Explainer-Can Russia make payments on its sovereign debt?

Reuters

LONDON – The United States has blocked the Russian government from paying owners of its sovereign debt from reserves held at U.S. banks, raising the spectre of default unless Russia can find other sources of cash or a workaround within 30 days.

Russia has managed to avoid defaulting on its international debt so far, despite unprecedented Western sanctions imposed after Moscow’s invasion of Ukraine. But the task just became a lot tougher as Washington tries to up the pressure.

WHAT DID THE U.S. TREASURY SAY?


Russia was due to pay $552.4 million on a maturing bond on Monday as well as an $84 million coupon payment on Monday on a 2042 sovereign bond.

The U.S. Treasury Department had been allowing the Russian government to use foreign currency reserves held by its central bank at U.S. financial institutions to make coupon payments on dollar-denominated sovereign debt on a “case-by-case basis.”

But, as of Monday, the U.S. Treasury said it would “not permit any dollar debt payments to be made from Russian government accounts at U.S. financial institutions.”

“Russia must choose between draining remaining valuable dollar reserves or new revenue coming in, or default,” a spokesperson added.

Roughly half of the $640 billion in Russia’s gold and foreign currency reserves has been frozen by the United States and its allies since Russia’s invasion of Ukraine, which Moscow calls a “special military operation.”

WHAT HAS CHANGED?

The U.S. Treasury said the size of the payment due on Monday – the largest due on sovereign debt since the Feb. 24 invasion – had presented “the right opportunity to force Russia into more difficult decisions.”

However, there was no suggestion U.S. banks might be banned from acting as correspondent banks – or processing any Russian debt payments. JPMorgan Chase has been processing the recent debt coupon payments as a correspondent bank.

Russia may already have been using funds from the half of its reserves that have not been frozen by sanctions, and it could still turn to those resources to avoid default.

It also still receives billions of dollars from exporting crude and gas. Analysing tanker traffic data, the Institute of International Finance (IIF) estimates Russia’s March oil export earnings will total $12.3 billion – up sharply on March 2021.

Moscow said on Monday it expected higher oil prices will boost its April revenue from energy sales by 798.4 billion roubles ($9.6 billion).

WHAT WILL HAPPEN NOW?

The bonds have 30 day grace periods, meaning Russia still has time to pay before default is triggered.

Russia’s willingness to pay means – so far – it has swerved its first default of any kind since a 1998 financial crisis, and its first on international market debt since the 1917 Bolshevik revolution.

Russia has also been working on managing its external liabilities – last week it bought back about three-quarters of a $2 billion bond payment by paying in roubles just before it matured on Monday. The move was targeted at local rather than international owners though reduced its dollar liabilities.

But there is another deadline looming: transactions by U.S. persons and entities with Russia’s finance ministry, central bank or national wealth fund in relation to debt payments are only allowed under a temporary general licence 9A issued by the U.S. Office of Foreign Assets Control (OFAC).

That licence is due to expire on May 25 and the U.S. Treasury has not commented on whether it will be extended.

Russia has more payments due on May 27, and has a total of 15 international bonds outstanding with a face value of around $40 billion. Prior to the Ukraine crisis, roughly $20 billion was held by investment funds and money managers outside Russia.

(Reporting by Tommy Reggiori Wilkes, Karin Strohecker and Marc Jones in London, and Alexandra Alper in Washington; Editing by Mark Potter)

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