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Simon Granger neuer Leiter für Restrukturierung und Turnarounds, EMEA, bei GoldenTree Asset Management

Simon Granger neuer Leiter für Restrukturierung und Turnarounds, EMEA, bei GoldenTree Asset Management
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GRAPHIC-Spectre of another lost tourism season haunts emerging markets

5 Min Read LONDON (Reuters) - Fresh outbreaks of COVID-19 and travel curbs are deterring tourists from flocking back to Thailand’s beaches and Turkey’s bazaars, stalling a recovery in tourism, a crucial source of foreign currency and a large employer for many emerging markets. FILE PHOTO: Tuk-tuks used to transport tourists around the city are seen idle due to travel bans and border closures from the global coronavirus disease (COVID-19) outbreak in a parking lot in downtown Bangkok, Thailand February 3, 2021. REUTERS/Jorge Silva Global tourism suffered its worst year ever in 2020 with the sector shrinking in value by an estimated $4.5 trillion in the pandemic’s wake, according to World Travel & Tourism Council (WTTC) figures.

GRAPHIC-Politics, inflation, new models: Five questions for Russia s central bank

4 Min Read LONDON, April 22 (Reuters) - Russia’s central bank will meet on Friday to set interest rates with more than one third of analysts now expecting inflation pressures and rising geopolitical tensions to prompt policymakers into a 50 basis point rate hike. About two thirds of analysts are sticking to earlier forecasts of a 25 bps rate hike to 4.75%. Here are some key questions being asked by markets: 1/WHAT ROLE WILL GEOPOLITICS PLAY? Russian markets are no strangers to geopolitics, but Washington’s latest sanctions targeting local sovereign debt send a message about what options are on the table and more might come.

UPDATE 2-Belize and its Superbond holders clash over IMF help

Belize's bid for its fifth debt restructuring in 15 years is threatening to turn sour as holders of its so-called 'Superbond' urged it to agree to an IMF programme, while the government accused the creditors of cancelling a planned Zoom call.

Suriname bondholders threaten to reinstate payments over IMF agreement

3 Min Read LONDON (Reuters) - Suriname Eurobond creditors accused the government on Friday of breaching its obligation of negotiating its debt overhaul in good faith and threatened to reinstate payments they previously agreed to defer. Suriname, battling high inflation and the economic fallout of the coronavirus pandemic, accused the bondholder committee of making false statements and urged it to “reconsider this ill-informed course of action.” Creditors last month agreed to defer payments on $675 million in bonds, but on Friday said Suriname had not allowed them sufficient participation in a $690 million staff-level financing deal with the International Monetary Fund. “The committee believes that Suriname has already breached its obligation to negotiate in good faith, as required by the terms of the Eurobonds,” the creditors said in a statement.

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