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Venezuela starts sovereign, PDVSA debt overhaul; liabilities seen above $150 bln

Venezuela launched a restructuring on Wednesday of its sovereign debt as well as that of the state oil company PDVSA. This boosted bond prices in an effort to relieve itself of 'unsustainable obligations.

In a statement, the Government said that the "orderly and comprehensive" overhaul would include both the sovereign debt as well as the debt of PDVSA. The government also stated the goal to "substantially reduce" the debt burdens.

In a statement, it was stated that the restructuring is meant to "put economy at service of Venezuelan people", with any relief being directed towards social welfare, inclusive development and job creation. Venezuela has announced that it will present its macroeconomic analysis and public debt sustainability to the international financial community in the next month. Centerview Partners is acting as its financial advisor. The statement did not give any details about a restructuring timeline, creditor engagement or terms that the country might seek.

The Venezuela Creditor Committee, a formal bondholder group, did not respond immediately to a comment request. Venezuela is one the largest sovereign default cases in the world, with PDVSA and the sovereign owing a total of about $60 billion. Analysts estimate that total liabilities could be more than $150 billion, including arbitration awards and accrued interest.

Since 2017, the South American oil exporter is not paying its external debt. The government stated in a statement released on Wednesday that Venezuela has previously shown its solvency and willingness to meet international obligations. However, its ability to pay dues was hindered by financial sanctions since 2017.

We welcome the Republic's willingness and ability to work with bondholders in order to meet its financial needs, said Pramol Dhawan. He is head of PIMCO’s Emerging Markets Portfolio Management team.

After nearly a decade of default, a formal restructure is a significant step forward. He said that any durable solution will have to be comprehensive, and anchored in a credible macroeconomic structure to give creditors confidence in Venezuela's ability to service restructured debt.

PDVSA bonds rose in response to the news. The 2027 bond gained nearly 2 cents, reaching 41.125 cents per dollar. The 2024 bond grew by 1.75 cents and reached 41.625 cents.

Shamaila KHAN, UBS's head of Fixed Income for Emerging Markets and Asia Pacific said that this development was in line with what they had expected. "Macro- and policy fundamentals are improving and we've long seen a PDVSA and sovereign restructuring as more likely in the near term."

(source: Reuters)