the Institute of International Finance, who represents 
private sector bondholders, met with Prime Minister Lucas Papademos of Greece 
and his deputies. 
While both sides have tried to adopt a conciliatory tone, the threat of a 
disorderly default and the spread of contagion to other vulnerable countries 
like Portugal remains pronounced. 
"In my opinion, it is unlikely that this is the last restructuring we go through 
in Europe," said Hans Humes, a veteran of numerous debt restructurings and the 
president and chief executive of Greylock Capital, the only hedge fund on the 
private sector steering committee, which is taking the lead in the Greek 
negotiations. 
"The private sector has come a long way. We hope that the other parties agree 
that it is more constructive to reach a voluntary agreement than the 
alternative." 
At the root of the dispute is a growing insistence on the part of
Germany and the 
International Monetary Fund that as Greece's economy continues to collapse, its 
debt - now about 140 percent of its gross domestic product - needs to be reduced 
as rapidly as possible. 
Those two powerful actors - which control the purse strings for current and 
future Greek bailouts - have pressured Greece to adopt a more aggressive tone 
toward its creditors. As a result, Greece has demanded that bondholders accept 
not only a 50 percent loss on their new bonds but also a lower interest rate on
them. That is a tough pill for investors to swallow, given the already steep 
losses they face, and one that would be likely to increase the cumulative 
haircut to between 60 percent and 70 percent. 
The lower interest rate would help Greece by reducing the punitive amounts of 
interest it pays on its debt, making it easier to cut its budget deficit. 
To increase Greece's leverage, the country's negotiators have said they could 
attach collective action clauses to the outstanding bonds, a step that would 
give them the legal right to saddle all bondholders with a loss. This would 
particularly be aimed at the so-called free riders - speculators who have said 
they will not agree to a haircut and are betting that when Greece receives its 
aid bundle in March, their bonds will be repaid in full. 
If the collective action clause is used - and Greek officials say it could 
become law next week - these investors, who bought their bonds at around 40 
cents on the dollar, are likely to suffer a loss. 
That, in turn, could prompt suits from investors claiming in the Court of Human 
Rights that their property rights were violated. 
"Because Greece is changing the bond contract retroactively, this can become an 
issue in a human rights court," said Mathias Audit, a professor of international 
law at the University of Paris Ouest. 
Such a case would take years and would have to run its course in Greece before 
being heard by human rights judges in
Strasbourg,
France. 
But with their considerable financial resources, some funds may be willing to 
pursue such a route, and they point to similar cases won by hedge funds in Latin 
America. While the prospect of Greece paying an investor any time soon is slim, 
the country wants to avoid a parade of lawsuits across Europe, which would 
restrict its ability to raise money in international markets. 
Argentina, which defaulted on its debts in 2002, still faces legal claims from 
investors that have made it nearly impossible for the country to tap global debt 
markets. 
"It cannot be Angela Merkel that decides who suffers losses," said one aggrieved 
investor who was considering legal action and did not want to be identified for 
that reason. "What Europe is forgetting is that there needs to be respect for 
contract rights." 
It is not just the legal cudgel that investors are threatening to use. Some 
hedge funds have discussed among themselves the possibility of demanding a side 
payment, as they describe it, as a price Europe and Greece must pay if the two 
want the funds to participate in the agreement. 
With the stakes so high, a compromise may well be reached. Germany and the IMF 
may realize that if the private sector is pushed too hard, the deal will 
collapse and they will have to pay even more money to keep Greece afloat in the 
coming years. 
Eager to put the issue behind them, private sector creditors may accept a larger 
loss and exchange their nearly worthless Greek bonds for more valuable 
securities that would also offer enhanced protection if Greece had to 
restructure in the future. 
As for the holdouts, they could run up millions of dollars in legal bills 
chasing after Greece in European courts. 
But beyond all the byzantine wrangling, a crucial question is how this would 
benefit Greece. Even with the deal, Greece's debt would be no less than 120 
percent of GDP in 2020 - which seems to be slight progress given the austerity 
and pain its citizens must endure during this period. 
"The real issue is not who participates in the deal," said Jeromin Zettelmeyer, 
the deputy chief economist at the European Bank for Restructuring and 
Development and an authority on sovereign debt. "The question is whether there 
is enough debt relief for Greece, and there may not be, because the fiscal and 
growth situation in Greece is quite dire."