London (04/11 – 50)
US government last week intervened in a lawsuit triggered by Hamilton Reserve Bank in St Kitts & Nevis. Somehow, a small bank based in a county with 50,000 inhabitants and GDP of under $1billion has amassed a $250million face-value stake in a Sri Lankan bond. The mysterious ‘global financier’ aka cunning vulture investor, Benjamin Wey is suing Sri Lanka.
This specific bond was issued in happier times in 2012 and lacks some now-common clauses that make bonds easier to restructure. HRB’s $250million is enough in theory to veto any restructuring proposal Sri Lanka makes to that specific security.
Chinese-American financier and founder of Fintech Holdings, Benjamin Wey with a history of legal trouble is suing Sri Lanka for $250 million. Sri Lanka defaulted on the $250 million bond in April 2022.
There are hedge funds that specialise in sniffing out vulnerable sovereign bonds, amassing a blocking stake, waiting patiently for a broader restructuring to take place, and holding out for full repayment once a country has secured debt relief from other creditors. It’s called being a “holdout”.
But the size of HRB’s stake and the unusual aggressiveness of its lawsuit against Sri Lanka, which began almost as soon as it defaulted in April 2022 had always smelled a bit fishy.
The US government obliquely wanted to get involved made the whole situation even more intriguing. The US will occasionally file “amicus briefs” laying out its views on contentious legal cases where it has pressing national interests, but hardly ever gets involved in something as routine as this.
The fact remained that Sri Lanka really has defaulted on the bond in question, and although HRB’s legal zealousness will be a massive headache to Sri Lanka at a perilous time, it’s not the kind of thing the US government would normally stick its oar in over.
There are talks about who might be behind HRB’s lawsuit, and last week Sri Lanka’s law firm Clifford Chance for the first time said explicitly who it thinks is driving this: a Chinese-American financier called Benjamin Wey.
It is worth noting that despite HRB’s claims to be a “bona fide” investor, there are serious questions about the nature of HRB’s alleged ownership interest. In addition, recently learned information suggests that HRB may have legal and regulatory problems of its own. Among other things:
“Benjamin Wey’s personal website describes him as a “philanthropist and global financier”, whose “optimism and impressive winning streaks in the face of daunting odds” and “abilities to overcome obstacles continue to propel him and his clients into greater successes”.
He is known for his promotion of a wave of Chinese reverse mergers as president of New York Global Group. However in 2015, he was arrested for fraud, but charges were eventually dropped in 2017 after a federal judge threw out evidence that prosecutors had obtained in a search of his apartment and office.
The New York Post dubbed Wey the “Horndog CEO” after he had to pay $18mn to an intern he had sexually harassed (later reduced to $5.65mn). Along the way he also appears to have run an online click farm called The Blot which he used to smear the former intern, journalists who had written about his travails and other people that had crossed him, in between a steady stream of generic internet content.
Now, Wey is involved in HRB and its lawsuit against Sri Lanka. Wey appears nowhere on the website of HRB, which says it was founded by “prominent bankers and lawyers from London”, including Sir Tony Baldry, a former MP and aide to Margaret Thatcher, who is now chair. The CEO is Prabhakar Kaza, who is also a councillor for Elstree & Borehamwood Town Council.
Through some other Sri Lankan creditors, investigations found that Wey had contacted several creditors about joining forces against Sri Lanka and had even emailed a presentation laying out their case. The presentation was on behalf of Fintech Holdings, which is the parent company of Hamilton Reserve Bank but stresses that “we need to limit public exposure of HRB as a private bank”.
The deck included a snapshot of a deleted earlier tweet from central bank governor Ajith Cabraal on meeting the “amazingly intuitive and highly energetic” Wey and his “erstwhile colleague” Ghassan Nasr, who is head of international markets at HRB.
HRB had tweeted this image of Nasr meeting Cabraal, which remains online:
The presentation Wey sent to fellow Sri Lankan creditors includes a similar but different photo. For copyright reasons, the photo cannot be shared but it showed both Wey and Nasr flanking Cabraal. Wey was identified as an FH “senior advisor” and Nasr as an “FH executive”.
The presentation said that at that meeting Cabraal assured Wey and Nasr that Sri Lanka would repay the 2022 bond in full and on time. As a result relying on such explicit guarantees directly represented to them by the Sri Lanka Central Bank, they bought the July 2022 ISB in large quantities, trusting Sri Lanka would safeguard at all costs its unblemished sovereign credibility since 1948 as assured directly by the CBSL governor himself, as well as CEOs of the largest government owned banks who were introduced by the governor to the delegation.
When the restructuring was announced in April 2022, Wey sent a letter to Sri Lanka’s then-president Gotabaya Rajapaksa on HRB letterhead warning of the dire consequences of a sovereign default. A copy of this letter here:
According to the presentation, Fintech Holdings seems to think that a central bank governor saying a country won’t default before it actually defaults is some kind of securities fraud. This is just one example of the deck’s many misunderstandings and misrepresentations of the sovereign debt restructuring process, such as an argument that Fintech Holdings can block IMF payments to Sri Lanka until it is paid off.
The presentation makes a big deal out of how “suing a sovereign for non-debt payment can be a justified and lucrative business” citing how Paul Singer’s Elliott Management managed to extract $2.4bn out of Argentina in 2016 (an action led by occasional AV contributor Jay Newman).
However, that took one of the biggest and best-resourced hedge funds on the planet over a decade of tortuous, expensive litigation and still required a change in government, plus an irascible judge to construct a legal noose around Argentina’s financial neck. Fintech’s play looks more like a haphazard copy-paste of Kenneth Dart’s well-timed bet on a Greek bond in 2012, except this time it went horribly awry.
In theory, Fintech/HRB shouldn’t have a problem getting a judgment from the court as Sri Lanka has after all defaulted on the bond. Since the holdouts have a blocking stake and there are no aggregating collective action clauses, they should be able to shield the bond from the broader sovereign debt restructuring that is already under way.
But the chances that they will be able to collect on any judgment are slim. The bondholders that do eventually agree to a restructuring will work to ensure that the debt relief they offer doesn’t help bankroll a full payout to HRB. Most likely, Sri Lanka will just let any holdouts in the 2022 bond stew for years to come.
Source : Financial Times