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Recent episodes
Ep 177 - Is it Finally Time to Restructure Venezuela’s Debt?
Jun 15, 2026
Unknown duration
Ep 176 - 1917 Tsarist Bonds
Jun 1, 2026
34m 41s
Ep 175 - The Most Amazing Revolution
May 18, 2026
38m 39s
Ep 174 - Something Black in the Lentils
May 11, 2026
39m 31s
Ep 173 - Foreign Civil War Entanglements
Apr 27, 2026
37m 03s
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| Date | Episode | Topics | Guests | Brands | Places | Keywords | Sponsor | Length | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 6/15/26 | ![]() Ep 177 - Is it Finally Time to Restructure Venezuela’s Debt? | Is it Finally Time to Restructure Venezuela’s Debt? Ever since Venezuela was allowed to hire advisors on its debt restructuring, rumors have been swirling about whether the restructuring might be attempted even before an IMF Debt Sustainability Analysis. Such a scenario is plausible, given the current context. But is it good for the Venezuelan people? Hell no. This is potentially going to be the most complicated debt restructuring in history. And it is going to be done without the involvement of the only competent institution (despite our frequent criticisms of it) in this space? In prior eras, we’d count on the US Treasury Department to insist on IMF oversight and active involvement. But can we count on that today? Producer: Leanna Doty | — | ||||||
| 6/1/26 | ![]() Ep 176 - 1917 Tsarist Bonds✨ | Tsarist bondslegal claims+3 | — | RussiaTsarist bonds | Venezuela | Tsarist bondslegal claims+3 | — | 34m 41s | |
| 5/18/26 | ![]() Ep 175 - The Most Amazing Revolution✨ | international debtBolshevik takeover+3 | — | United States government | Russia | Bolsheviksinternational debt+5 | — | 38m 39s | |
| 5/11/26 | ![]() Ep 174 - Something Black in the Lentils✨ | legal implicationsSenegal+5 | — | TRSSenegalese yield curve | Senegal | Senegalyield curve+5 | — | 39m 31s | |
| 4/27/26 | ![]() Ep 173 - Foreign Civil War Entanglements✨ | foreign civil warsU.S. foreign policy+4 | — | U.S.U.S.-supported side | — | foreign civil warsU.S. support+4 | — | 37m 03s | |
| 4/13/26 | ![]() Ep 172 - If Only YPF’s Bylaws Had Been Governed by Texas Law✨ | YPF caseSecond Circuit decision+4 | — | YPF | TexasArgentina | YPFSecond Circuit+5 | — | 37m 05s | |
| 3/9/26 | ![]() Ep 171 - The $500 Million American “Financial Aid” to China✨ | financial aidChina+3 | — | United StatesNationalist government | — | financial aidChina+6 | — | 40m 18s | |
| 2/23/26 | ![]() Ep 170 - Ethiopia and Senegal: Debt Shenanigans?✨ | sovereign debtEthiopia+3 | — | BOADChina | EthiopiaSenegal | debtEthiopia+5 | — | 31m 01s | |
| 2/2/26 | ![]() Ep 169 - Can We Say Anything Meaningful About a Venezuelan Debt Restructuring?✨ | debt restructuringVenezuela+4 | — | oilIMF | VenezuelaWashington DC+1 | Venezueladebt restructuring+5 | — | 43m 11s | |
| 1/12/26 | ![]() Ep 168 - Are CACs Unilateral Modification Clauses?✨ | collective action clausessovereign bonds+4 | — | Leanna Dotycollective action clause+3 | — | collective action clausesovereign bonds+5 | — | 40m 45s | |
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| 1/5/26 | ![]() Ep 167 - Will the Flip Clause Enter the Canon?✨ | sovereign debtcontract innovation+3 | — | New York legislatureFlip Clause | — | flip clausesovereign debt+3 | — | 33m 35s | |
| 12/1/25 | ![]() Ep 166 - Imperial (Defaulted) Chinese Bonds (Again)✨ | Imperial Chinese bondsdefaulted bonds+3 | — | Trump administrationDC federal courts | — | Imperial Chinese bondsdefaulted bonds+3 | — | 31m 31s | |
| 11/24/25 | ![]() Ep 165 - Total Return Swaps✨ | Total Return Swapscredit to governments+4 | — | Total Return SwapsAngola | — | Total Return Swapscredit+4 | — | 29m 37s | |
| 11/10/25 | ![]() Ep 164 - Cambodia’s “Dirty Debts” to the US — Redux✨ | CambodiaUS foreign policy+4 | — | Khmer RougePL-480+1 | CambodiaUS | dirty debtsCambodia+7 | — | 45m 07s | |
| 10/20/25 | ![]() Ep 163 - What if POTUS wanted an OBBD? | What if POTUS wanted an OBBD? Let us say, purely hypothetically, that there is a point at which some combination of the spending excesses of the One Big Beautiful Bill, the government shutdown, a rejection by the Supreme Court of tariff mania, and more, result in a shortfall of revenues for the current administration. And let us also say that POTUS goes to his brains trust to ask how best to do an OBBD/R (One Big Beautiful Default/Restructuring). What path might the brains trust take? And what about the option of taxing the treasury holdings of foreign governments, which the administration has already signaled its interest in? Producer: Leanna Doty | — | ||||||
