Gesamtzahl der Seitenaufrufe

Samstag, 29. Juni 2013

The Greek Debt Exchange: An Autopsy // mit einer schönen Liste der alten, untergegangenen greek-law-bonds

mit einer schönen Liste der alten, untergegangenen greek-law-bonds


The Greek Debt Exchange: An Autopsy
Jeromin Zettelmeyer
Christoph Trebesch
Mitu Gulati*
Draft: 11 September 2012
Abstract
This paper analyses the main features of Greece‘s 2012 sovereign debt exchange and
compares it to previous debt exchanges in the 1990s and 2000s. We focus on two questions.
First, in present value terms, how much did creditors lose and how much did Greece receive?
Second, how did the exchange persuade creditors to take a haircut? We find that (i) the
aggregate haircut was 55-65 per cent, depending on how the old bonds are valued. This is
lower than the numbers reported in the press, and less than in Argentina 2005; (ii) the
distribution of haircuts across bonds was exceptionally unequal, ranging from a close to 80
per cent on very short term bonds to no haircut at all on Greece‘s longest dated bond; (iii) the
debt relief received by Greece was large, in the order of 48 per cent of GDP in present value
terms (excluding bank recapitalisation costs generated by the restructuring); (iv) while not
voluntary, the exchange was not especially coercive based on a standard set of criteria. Free
riding was addressed by exploiting the fact that most outstanding debt was issued under
domestic law, and by making the new bonds de facto senior to the old ones – including
through a ―co-financing agreement‖ which gives equal priority to the new bonds and Greece‘s
payments to the EFSF for bills received for the purposes of the debt exchange. We conclude
by asking what lessons might lie in the Greek 2012 restructuring for future crisis management
in the Eurozone.

http://scholarship.law.duke.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=5343&context=faculty_scholarship

Keine Kommentare:

Kommentar veröffentlichen