The Emperor's Old Bonds

M. Chen, Charlie Fendrych, Andres Paciuc
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Abstract

Tracy Alloway’s recent article in Bloomberg has suggested that Trump’s trade war may finally provide relief to American holders of defaulted, pre-1950s Chinese bonds. Here, we examine the hurdles set before these bondholders, namely establishing jurisdiction over the People’s Republic of China as sovereign and the long-lapsed statute of limitations. We also evaluate the Chinese government’s possible recourse. The key takeaways from our investigation: To establish jurisdiction in the U.S., the bond must be denominated in U.S. Dollars or state a place of performance within the country. To overcome the long-expired statute of limitations, and win an equitable remedy, it must be shown that the PRC not only violated an absolute priority or pari passu clause, but also that they are a “uniquely recalcitrant” debtor. Finally, despite China’s commitment to the odious debt doctrine, the doctrine is unlikely to provide meaningful legal protection in the event of an otherwise successful suit. Overall, it is a difficult suit to bring, but through our investigations we have discovered one issue in particular which holds the greatest danger — or perhaps the greatest promise: the 1919 Gold Bond.
皇帝的旧债券
特蕾西·阿洛韦(Tracy Alloway)最近在彭博社(Bloomberg)发表的一篇文章表明,特朗普的贸易战可能最终会让持有20世纪50年代以前违约的中国债券的美国人松一口气。在这里,我们研究了这些债券持有人面临的障碍,即建立对中华人民共和国的主权管辖权和长期失效的诉讼时效。我们还评估了中国政府可能采取的措施。我们的调查得出的关键结论是:要在美国建立管辖权,债券必须以美元计价或在美国境内写明履约地点。为了克服过期已久的诉讼时效,并赢得公平救济,必须证明中华人民共和国不仅违反了绝对优先权或同等权益条款,而且他们是一个“独特的顽固”债务人。最后,尽管中国坚持可恶的债务原则,但在诉讼成功的情况下,这一原则不太可能提供有意义的法律保护。总的来说,这是一场很难提起的诉讼,但通过我们的调查,我们发现了一个特别的问题,它蕴含着最大的危险,也可能是最大的希望:1919年的黄金债券。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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