"PIMCO — given its fiduciary duty to its clients — has engaged with U.S. Treasury to express some of those key consequences of Russia defaulting," a spokesman for the Newport Beach, Calif.-based firm said in a statement.
Russia has argued it's fulfilled all obligations even as its bond payments are stuck on their path to foreign investors by tighter U.S. and European Union sanctions. That's left fund managers that own the country's foreign debt in an awkward position — making the case for payments that ultimately flow to their clients while running the risk of appearing to tell governments to relax their response to a conflict that's already cost thousands of lives.
A representative for the Office of Foreign Assets Control of the U.S. Department of the Treasury declined to comment on any discussions with PIMCO about Russian sanctions.
The U.S. Treasury stepped up financial sanctions further last week on Russia by barring investors from buying the country's debt in the secondary market. The new rules mean U.S. firms can hold or sell Russian corporate or sovereign debt, but can't purchase it. J.P. Morgan Chase and Goldman Sachs Group are withdrawing from handling trades of Russian debt following the move, Bloomberg reported this week.
The ban comes as Russia tries to avoid a sovereign default on foreign currency debt by finding a way around sanctions that are preventing it getting money to bondholders. Two payments of about $100 million in total due May 27 are stuck at Euroclear Bank. Meanwhile, a missed interest payment has triggered all of Russia's outstanding credit default swaps, which covered a net $1.5 billion of Russian debt as of the end of last month.
Money managers have spent months pouring over the legal fine print in Russia's debt documentation to understand what might constitute a default. Despite the technicalities, there's little doubt Russia is at risk of sliding into its first external bond default since the aftermath of the 1917 revolution.