Russia keeping Eurobond payment commitments, says finance ministry

R1.5bn coupon payment made this week

29 March 2022 - 12:16
By Reuters
President Vladimir Putin's Russia has another $4.4bn (R64bn) in external debt redemptions due for the remainder of the year. File photo.
Image: Sputnik/Ramil Sitdikov/Kremlin via Reuters President Vladimir Putin's Russia has another $4.4bn (R64bn) in external debt redemptions due for the remainder of the year. File photo.

The Russian finance ministry said on Tuesday it has fully paid a coupon on the country’s Eurobond due in 2035, its third payout since unprecedented Western sanctions called Moscow’s ability to service foreign currency debt into question.

The ministry said it had channelled $102m (about R1.5bn) for the coupon payout on the Eurobond to Russia’s National Settlement Depository (NSD).

“The Russian finance ministry has fully executed its obligations to service sovereign securities of the Russian Federation in accordance with the Eurobond prospectus,” the ministry said, without giving details on whether the payment had been sent to Euroclear or processed further to foreign Eurobond holders.

However, a source familiar with the situation said the transaction was processed by correspondent bank JPMorgan Chase.

According to the Eurobond prospectus, settlement with investors occurs through the NSD and Euroclear, and “if, for reasons beyond its control, the Russian Federation is unable to make payments in US dollars”, settlement may be in euros, pound sterling, Swiss francs or Russian roubles.

Neither Euroclear nor NSD immediately responded to a request for comment.

In mid-March, Russia paid $117m (about R1.7bn) in interest due on two sovereign Eurobonds and last week another $66m (about R966m) coupon due on another issue. Excluding this Monday’s coupon, Russia has another $4.4bn (about R64bn) in external debt redemptions due for the remainder of the year. Some corporate borrowers have also faced payment delays.

Russia’s next payment is on March 31 when a $447m (about R6.5bn) payment falls due. Its biggest payment of the year — and its first full repayment of principal, of $2bn (about R29bn) — is due on April 4.