De Morgan Stanley proposéiert de beschiedegte Obligatiounen vum El Salvador ze kafen nodeems d'Bitcoin Wette net feelt

Morgan Stanley proposes buying El Salvador's damaged bonds after Bitcoin bet fails

El Salvador’s president Nayib Bukele’s gamble on Bitcoin (BTC) seems to be backfiring under the influence of the recent cryptocurrency Maart crash, leading the American Investitioun Bank an finanziell services company Morgan Stanley to encourage its investors to purchase the nation’s poor-performing bonds.

According to a note by Simon Waever, the global head of emerging-market sovereign strategy at Morgan Stanley (NYSE: MS), the market has “overly punished” the $7.7 billion in Eurobonds held by the Salvador government, regardless of the country having better metrics than other troubled peers, Dem Bloomberg seng Maria Elena Vizcaino confirméiert am Juli 19.

As Waever explained:

"Mäert sinn kloer an enger héijer Wahrscheinlechkeet vun der Autarky Szenario an deem El Salvador Standards Präis, awer et gëtt keng Restrukturatioun."

Effects of the poor market conditions

Indeed, the price of Bitcoin has dropped by close to a third of its value since its all-time high in November 2021, leading to losses of about 48% for the Central American nation, which currently holds around $56 million in Bitcoin.

Consequently, El Salvador’s 2027 bond has dropped 32 cents on the dollar to 28 cents in 2022, declining to a record low of 26.3 cents on July 15. 

In Weaver’s view, the debt should trade on average at 43.7 cents on the dollar, even if the nation is on the path toward default. However, he admits that the chances of touching this level in the near future were low in the face of the tightening global liquidity.

As per the report, the market pessimism is partly due to President Bukele’s erratic decisions, such as making Bitcoin legal tender, announcing a failed dollar-bond sale linked to the digital asset, and dismissing some of the nation’s top judges.

Restructuring options

Furthermore, Waever also believes that the International Monetary Fund (IMF) should have a role in any potential restructuring:

“For a restructuring to work, it nearly always needs the IMF involved and or there to be a clear push for reform by the government. (…) Given this may not be the set-up in a potential restructuring, it could easily end up being a protracted negotiation.”

El Salvador’s finance minister Alejandro Zelaya had announced the planned issuance of a Bitcoin-backed bond for late March. 

However, Bukele has been announcing it since November 2021, pledging half of the $1 billion collected toward building energy and Bitcoin mining infrastructure, and the other half toward increasing El Salvador’s crypto assets, finbold gemellt.

Source: https://finbold.com/morgan-stanley-proposes-buying-el-salvadors-damaged-bonds-after-bitcoin-bet-fails/