| 10/6/25 | ![]() Ep 162 - The Invasion Tax | The Invasion Tax The lawsuit over Ukraine's $3 billion bond debt to Russia seems to be on hold (maybe forever) in the English courts. And maybe there is no way for the Russian government to force repayment. Still, the debt is a minor cloud hanging (along with many bigger ones) over Ukraine. It would be nice if there was a way to make it go away permanently. Might there be? We talk about a common provision in a sovereign bond's Taxation section — we aren't sure how common, but it certainly isn't unique to Ukraine — that lets the issuer tax investors who have a connection to it other than simply holding its bonds. As written, this provision would allow Ukraine to impose a 100% tax on bond payments to Russia. This may not be what the drafters had in mind, and it opens the door to some unsavory tax shenanigans, but an Invasion Tax doesn't seem too objectionable. Also: "Whatever it takes" means "whatever it takes!" Except when it means something else. Producer: Leanna Doty | — | ||||||
| 9/29/25 | ![]() Ep 161 - Argentina Again | Argentina Again The Trump administration says it will do “whatever it takes” to rescue the Argentine peso and bond yields, saving buddy Javier Milei from electoral disaster. We do not think the U.S. Treasury can simply dole out money to Milei. If the administration does not want to go to Congress for permission (it generally does not), and if the Mexican bailouts of 1982 and 1995 are indicators, the U.S. Treasury will ask the Argentines to provide collateral of some sort. (The Falklands, maybe?) If so, holders of Argentine sovereign bonds might wonder whether they are entitled to some collateral too. Sovereign bonds have negative pledge clauses, which generally prevent the borrower from creating new secured debt without securing bondholders on equivalent terms. So, we looked at some of the negative pledge clauses in Argentine bonds. They are weird, but don't seem very protective. These are beautiful clauses, folks, BEAUTIFUL. Looks like the U.S. gets collateral, bondholders don't. Total disaster for them! Producer: Leanna Doty | — | ||||||
| 6/23/25 | ![]() Ep 160 - Ukraine's Expansive "Fiscal Laws" Clause | Ukraine's Expansive "Fiscal Laws" Clause International sovereign bonds, and particularly those issued under English law, often include a clause providing that payments are subject to the applicable "fiscal and other laws." Usually, the clause makes clear this refers to fiscal laws in the “place of payment” (e.g., Luxembourg). Separately, international bonds also provide that, if the issuer imposes any taxes on bond payments, it must "gross up" payments to foreign investors, so the tax does not reduce their payments. Together, the two clauses usually immunize foreign investors from taxes imposed by the issuer but leave room for taxes imposed by the place of payment. Ukraine's bonds are different. They seem to leave room for Ukraine to impose its own "fiscal" law on payments. Arguably, they leave investors subject even to local laws that aren't fiscal in nature. Might this be a source of leverage for the country in its negotiations with GDP warrant holders, who have so far refused to make concessions in restructuring talks? Producer: Leanna Doty | — | ||||||
| 6/10/25 | ![]() Ep 159 - The Greek GDP Warrant Drama | The Greek GDP Warrant Drama Greece’s debt situation has improved remarkably, from default status in 2012 to investment grade in 2025. A few weeks ago though, Bloomberg reported on a brewing drama with the GDP warrants that were offered to investors in the brutal 2012 restructuring. Apparently, Greece has elected to exercise its right to call the warrants, and holders are yelling bloody murder at the low price at which Greece says it is entitled to buy. Every side has lawyered up and claims the other side is acting unreasonably. We speculate wildly on what might actually be going on and what is likely to happen. Producer: Leanna Doty | — | ||||||
| 5/28/25 | ![]() Ep 158 - Some Questions, Now That it's About 3 Years Since Russia’s Default | Some Questions, Now That it's About 3 Years Since Russia’s Default It has now been around 3 years since Russia’s invasion of Ukraine, which prompted EU and US sanctions and a default on Russia’s external bonds. The prescription clause in these bonds says that Russia’s obligations become void unless investors make claims within three years of the date payment is due. What does it mean to “make” a “claim”? Filing a lawsuit would do the trick. What about an email requesting payment? An automated message, which the depository sends out every payment date? Should bondholders have sought an agreement tolling the prescription period? Since they didn't, does Russia now have what amounts to an option to pay past due amounts? And what about interest on unpaid amounts? Does Russia owe interest on payments that were impossible to make due to sanctions? Producer: Leanna Doty | — | ||||||
