Kicillof Pays To 92% Of Bondholders, Griesa's Move Now?

ejcot en argentina said:
Again... We don t have voting rights, why would the opposition spend one dime in us?
GHbcPCH.gif


It doesn't make sense

The K cares about those who vote because they care about elections, so, they don t care about expats.
Others do cover operations looking for a coup. For a coup you don t need voting rights.
 
U.S. District Judge Thomas Griesa In Argentina, where for more than seven years a return to international capital markets has rested on his rulings, the 79-year-old, semi-retired judge is a star. Buenos Aires newspapers kept his face on front pages as judgments for defaulted bonds in his court piled up to about $6.4 billion. When he agreed not to impede an $18.3 billion bond swap, they portrayed him as a hero. ... Alongside a digitally-altered picture of the judge wearing a national soccer team jersey, newspaper Ambito Financiero ran a front-page headline the next day: “Griesa Is Argentine.”

http://www.law.harva...usinessWeek.pdf


Clear example of manipulation (while posting links with no real substance).

Explanation:
- Links starts with law.harvard (wow looks serious!)
- It's just a Bloomberg News (author works for Business Week but it seems this text was not published in it = prove me wrong, I might be).
- Seems anyway that Drew Benson likes words like "Star", "Celebrity" (ouuuuppsss ---> check the caption under the picture http://www.businessweek.com/articles/2012-03-15/what-greece-can-learn-from-argentinas-default


Griesa being a "star" in the Argentine press does not seem right... Check the Clarin's articles around may/june 2010 = Griesa's decisions were not really acclaimed (and Clarin is not pro K obviously).


Don Alberto, don't believe everything you read on the Net, that's toxic.
 
Clear example of manipulation (while posting links with no real substance).

Explanation:
- Links starts with law.harvard (wow looks serious!)
- It's just a Bloomberg News (author works for Business Week but it seems this text was not published in it = prove me wrong, I might be).
- Seems anyway that Drew Benson likes words like "Star", "Celebrity" (ouuuuppsss ---> check the caption under the picture http://www.businessw...entinas-default


Griesa being a "star" in the Argentine press does not seem right... Check the Clarin's articles around may/june 2010 = Griesa's decisions were not really acclaimed (and Clarin is not pro K obviously).


Don Alberto, don't believe everything you read on the Net, that's toxic.
What is wrong in your head?

http://www.law.harvard.edu/ is Harvard Law School as you will find out, if you use the link and remove the text
/programs/corp_gov/MediaMentions/5-24-10-BusinessWeek.pdf
in the browser address field.

Of course you checked it, didn't you?

GRIESA ES ARGENTINO: FALLÓ Y SUBIERON BONOS
Martes 27 de Abril de 2010

http://www.ambito.co...a.asp?id=519570

- and, besides, it was a joke (look the word up) because it is of no consequence if the viveza criollas love or hate him.
 
What is wrong in your head?

http://www.law.harvard.edu/ is Harvard Law School as you will find out, if you use the link and remove the text
/programs/corp_gov/MediaMentions/5-24-10-BusinessWeek.pdf
in the browser address field.

Of course you checked it, didn't you?
quence if the viveza criollas love or hate him.

I'll let readers read again your answer, nothing to add.

PS: you don't have to use insults (which you did repeatedly), I didn't insult you. Furthermore you wouldn't insult me in front of me.
 
Why do these countries offer bonds to people like Singer if they know when they eventually default he will try take them to the cleaners??

Sleep with dogs and get fleas, if you don't want to end up in situations like this then stick to the IMF and other institutions that treat you nicer when you can't pay them back.

It's like buying drugs from a well known dodgy dealer and complaining when you overdose because of a bad batch.
 
Argentina did not sell bonds to Singer. Singer bought the bonds from third parties at bargain basement prices after Argentina had already defaulted.

And furthermore, sticking to the IMF is not in any way nicer, since they historically have demanded loan-shark style terms and require cuts to essential programmes like education and healthcare.
 
Back
Top