On paper, it was one of the most lucrative victories ever in the field of litigation financing.
Then
But any optimism for a settlement has long dissipated, more than a year after Milei took office. In his first public comments, the person Burford hired to facilitate talks with the government said he hasn’t had a single meeting with Argentine officials.
“There have been no talks for now with the government,”
The ruling, a saga stemming from Argentina’s nationalization of energy firm
Argentina’s Economy Ministry didn’t respond to a request for comment on Mato’s remarks.
The 61-year-old is a veteran Wall Street banker who’s worked on Latin American bond deals for years, including the 2016 resolution of Argentina’s
Milei has wooed Wall Street since he stormed to power 15 months ago on a crusade to free up Argentina’s tightly controlled economy and end decades of malaise. But the libertarian president has said little about the ruling, issued in September 2023 by US District Judge
Despite Mato’s insistence that striking a deal would help Milei’s campaign to improve perceptions of Argentina among global investors, the administration continues to
“The most important thing to insert Argentina into the first world is to respect the rule of law,” said Mato, an Argentine who lives in the US. “Any negotiation by the government in this case would be extremely valued.”
But radio silence from Economy Minister
Some investors abroad are concerned about the case impacting Argentina’s return to markets.
“Burford’s judgment against Argentina has the potential to impede Argentina’s ability to access international capital markets,”
Mato said that even if Argentina moves forward by selling bonds without a settlement in the case, it could eventually be a problem. If Argentina fails to overturn the decision on appeal, it could get creative with its debt structure to avoid an embargo of accounts — a legal technicality that would likely turn off some investors.
“If we’re in a situation where the final ruling is favorable for Burford, I think that complicates Argentina’s return to international capital markets,” Mato said. Once Argentina goes to bond markets, he warned that “if you can’t do a plain vanilla structure, a standard structure, every wrinkle will cost.”
A final decision in the courts, however, may take years. The next step in the case, now in a US appeals court, would be whether there’s a hearing on technical issues before those judges make a decision. If the appeals court judges uphold Preska’s ruling, Argentina’s only legal option would be to appeal to the US Supreme Court.
Patience Required
Mato said Burford could accept a bond — or other securities with market structure — as a form of payment.
“The best tool that we have is patience. The tool is the judicial tool,” says Mato. “We’re waiting for the final resolution. Burford isn’t in any rush on this issue. If we negotiate before, it’ll benefit the government because it’s going to have a discount on the debt. If it happens after, they’re going to have to pay the totality of the suit.”
Burford is perhaps the best-known of a cadre of investment funds that specialize in financing lawsuits. Launched in 2009 with backing from
Chief Executive Officer
The goal of firms like Burford is to identify undervalued legal claims, pay lawyers to successfully litigate them, and then take a percentage of the award.
In this case, which targets Argentina over its 2012 nationalization of YPF, Burford acquired the claims from the original shareholders for a little less than $17 million in 2015. At the time of Preska’s September 2023 judgment, the firm said it had paid around $50 million in legal fees. It had also sold more than a third of its interest to other investors, mainly large hedge funds, for $236 million.
But litigation funding has often worked better in theory than in practice.
Many of Burford’s early competitors folded. Burford itself, listed in both New York and London, came under attack in 2019 by short-seller
Preska’s ruling said the government’s takeover of YPF violated company bylaws that required it to make a tender offer to all shareholders at a pre-determined price. At the time, the deputy economy minister who spearheaded the expropriation argued that the bylaws were a “bear trap,” comments frequently cited by Burford in its case.
Argentina’s stalemate with Burford comes at a crucial time for Milei. His negotiations for a new agreement with the International Monetary Fund are being closely monitored by investors and he is also trying to keep voters onside by crushing inflation before a crucial midterm election later this year.
(Corrects March 21 story to remove reference to legal strategy in 17th paragraph)
--With assistance from
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Stephen Wicary, Patrick Gillespie
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