Return money, Argentina tells US banks

Buenos Aires is calling on Citibank to transfer the September 30 debt payment, saying it will violate Argentine law if it fails to do so.

Argentina has told Citibank and Bank of New York Mellon to either execute its debt payments or give it back money frozen in its dispute with two creditors.

A US federal judge has ordered the banks not to transfer payments on the debt Argentina restructured after its 2001 economic crisis until the country settles a $US1.3-billion ($A1.4-billion) dispute with the two "holdout" creditors, hedge funds NML Capital and Aurelius Capital Management.

BNY Mellon is currently sitting on a $US539 million interest payment Argentina was due to make on June 30, and Citibank is barred from making a $US200-million payment due on September 30.

The government in Buenos Aires took out an advertisement in Argentine and US newspapers announcing it had asked BNY Mellon to step down as trustee for its restructured debt and transfer the $US539 million to a new payment agent.

BNY Mellon dismissed any suggestion that it would resign, and said it would continue to "fulfill the court orders" by which it is bound as trustee.

Economy Minister Axel Kicillof also called on Citibank to transfer the September 30 payment, saying it would violate Argentine law if it failed to do so.

The bank "has an Argentine contract that says it has to pay bonds issued under Argentine law, not New York law. When we deposit the money, they have to pay it," he told broadcaster Radio del Plata.

The situation has infuriated Argentina, which defaulted on its debt for the second time in 13 years when the grace period on the June 30 payment expired.

Argentina defaulted on $US100 billion in debt in 2001, the largest default in history at the time.

It persuaded 93 per cent of its creditors to take losses of up to 70 per cent on the face value of their bonds in deals reached in 2005 and 2010.

But the holdouts refused to accept the write-down and took Argentina to court, winning a ruling that has derailed the country's debt restructuring.

US federal Judge Thomas Griesa has called a new hearing in the case for Friday.


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