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  • Writer's pictureBy The Financial District

U.S. Scraps License That Allows Russia To Pay Debts Via American Banks

The US will close the last avenue for Russia to pay its billions in debt back to international investors on Wednesday, making a Russian default on its debts for the first time since the Bolshevik Revolution all but inevitable, Ken Sweet and Fatima Hussein reported for the Associated Press (AP).


Photo Insert: The decision has made a Russian default all but inevitable.



The Treasury Department said in a notification that it does not plan to renew the license that allowed Russia to keep paying its debtholders through American banks. Since the first rounds of sanctions, the Treasury Department has given banks a license to process any dollar-denominated bond payments from Russia. That window expires at midnight May 25.


There had already been signs that the Biden administration was unwilling to extend the deadline.



At a press conference heading into the Group of Seven finance minister meetings in Koenigswinter, Germany, last week, Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen said the window existed “to allow a period of time for an orderly transition to take place, and for investors to be able to sell securities.”


“The expectation was that it was time-limited,” Yellen said.


All the news: Business man in suit and tie smiling and reading a newspaper near the financial district.

Without the license to use US banks to pay its debts, Russia would have no ability to repay its international bond investors. The Kremlin has been using JPMorgan Chase and Citigroup as its conduits to pay its obligations.


Jay Auslander, a prominent sovereign debt lawyer who previously litigated other debt crises like the one in Argentina, said at this point most of the institutional investors in Russian debts have likely sold their holdings, knowing this deadline is coming.


Government & politics: Politicians, government officials and delegates standing in front of their country flags in a political event in the financial district.

Those who are still holding the debts are either distressed debt investors or those willing to wait to litigate it out over the next few years. “The majority who wanted out have gotten out. The only issue is finding buyers,” he said.


The Kremlin appears to have foreseen the likelihood that the US would not allow Russia to keep paying on its bonds.


Banking & finance: Business man in suit and tie working on his laptop and holding his mobile phone in the office located in the financial district.

The Russian Finance Ministry prepaid two bonds on Friday that were due this month to get ahead of the May 25 deadline. The next payments Russia will need to make on its debts are due on June 23.


Like other Russian debt, those bonds have a 30-day grace period — which would cause default by Russia to be declared by late July, barring the unlikely scenario that the Russia-Ukraine war would come to an end before then.





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