Use of the Local Law Advantage in the Restructuring of European Sovereign Bonds

Emerging market sovereigns issue bonds in the international capital markets governed by a foreign legal regime such as the law of England or New York State.European sovereigns, however, have been able to issue bonds governed by the issuer’s own law.In the event of a future financial crisis, this giv...

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Main Authors: Mitu Gulati, Lee C. Buchheit
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: University of Bologna 2018-11-01
Series:University of Bologna Law Review
Subjects:
Online Access:https://bolognalawreview.unibo.it/article/view/8655
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spelling doaj-991f008d5ec34ac9b8964d4bdd66132a2020-11-25T01:30:10ZengUniversity of BolognaUniversity of Bologna Law Review2531-61332018-11-013217217910.6092/issn.2531-6133/86557533Use of the Local Law Advantage in the Restructuring of European Sovereign BondsMitu Gulati0Lee C. Buchheit1Duke UniversityCleary Gottlieb Steen & Hamilton LLPEmerging market sovereigns issue bonds in the international capital markets governed by a foreign legal regime such as the law of England or New York State.European sovereigns, however, have been able to issue bonds governed by the issuer’s own law.In the event of a future financial crisis, this gives European sovereign issuers the ability to pass local legislation that will facilitate an eventual restructuring of their bonds -- the “local law advantage.”Greece did this in 2012 as part of a restructuring of €206 billion of Greek Government bonds.The validity of the revisions to Greek law enacted in 2012 by the Greek Parliament has been upheld in multiple judicial challenges (in Greece, Germany, Austria and before the European Court of Human Rights), as well in a major ICSID arbitration.This raises the question of whether other European sovereigns enjoying the local law advantage over their bonds can, in an emergency, rely on the power of their own legislatures to amend local law in order to facilitate a future restructuring of those instrumentshttps://bolognalawreview.unibo.it/article/view/8655sovereign debtgreek restructuringlocal law advantagecollective action clauses
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Mitu Gulati
Lee C. Buchheit
spellingShingle Mitu Gulati
Lee C. Buchheit
Use of the Local Law Advantage in the Restructuring of European Sovereign Bonds
University of Bologna Law Review
sovereign debt
greek restructuring
local law advantage
collective action clauses
author_facet Mitu Gulati
Lee C. Buchheit
author_sort Mitu Gulati
title Use of the Local Law Advantage in the Restructuring of European Sovereign Bonds
title_short Use of the Local Law Advantage in the Restructuring of European Sovereign Bonds
title_full Use of the Local Law Advantage in the Restructuring of European Sovereign Bonds
title_fullStr Use of the Local Law Advantage in the Restructuring of European Sovereign Bonds
title_full_unstemmed Use of the Local Law Advantage in the Restructuring of European Sovereign Bonds
title_sort use of the local law advantage in the restructuring of european sovereign bonds
publisher University of Bologna
series University of Bologna Law Review
issn 2531-6133
publishDate 2018-11-01
description Emerging market sovereigns issue bonds in the international capital markets governed by a foreign legal regime such as the law of England or New York State.European sovereigns, however, have been able to issue bonds governed by the issuer’s own law.In the event of a future financial crisis, this gives European sovereign issuers the ability to pass local legislation that will facilitate an eventual restructuring of their bonds -- the “local law advantage.”Greece did this in 2012 as part of a restructuring of €206 billion of Greek Government bonds.The validity of the revisions to Greek law enacted in 2012 by the Greek Parliament has been upheld in multiple judicial challenges (in Greece, Germany, Austria and before the European Court of Human Rights), as well in a major ICSID arbitration.This raises the question of whether other European sovereigns enjoying the local law advantage over their bonds can, in an emergency, rely on the power of their own legislatures to amend local law in order to facilitate a future restructuring of those instruments
topic sovereign debt
greek restructuring
local law advantage
collective action clauses
url https://bolognalawreview.unibo.it/article/view/8655
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