NEW YORK, Oct 23: A US judge ruled that holders of 234 million dollars in defaulted Argentine bonds suing for full payment had been treated unequally to creditors who had participated in the country’s past restructurings. US District Judge Thomas Griesa in Manhattan ruled that Argentina had made no new arguments to justify treating the creditors in the 15 lawsuits differently than several similar holdouts who held 5.4 billion dollars of defaulted bonds that he granted similar relief to in June. These holdout bondholders are often called “me-too” creditors for seeking the same relief as several hedge funds who had secured a ruling ordering Argentina to pay it 1.33 billion dollars plus interest. The latest batch of creditors include Trinity Investments Limited and MCHA Holdings LLC and hold bonds totaling about 235 million dollars in principal, according to court papers. Anthony Costantini, a lawyer for creditors including Trinity and MCHA, called the ruling “gratifying.” A lawyer for Argentina had no immediate comment. The ruling marked the latest development in long-running litigation by creditors seeking full repayment on Argentine bonds following its 100 billion dollars default in 2002. Those creditors spurned Argentina’s 2005 and 2010 debt restructurings, which resulted in 92 per cent of its defaulted debt being swapped and investors being paid less than 30 cents on the dollar. The country defaulted again in July 2014 after refusing to honor court orders to pay 1.33 billion dollars plus interest to holdouts including Elliott Management’s NML Capital Ltd when it paid holders of restructured bonds. The Argentine government refers to the holdouts as “vultures” for picking over the carcass of its 2002 default that plunged millions of Argentines into poverty. Griesa has scheduled a hearing for next Wednesday to determine whether to expand that order to apply to other creditors who he ruled were not treated equally as the restructured bond holders. Earlier yesterday, Argentina’s economy minister said he expected Griesa to expand the amount the country must pay the so-called “me-too” creditors to 8 billion dollars, beyond what it was previously ordered to pay NML and other holdouts. “This just goes to show it was a trick, paying those 1.6 billion dollars would not have solved anything,” said Argentina’s Economy Minister Axel Kicillof. (agencies)
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