How Barack Obama could end the Argentina debt crisis US president - TopicsExpress



          

How Barack Obama could end the Argentina debt crisis US president need only inform a federal judge that vulture fund billionaire Paul Singer is interfering with the presidents sole authority to conduct foreign policy. He hasnt. But why not? The vulture financier now threatening to devour Argentina can be stopped dead by a simple note to the courts from Barack Obama. But the president, while officially supporting Argentina, has not done this one thing that could save Buenos Aires from default. Obama could prevent vulture hedge-fund billionaire Paul Singer from collecting a single penny from Argentina by invoking the long-established authority granted presidents by the US constitutions Separation of Powers clause. Under the principle known as comity, Obama only need inform US federal judge Thomas Griesa that Singers suit interferes with the presidents sole authority to conduct foreign policy. Case dismissed. Indeed, President George W Bush invoked this power against the very same hedge fund now threatening Argentina. Bush blocked Singers seizure of Congo-Brazzavilles US property, despite the fact that the hedge fund chief is one of the largest, and most influential, contributors to Republican candidates. Notably, an appeals court warned this very judge, 30 years ago, to heed the directive of a president invoking his foreign policy powers. In the Singer case, the US state department did inform Judge Griesa that the Obama administration agreed with Argentinas legal arguments; but the president never invoked the magical, vulture-stopping clause. Obamas devastating hesitation is no surprise. It repeats the presidents capitulation to Singer the last time they went mano a mano. It was 2009. Singer, through a brilliantly complex financial manoeuvre, took control of Delphi Automotive, the sole supplier of most of the auto parts needed by General Motors and Chrysler. Both auto firms were already in bankruptcy. Singer and co-investors demanded the US Treasury pay them billions, including $350m (£200m) in cash immediately, or – as the Singer consortium threatened – well shut you down. They would cut off GMs parts. Literally. GM and Chrysler, with no more than a couple of days worth of parts to hand, would have shut down, permanently;forced into liquidation. Obamas negotiator, Treasury deputy Steven Rattner, called the vulture funds demand extortion – a characterisation of Singer repeated last week by Argentina President Cristina Fernández de Kirchner. But while Fernández declared I cannot as president submit the country to such extortion, Obama submitted within days. Ultimately, the US Treasury quietly paid the Singer consortium a cool $12.9bn in cash and subsidies from the US Treasurys auto bailout fund. Singer responded to Obamas largesse by quickly shutting down 25 of Delphis 29 US auto parts plants, shifting 25,000 jobs to Asia. Singers Elliott Management pocketed $1.29bn of which Singer personally garnered the lions share. In the case of Argentina, Obama certainly has reason to act. The US State Department warned the judge that adopting Singers legal theories would imperil sovereign bailout agreements worldwide. Indeed, it is reported that, in 2012, Singer joined fellow billionaire vulture investor Kenneth Dart in shaking down the Greek government for a huge payout during the euro crisis by threatening to create a mass default of banks across Europe. The financial press has turned on Singer. Commentators in the Wall Street Journal and FT are enraged at the financiers quixotic re-interpretation of sovereign lending terms in the way that the Taliban interprets a peace agreement. No peace, no agreement. Singer has certainly earned his vulture feathers. His attack on Congo-Brazzaville in effect snatched the value of the debt relief paid for by US and British taxpayers and, says Oxfam, undermined the nations ability to fight a cholera epidemic. (Singers spokesman responded that corruption in the Congo-Brazzaville government, not his lawsuits, have impoverished that nation.) As if to burnish his tough-guy credentials, Singer has mounted legal attacks on JP Morgan Chase, Citibank, BNY Mellon, and UBS, demanding they pay him the money that Argentina had paid them over the last decade. Furthermore, Singers lawyers persuaded the judge to stop BNY Mellon, Argentinas agent, from making $500m in payments to Argentinian bondholders. Surely the president would intervene. He didnt. He hasnt. Why? Im not a psychologist. But this we know: since taking on Argentina, Singer has unlocked his billion-dollar bank account, becoming the biggest donor to New York Republican causes. He is a founder of Restore Our Future, a billionaire boys club, channelling the funds of Bill Koch and other Richie Rich-kid Republicans into a fearsome war-chest dedicated to vicious political attack ads.
Posted on: Thu, 07 Aug 2014 22:48:25 +0000

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