Standard & Poor's declared Venezuela in "selective default" on Monday, after it failed to make $200 million in payments on its global bonds, becoming the first credit ratings agency to do so.
The agency said it acted after a 30-day grace period had passed on payments on two bonds.
"We have lowered two issue ratings to 'D' (default), and we lowered the long-term foreign currency sovereign credit rating to 'SD' (selective default)," the agency said.
S&P's verdict came after the Venezuelan government met with international creditors in Caracas but offered no concrete plan for restructuring its $150 billion debt.
Participants at the meeting told AFP that officials said the government intended to form working groups to evaluate short- and mid-term debt renegotiation proposals, but gave no specifics.
"We would very likely consider any Venezuelan restructuring to be a distressed debt exchange and equivalent to default given the highly constrained external liquidity," S&P said.
"In addition, in our opinion, US sanctions on Venezuela and government members will most likely result in a long and difficult negotiation with bondholders," it said.
Besides the two bond payments it has defaulted on, Venezuela is overdue on four other debt payments but they were still within the 30 day grace period, S&P said.
Ratings on those bonds also will be lowered to "D," of default, if not paid on time, it said.
The unpaid obligations total $420 million, the agency said.
Source:AFP
GMT 03:27 2017 Saturday ,18 November
Venezuela suffers another blow as PDVSA declared in defaultGMT 12:29 2017 Saturday ,04 November
IMF sanctions Venezuela for failing to provide economic dataGMT 03:20 2017 Thursday ,21 September
Venezuela extends state of economic emergencyGMT 20:49 2017 Wednesday ,01 March
Opec compliance with oil curbs rises to 94 per cent in FebruaryGMT 03:37 2017 Saturday ,18 February
Venezuela gears up military machine amid economic crunchMaintained and developed by Arabs Today Group SAL.
All rights reserved to Arab Today Media Group 2021 ©
Maintained and developed by Arabs Today Group SAL.
All rights reserved to Arab Today Media Group 2021 ©
Send your comments
Your comment as a visitor