Sign up for our free daily newsletter
YOUR PRIVACY - PLEASE READ CAREFULLY DATA PROTECTION STATEMENT
Below we explain how we will communicate with you. We set out how we use your data in our Privacy Policy.
Global City Media, and its associated brands will use the lawful basis of legitimate interests to use
the
contact details you have supplied to contact you regarding our publications, events, training,
reader
research, and other relevant information. We will always give you the option to opt out of our
marketing.
By clicking submit, you confirm that you understand and accept the Terms & Conditions and Privacy Policy
Landowners whose land was expropriated by Juan Velasco’s government in the late nineteen sixties and early nineteen seventies were compensated in ‘Agrarian Reform Bonds’. The government defaulted on the bonds in the 1980s after an economic crisis and since then has been locked in a lengthy dispute with bondholders over whether and how it should repay them.
Inadequate compensation
Gramercy purchased a chunk of the bonds at a discount in 2008 and is now one of many bondholders clamouring publicly for fair settlement. The crux of the argument is how to value the bonds, with the current administration using an adjustment methodology that offers a fraction of the compensation that bondholders claim they are owed. Gramercy estimates that its payout offer from the government will be $24m at most and has threatened to bring a claim against Peru under a tribunal system established in a US-Peruvian trade deal. Sources: BBC News; Financial Times
Email your news and story ideas to: [email protected]