Parsing President Trump’s Puerto Rico debt comments
Puerto Rico’s billions of dollars in outstanding debt involves a complicated mix of obligations: general government bonds sold by Puerto Rico, sales tax-backed bonds, electric power revenue bonds … it’s a long list. Bond insurers are on the hook for a portion of the debt if the government agencies that issued the bonds fail to […]
Puerto Rico’s billions of dollars in outstanding debt involves a complicated mix of obligations: general government bonds sold by Puerto Rico, sales tax-backed bonds, electric power revenue bonds … it’s a long list. Bond insurers are on the hook for a portion of the debt if the government agencies that issued the bonds fail to pay interest and principal. Mutual funds and hedge funds stand to lose in the debt restructuring, but so do small investors. About 40 percent of the territory’s outstanding bonds are held by Puerto Ricans in individual retirement accounts and local banks. And as for President Donald Trump’s power to intervene in some way in the debts owed to Wall Street firms and “wipe that out”? There’s no legal precedent for unilateral executive branch action given that Congress has already passed a law governing Puerto Rico’s bankruptcy and a federal judge is now adjudicating the complicated debt restructuring case.
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