Showing posts with label zero coupon bonds. Show all posts
Showing posts with label zero coupon bonds. Show all posts
May 25, 2021
“The time to prepare for the next threat is now”, that’s how Bill Emmott ends his “How to build global resilience after the pandemic” FT, May 25.
Sir, Mark Twain, supposedly, said: “A banker is a fellow who lends you his umbrella when the sun is shining, but wants it back the minute it looks to rain”
Today, if alive, with respect to Basel Committee’s risk weighted bank capital requirements, Mark Twain would have opined: “A bank regulator is a fellow who allows banks to hold little capital when the sun shines, so these can pay lots of bonuses and dividends and buy back lots of stock, but wants banks to hold much more capital, the moment the rain starts”
PS. Emmott writes “But there must be an international accord on debt restructuring, akin to the Brady Plan in the early 1990s.” I lived through that restructuring. It was made feasible by developing countries being able, because US$ interest rates were high, to very inexpensively purchase US$ 30 years zero coupon bonds issued by the US, in order to guarantee the repayment of the principal of their debts. In a world of ultra-low, even negative interest rates, what’s the price of such bonds?
@PerKurowski
December 01, 2020
The need for debt to equity conversions is an inescapable reality
Sir, Martin Wolf writes: “It will be crucial to deal with debt overhangs. As the OECD stresses, converting debt into equity will be an important part of this effort”, “A light shines in the gloom cast by Covid” December 1.
Indeed, with so much corporate debt in being pushed down by Covid-19 into junk rated territory, both debtors and creditors will need massive debt to equity conversions, in order to buy the time needed to reactivate assets, before these also become junk. And whether highly indebted companies, are important and viable enough to merit help from taxpayers, from money printers or from banks, by grants or other means, the proof in the pudding is precisely first seeing hefty debt to equity conversions.
The credit rating agencies could also be helpful by indicating how much of each investment grade rated bonds that has been downgraded to junk, should be converted into equity so as to have the remainders of those bonds recover an investment grade rating.
Now, with respect to the restructure emerging and developing countries’ debts, given the current very low interest rates, we unfortunately do not count with the highly discounted US 30 years zero coupon bonds, those which helped create the guarantees that allowed the Brady bonds to become so useful when restructuring many Latin American debts in 1989.
@PerKurowski
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