Is the Greek haircut a snip too far for investors?
Release Date 18 April 2012
Research from the University of Reading suggests that the recent bail-out for Greece could lead to decades of legal actions as disgruntled investors sue for compensation.
Angela Merkel and Nicolas Sarkozy may think the Greek problem is solved for now but Dr Ioannis Glinavos, from the School of Law, believes legal advisers will be grappling with the issues raised by the country's debt restructuring well into the 2020s.
The European Union and International Monetary Fund insisted on a debt swap as part of the latest bailout of 130bn Euros to Greece. This so-called ‘haircut' saw some investors lose around 70% of their investment on Greek government bonds and those who were forced to accept the deal are demanding the full value of their investment.
Around 90% of creditors agreed to the debt swap - this was enough support to make it binding on all bondholders, whether they agreed or not.
In his new paper, Investors vs. Greece, The Greek Haircut and Investor Arbitration Under BIT's, Dr Glinavos says the key issue is whether a reduction in the face value of a sovereign bond is an exercise of legitimate state powers, or a form of expropriation that gives rise to a claim for compensation under international law. Expropriation is the compulsory seizure or surrender of private property for the state's purposes, with little or no compensation to the owner.
The Greek situation has much in common with that of Argentina which defaulted in 2001. A significant portion of its bondholders went to court to win compensation. After a decade of wrangling, tribunals have ruled that investors can sue for compensation under investment treaties Argentina had signed.
Dr Glinavos said: "The Argentine precedent demonstrates that there are always some ‘holdouts' during a restructuring -disgruntled investors who refuse to negotiate and demand the full value of their investment, even in desperate situations for the countries involved.
"The events in Greece since 2010 will occupy policy makers and market participants for the foreseeable future. They will also occupy courts and arbitral tribunals in multiple jurisdictions. In the same way that Argentina‘s default led to legal actions that are still to reach a conclusion, legal advisers will be grappling with the issues raised by Greece's workout well into the 2020s.
"The message for investors seeking to sue Greece for their losses is that they have a long and hard road ahead of them, but the very fact that a road exists is reason for optimism that a possibility of recouping some of their losses survives. Whether investors should pursue this lengthy legal battle is another question. When there is money to be made, someone somewhere will always consider options, regardless of the damage such action may cause to the country concerned and its prospects for recovery."
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For more information please contact Rona Cheeseman, research communications manager, on 0118 378 3788 or email r.cheeseman@reading.ac.uk
Notes for editors:
The article is a available on the Social Science Research Network >>>
This research forms part of a wider project that will be published as a monograph by Routledge in 2013 in its Research in Finance and Banking Law series. The title of the book is Redefining the Market State Relationship (ISBN 978-0415691284).
The School of Law at the University of Reading is one of the UK's top-ranked law schools. In the latest Research Assessment Exercise (2008), it was ranked joint 7th, alongside Cambridge, for world-leading research and international excellence. In addition, it was ranked 11th out of 67 law schools across all research categories.