Officials said they plan to submit a proposal later this month, which they hope will finally provide a resolution to the long-running financial crisis.
Talks between bondholders and representatives of the new government of President Mauricio Macri, who has pledged to reform and revitalize the Argentine economy, opened in Manhattan under the guidance of the court-appointed mediator Daniel Pollack yesterday.
"We'll be presenting Argentina's proposal during the week of Monday, January 25 to Pollack and to the holdout firms" Luis Caputo, an official representing Buenos Aires said at the close of five hours of negotiations on the first day of talks.
The leaders of the so-called "holdout" group, the hedge funds NML Capital and Aurelius Capital Management, bought up Argentine debt cheaply around the time of the default and over the next decade refused to join 93 per cent of bondholders in restructuring the debt.
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Speaking in Buenos Aires yesterday, Argentine Economy Minister Alfonso Prat-Gay said the South American country would negotiate "with toughness" but was committed to finding an agreement.
"We will tell the mediator that there has been a change, another vision for our debts and how to stop being a defaulter and to resolve the pending issues," Macri said.
To the great dismay of Argentina and its restructured bondholders, NML and Aurelius won a New York court judgment in 2012 that ordered Argentina to repay the full value of their bonds.
The court said, moreover, that Buenos Aires could not make payments on the restructured bonds without first paying off in full the two hedge funds. And it forbade banks from handling any other bond payments before the hedge funds were paid.
Kirchner's government refused, and talks on an ostensible compromise went nowhere.
The two hedge funds hold about USD 1.3 billion worth of bonds, whose accrued value is now about USD 1.7 billion.