Argentina and Ecuador: Testing the Boundaries of Sovereign Incorrigibility

Key Points:

  • Argentina and Ecuador have both defaulted on their debts multiple times, most recently in 2020.
  • Investors are skeptical that these countries will be able to return to the international debt markets.
  • Argentina and Ecuador's bond prices are extremely low, reflecting this skepticism.
  • GMO is overweight on both Argentina and Ecuador in its external debt strategy.
  • GMO believes that markets are pricing in overly pessimistic outlooks based on fundamentals.
  • There is scope for bond prices to fall from already distressed levels.
  • GMO is open-minded about what can go right, not just what can go wrong.

In the world of sovereign debt, both lenders and borrowers have long understood that default has costs. For the lender, those costs usually come in the form of write-downs on the principal amount they are owed, or on the coupons they are scheduled to be paid. For borrowers, however, these costs are less immediate and straightforward, with a failure to pay today meaning a loss of market confidence and higher borrowing costs tomorrow.

Two countries suffering such an effect are Argentina and Ecuador, each of which has endured multiple defaults, most recently in 2020. For various reasons, both have since struggled to recoup the necessary confidence to once again borrow in international commercial debt markets. For these countries, the question goes beyond the usual: Should these countries pay an additional premium as a recently defaulted country? Rather, for these two borrowers, investors have asked the question: Can these countries ever return to the markets, given their multiple episodes of default? Are they simply incorrigible?

Unfortunately, the question of sovereign incorrigibility, for lack of a better term, is a reasonable one to contemplate in both cases, especially for investors who have followed these credits over the years. Such investors no doubt recall the excitement for Argentina following the pro-market Mauricio Macri’s ascent to the presidency in late 2015, or, more recently, for Ecuador upon the reformist Guillermo Lasso’s surprise electoral victory in 2021. Both events seemed to portend the end of dominant, economically destructive, and market unfriendly ideologies of Kirchnerism and Correism, respectively. Both, however, ended in disappointment: Macri’s administration failed to generate consistent market confidence, ending in economic crisis and the political collapse in 2019, while Lasso’s foundered in the face of a divided congress and political turbulence, ending in his impeachment earlier this year.