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Russia to Declare Ukraine in Immediate Default if Kiev Fails to Repay Debts

© Sputnik / Alexandr Demyanchuk / Go to the mediabankUkrainian notes and hryvnia coin.
Ukrainian notes and hryvnia coin. - Sputnik International
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Ukraine will not pay off its $3 billion bond to Russia which matures on December 20, RBK reported, citing the memorandum of the proposal to restructure Ukraine’s foreign debt.

A man stands next to an advertising placard showing British pounds, US dollars and Ukrainian hryvnia banknotes in the Ukrainian capital Kiev - Sputnik International
Major US Banks Rule Ukrainian Default is Inevitable
The document was addressed to the holder of Ukrainian bonds worth $18 billion.

According to the text, new bonds Ukraine will offer to its creditors presume that holders of old bonds have no privileges in settling the debt. After its debt is restructured Kiev will not pay off old debt on the previous conditions.

If Kiev settles its debt repayment issue with Moscow, then it will not offer to Moscow a deal with net present value higher than for newly-issued bonds, an article explained.

"Russia will never be offered more favorable conditions than the other creditors," Ukrainian Prime Minister Arseniy Yatsenyuk said earlier.

Nevertheless, the hybrid status of the Russian bonds poses a serious risk of Ukraine being banned from receiving financial aid from the International Monetary Fund (IMF) in 2016. If the debt is recognized by the IMF as "official" (as Russia insists), the fund will be prohibited from giving loans to Ukraine until its debt is paid off to Moscow.

A burning one hryvnia bill on a gas burner - Sputnik International
Russia Warns Kiev Against Default on Debt Payment
On Wednesday, Kiev failed to redeem its $500 million bonds issued in 2010. Earlier this week, the government froze payments on euro bonds maturing between September 23 and December 1.

Russia already has formal grounds to declare default on Kiev’s $3 billion in bonds.

Earlier, Russian Finance Minister Anton Siluanov said that Ukraine’s proposal on debt restructuring is addressed to private creditors. As a sovereign creditor Moscow will insist on the bonds to be redeemed in the end of 2015.

If Kiev fails to settle the debt Russia may file a legal claim against Ukraine to the English Court of Appeal, or initiate arbitral proceedings in the London Court of International Arbitration. The process is usually lengthy and may prevent Ukraine from returning to international capital markets and block investment flows to the country.

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