Markets · Credit
Key Facts
—The new players. The activist investor Elliott and the credit firm SVP Global have bought into Braskem’s debt.
—The target. Braskem is Latin America’s largest petrochemical maker, and it is racing to restructure a heavy debt load.
—The clock. The company faces about $150 million of bond interest in July that it would rather not pay.
—The threshold. To file its plan out of court, Braskem needs at least a third of its creditors on side.
—The twist. Specialist distressed-debt funds rarely buy in just to wave a plan through.
—The backdrop. Braskem’s state-linked shareholder Petrobras has made clear it will not ride to the rescue.
A fresh twist in the Elliott Braskem debt story has tough new negotiators at the table: two specialist funds have quietly bought into the petrochemical giant’s borrowings just as it pleads with creditors for breathing room.
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What the Elliott Braskem debt move means
Two of the world’s most prominent distressed-debt investors have bought into Braskem, the Brazilian petrochemical company now scrambling to restructure its borrowings. According to Bloomberg, Elliott Investment Management and SVP Global recently acquired pieces of the company’s debt.
The purchases were specific. The funds bought portions of Braskem’s revolving credit line from existing lenders, and Elliott also built up holdings in the company’s international bonds.
None of the parties would comment. But the move matters because of who Elliott is: a famously combative investor best known in the region for chasing Argentina through the courts for years over defaulted bonds.
Why these buyers change the game
Funds like Elliott and SVP specialise in buying the debt of troubled companies cheaply, then pushing hard for the best possible terms. They do not typically buy in simply to nod a rescue plan through.
That is awkward timing for Braskem. Its new owners are asking creditors for patience rather than a write-down, and the arrival of tough negotiators on the other side of the table makes that ask harder.
The plan on the table is mild by restructuring standards. It would stretch out when debts come due, lower the interest paid along the way and grant long grace periods, but it stops short of forcing losses on lenders or wiping out debt.
Live Company IntelligenceBuys Into Braskem’s Debt, Raising the Stakes in Its Rescue — the full investor dossierInside: live share price, peer benchmarks and the latest Rio Times coverage on the company.
Rio Times · Live Ticker Intelligence
Buys Into Braskem’s Debt, Raising the Stakes in Its Rescue
BRKM5 · B3 São Paulo
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R$7.50
▼ -0.13% today
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PETR4 · Petrobras
▼ -0.13%
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The deadline driving everything
A calendar is forcing the pace. Braskem faces roughly $150 million of interest on its international bonds in July, money the company has signalled it does not intend to pay as it negotiates.
Under Brazilian law, a company can restructure out of court if enough lenders agree, binding the holdouts. Braskem needs the backing of at least a third of its creditors to file, and it wants the deal in shape before that July payment lands.
That is exactly the kind of threshold where a determined debt buyer can gain leverage. By owning a meaningful slice, a fund can press for sweeteners or slow the process down.
No state safety net this time
What makes this fight unusual is the missing backstop. Braskem is part-owned by Petrobras, the Brazilian state oil company, and creditors long assumed that link meant the government would never let it fail.
That assumption is now gone. People close to the talks say Petrobras will not inject fresh capital or pledge assets, leaving the new private-equity controllers to strike a deal on the company’s own merits.
For lenders weighing the restructuring, that removes a comforting cushion. It also helps explain why distressed specialists see an opening worth buying into.
Why it matters beyond Brazil
Braskem is no ordinary company. It is one of the largest corporate bond issuers in Latin American credit markets and a key supplier of the plastics that feed packaging, construction and consumer goods across the region.
Its troubles run deep. The company posted a net loss of nearly eleven billion reais last year, carries tens of billions in debt, and still faces huge clean-up costs from a geological disaster at its salt-mining operations in the northeastern city of Maceió.
A Mexican joint venture adds to the strain. That unit is running its own parallel restructuring under United States bankruptcy law, and because the parent supports it financially, trouble there can rebound on the business in Brazil.
How its restructuring plays out will set a template for other distressed cases where the state declines to step in. With activist money now on the creditor side, the coming weeks will test whether a quiet, lender-friendly deal is still possible, or whether the fight gets messier.
Frequently Asked Questions
What did Elliott and SVP buy?
According to Bloomberg, the two funds bought portions of Braskem’s revolving credit facility from existing lenders, and Elliott also accumulated holdings in the company’s international bonds. The purchases position them to influence Braskem’s restructuring negotiations.
Why is Braskem restructuring its debt?
Braskem has been hit by years of weak global petrochemical prices and heavy liabilities, leaving it with a large debt load and thin cash. Its new owners want to stretch maturities and cut interest to buy time, and it faces about $150 million of bond interest in July.
Will Petrobras bail Braskem out?
No. People close to the talks say Petrobras, which holds a large stake, will not inject fresh capital or pledge assets, removing the implicit state backstop creditors once assumed and leaving the restructuring to stand on the company’s own finances.
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