| 5/12/25 | ![]() Ep 157 - Sovereign Debt Odd & Ends | Sovereign Debt Odd & Ends An odds and ends podcast about unrelated sovereign debt topics. First up, Venezuela. Most investors have been sitting around waiting for an eventual restructuring and lifting of US sanctions. But a handful of funds sued early, got judgments, and have spent years trying unsuccessfully to collect. If they had succeeded, they would have recovered much more than similarly-situated creditors who waited around for a restructuring deal. But they failed and, in a bizarre twist, have asked the court to vacate their judgments, effectively returning them to the creditor queue. We cry foul. Next up, another fiscally-irresponsible and increasingly author ... well, it's the United States. We discuss the crazy (and terrifying) idea that the US might unilaterally extend the maturities of government debt. Producer: Leanna Doty | — | ||||||
| 4/28/25 | ![]() Ep 156 - Is There Any Law of State Succession? (ft. Paul Stephan) | Is There Any Law of State Succession? Syria, Ukraine and Greenland The law of state succession to obligations comes mostly from a different era, when war and conquest were legal and borders changed with some frequency. Today, we are faced with multiple situations where borders might change due to war. Does the law tell us what happens to the debts attributable to the acquired territory? And how do we translate legal rules that evolved in the 18th and 19th centuries into the modern era? Paul Stephan (Virginia), one of the foremost international law experts, joins us to discuss. Producer: Leanna Doty | — | ||||||
| 3/30/25 | ![]() Ep 155 - What if Trump Discovers that Unpaid UK (and French) Debt From WWI? | What if Trump Discovers that Unpaid UK (and French) Debt From WWI? The current administration has tossed concepts such as “special relationships” with allies out the window. The administration seems willing to apply just about any leverage it has to obtain concessions from allies, including concessions that might reduce the US debt. Seen in that light, what will happen when Trump and the Musketeers discover that the UK and France have hundred-year old unpaid debts? With interest, that unpaid debt would now amount to a few trillion dollars. Enforcing these debts would be near impossible, except that the UK and France own a whole bunch of US Treasuries. Could the administration try to force a swap of those Treasuries into longer term obligations? Or try to use the US government's claims against the UK and France as a setoff, reducing payments on US debt held by those governments? Seems loony. But loony is normal these days. Producer: Leanna Doty | — | ||||||
| 3/23/25 | ![]() Ep 154 - What Might a Syrian Debt Restructuring (Eventually) Look Like? | What Might a Syrian Debt Restructuring (Eventually) Look Like? There is little doubt that Syria needs to restructure its debt, among other reasons to pave the way for rebuilding after a long and brutal civil war. It strikes us as too early to envision what that process will look like, but we can identify some of the key issues. The country owes a lot to official creditors, especially Iran and Russia. Much of this was off-books and was used for the military or otherwise to support former President Bashar al-Assad's repressive regime. Not surprisingly, we are already hearing the term "odious debt" raised to suggest these debts need not be repaid; there may be a separate doctrine allowing repudiation of certain war-related debts. We talk about whether these (arguable) doctrines of international law have any relevance here and about the potential role of the U.S. in a debt restructuring. Producer: Leanna Doty | — | ||||||
| 3/16/25 | ![]() Ep 153 - User Fees on the US Treasury Strategic Gold Crypto Reserve | User Fees on the US Treasury Strategic Gold Crypto Reserve Trump plans to reduce the US debt. We are missing some of the steps, but here are the ones we have identified so far: 1. Golden passports 2. Tariffs 3. Maybe not tariffs 4. Okay, tariffs 5. Something about gold 6. User fee on treasuries 7. Crypto 8. ??? We speculate about what we are missing. Maybe it’s a red Tesla? Producer: Leanna Doty | — | ||||||
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