Puerto Rico to Miss Largest Payment to Date

Gov. Alejandro García Padilla of Puerto Rico said Sunday that he had ordered a debt moratorium, blocking a $422 million payment due on Monday.
The missed payment is the biggest yet in a continuing series of defaults by the struggling United States territory, and a warning that Puerto Rico will probably default on even larger and more consequential payments due on July 1, unless Congress enacts rescue legislation before then.
On that date nearly $2 billion is due, roughly $800 million of which consists of general-obligation bonds that carry an explicit guarantee by the Puerto Rican Constitution. Missing a major payment on such debt would not only set off a wave of creditor lawsuits, but it could also cast a shadow over America’s $3.7 trillion municipal bond market, for decades an essential source of financing for public works.
“This was a painful decision,” the governor said in a televised speech on Sunday, in which he struck a nationalistic tone and said he had to invoke his emergency powers under Puerto Rican law because help from Washington was not forthcoming.
“We would have preferred to have had a legal framework to restructure our debts in an orderly manner,” he said.
But the bill is contentious and important provisions are still being negotiated.
The governor said the process was too slow. In his speech he blamed unnamed “opponents of the people of Puerto Rico,” who, he said, “have unleashed a brutal campaign of racial discrimination and lies against us,” convincing some members of Congress that Puerto Rico needed austerity rather than debt relief.






The capitol building in San Juan, Puerto Rico. Credit Joe Raedle/Getty Images 
       


Puerto Rico to Miss Largest Payment to Date

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