Analysis-Russia debt investors in limbo as default risk increases
Russian rouble banknotes are seen in this illustration picture · Reuters

By Davide Barbuscia, Alexandra Alper and Karin Strohecker

NEW YORK/WASHINGTON/LONDON (Reuters) - Investors in Russia's international bonds face an increasingly uncertain path to recover their money should Russia ultimately default, while the country itself would face increased financial isolation and hurdles to regain investor confidence.

Russia's ability to fulfill its debt obligations is in focus after sweeping sanctions in response to Moscow's invasion of Ukraine have frozen nearly half of its $640 billion in gold and foreign reserves and limited access to global payment systems.

The U.S. Treasury Department this week halted Russia's ability to use foreign currency reserves held by the Russian central bank at U.S. financial institutions to pay its debt.

That forced Russia to come up with an alternative to pay more than $600 million in sovereign debt dues, placing the rouble equivalent of those payments for bondholders from so-called unfriendly nations in special accounts at Russia's National Settlement Depository.

How bondholders get to the funds is a big question mark.

"Bondholders are doing scenario planning now," said Kenneth Rivlin, a partner at Allen & Overy’s New York office. "If they're not, they should be.

"I think it's going to be a long and winding road for bondholders to get recovery."

Rivlin said the process of getting money transferred from Russia to international bondholders was fraught as financial institutions in the chain would risk sanctions and have to engage external lawyers to seek a license from sanctions authorities to proceed.

Funds from Russia to bondholders have until now followed the process of going through correspondent bank JPMorgan to paying agent Citi. That unraveled this week, when JPM was prevented by the U.S. Treasury from proceeding.

The amounts involved are not insignificant. JPM analysts said last month that foreigners owned around $79 billion of Russia's debt securities, including local currency bonds, sovereign hard currency euro bonds, and corporate hard currency eurobonds.

Data from industry tracker Morningstar Direct showed large money managers such as BlackRock, PIMCO and Western Asset had exposure to Russian bonds before the conflict started. PIMCO and BlackRock declined to comment. Western Asset did not immediately respond to a comment for request.

Russia has a 30-day grace period to make the dollar payment, but if the cash does not show up in bondholders' accounts within that time frame it would constitute a default. If that happens, expect bondholders to sue, experts said.