A federal appeals court on Wednesday heard impassioned arguments from two of the nationâs most prominent lawyers in a case that pits a group of bond investors in a long-running battle with the country of Argentina.
Legal specialists who observed the proceedings at the United States Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit said they felt that the judges showed little sympathy for Argentina, which is refusing to make payments on the disputed bonds.
âAt least two of the three judges seemed to have no patience with Argentina,â said Anna Gelpern, a professor at the Washington College of Law at the American University. âThey were rolling their eyes and shaking their heads.â
The dispute started out over a relatively small amount of debt that Argentina defaulted on over 10 years ago. But, as the case progressed in the United State courts, its significance has grown. Its outcome will test the extent to which an American court can pressure a foreign government to take actions to comply wih American laws. Some debt market specialists believe a defeat for Argentina could make it harder for countries overwhelmed by debt to ease their obligations through a managed default.
The appeals court case is being watched closely by legal experts, and on Wednesday, the overflow from the courtroom filled two other rooms in the court building.
Theodore B. Olson, of Gibson, Dunn & Crutcher, spoke on behalf of the hedge fund that is leading the litigation against Argentina. The fund is an affiliate of Elliott Management, an investment firm founded by Paul E. Singer. The fundâs argument is that it should be paid on its defaulted bonds when investors holding another type of Argentine bond get paid.
Those investors, represented on Wednesday by David Boies of Boies, Schiller and Flexner, hold bonds that emerged from two debt restructurings that forced creditors to agree to large losses on their bonds. Argentina has made payments on those so-called exchange bonds since they were issued after the restructurings. Elliott Management and others never included their bonds in the exchange, and for that reason they are called holdouts. Argentina refuses to pay the holdouts, and there is almost no support for paying these investors in Argentina.
A federal district court, under Judge Thomas P. Griesa, has already ruled largely in favor of the litigating investors. The appeals court has already issued an opinion agreeing with Judge Griesaâs main points. The judge as become gradually more frustrated with Argentina and last year issued a ruling that included a sanction that upped the ante on the country. It effectively said that a bank would be in contempt if it processed the payments from Argentina to exchange bondholders when knowing that the holdouts werenât also getting paid.
The appeals court asked Judge Griesa to clarify which financial entities would be affected by this order and how much the holdouts might get paid.
Of the three appellate court judges, Judge Reena Raggi was the most pointed questioner and was concerned that Argentina was effectively holding out the threat of not paying the exchange bondholders to get a favorable decision in the United States. âIt hardly seems appropriate for a court not to enforce one of its orders because a party will breach another ! of its ob! ligations,â she said.
Mr. Olson echoed that, saying, âThe hostage holding is being done by Argentina.â
The Bank of New York Mellon, which processes Argentinaâs bond payments, would almost certainly stop channeling money to the exchange bondholders if Judge Griesaâs injunction is upheld. Default would then be likely.
Mr. Boies, representing the exchange bondholders, argued that the district court injunction goes against parts of commercial law and the Constitution that safeguard property rights. âIt is designed to prevent us from accepting money we are contractually owed, he said. âWe are the innocent parties.â
Argentinaâs lawyer, Jonathan I. Blackman of Cleary Gottlieb Steen & Hamilton, understood that the appeals court judges had little sympathy for Argentina. He stated at one point that Argentinawas not intending to pay the holdouts if Judge Griesaâs injunction took effect.
He argued that this didnât warrant setting off a chain of events that could result in no one getting paid. Countries canât be thrown into bankruptcy so that creditors can make claims, he noted. The current system of dealing with sovereign defaults, like the sort of debt restructuring Argentina did with exchange bondholders, âis the best system that exists absent bankruptcy,â Mr. Blackman said.
âI beg you, judges of equity, do no harm,â Mr. Blackman said to the bench. âI know it is not easy. I know my client doesnât appeal to you.â
While the appeals court judges gave Argentinaâs supporters few reasons to hope, there a couple of developments that they may cling to. First, the judges asked a lot of questions about how much Elliott Management should receive under a payment formula. Judge Griesa has said they should be paid all that they are owed.
But another solution might be that! they get! a sum proportionate to what the exchange bondholders received. Itâs not clear if Argentina would ever agree to paying the holdouts anything. But the questions raised the very slight possibility that the appeals judges might arrive at a payment formula that doesnât give the holdouts all they are owed under the bondsâ original contracts.
Judge Rosemary S. Pooler, asked Mr. Olson if the investors suing Argentina have done trades that would profit if the country defaulted on its exchange bonds. This could create a conflict of interest, the judge said. When asked if his clients had done such a trade, Mr. Olson said, âI have been informed it isnât true.â
The appeals court may take several weeks to issue its opinion in the case.