By Matt Wirz And Christopher Whittall 

A bid by two global banks to sell bonds for Argentina in London collapsed, delivering a fresh setback to the cash-strapped South American nation amid a long-running feud with creditors.

Deutsche Bank AG and J.P. Morgan Chase & Co. approached bond fund managers on Wednesday to gauge interest in an auction of the country's debt in London, people familiar with the matter said. The banks believed they had found a way to sell Argentine bonds without running afoul of a U.S. court ruling last year, the people said.

The banks suspended the plans Thursday after legal action taken by a group of creditors who have been battling with Argentina for payment on defaulted bonds. Late Wednesday, the U.S. District Judge in the case, Thomas Griesa, ordered an emergency hearing to discuss the proposed London sale.

The sale would have been the first of its kind outside Argentina since the country defaulted in 2001, and would have helped it replenish dwindling foreign-currency reserves. It isn't clear whether the banks had an official mandate from Argentina, which has been fielding bond sale proposals from banks for over a year.

A spokeswoman for Argentina's Economy Ministry said the government studies all debt-issuance proposals submitted to it that in accordance with Argentine law.

The developments show that "Argentina will find it extremely difficult to use international banks to help it raise funds and will likely not be able to issue new local-law bonds to foreign investors," said Jane Brauer, an emerging markets analyst at Bank of America Corp.

Though short-lived, Argentina's latest attempt to borrow outside its borders marks a new phase in the cat-and-mouse game it has been playing with some creditors for years.

Judge Griesa ruled in June that Argentina cannot pay holders of its restructured debt until it pays a group of hedge funds known collectively as holdout creditors. They own bonds that Argentina defaulted on in 2001 and are seeking repayment; they have refused to participate in the country's 2005 and 2010 debt restructurings.

The judge said anyone that helped Argentina pay other bondholders would be in contempt of court. As a result, bond trustees and payment-clearing firms have been reluctant to pass along payments from Argentina to restructured bondholders. Analysts said the ruling also would likely limit the participation of global banks in Argentine bond sales.

Investors have snapped up Argentine bonds in recent months, effectively wagering that Argentina will soon find a way around last year's ruling by Judge Griesa or that the country will settle with the holdout creditors after general elections scheduled for October.

The yield of Argentina's dollar bonds that mature in 2024 has fallen to 7.86% this week from 10.48% in December, according to FactSet. Yields fall when prices rise.

A successful sale of new bonds in international markets would give Argentina the upper hand in the long-running legal battle with the holdouts, led by hedge funds Elliott Management Corp. and Aurelius Capital Management LP.

Lawyers working for Deutsche Bank and J.P. Morgan crafted the new bond sale in a way they thought would conform to Judge Griesa's directives, according to people familiar with the matter.

On Wednesday the banks' salespeople approached fund managers to gauge interest in a new bond to be issued in London through an auction format, according to investors who received sales pitches. The new debt would have been issued by reopening a pre-existing bond governed by Argentine law rather than U.S. law.

Elliott first subpoenaed Deutsche Bank and J.P. Morgan about a planned $2 billion bond sale for Argentina on Feb. 9 but they failed to respond, prompting Judge Griesa this week to force them to comply.

The banks are now in a holding pattern to see whether the judge will agree that their plan doesn't violate his earlier ruling blocking bond payments. No deal had officially been launched and the plans were at an early stage, people familiar with the matter said.

Elliott said through a spokesman Wednesday that it was "dismayed" that Deutsche Bank and J.P. Morgan were participating in the attempted deal.

Some of the investor optimism comes from lawsuits challenging Judge Griesa's ruling filed in Belgium and the U.K. by other hedge funds that in August held about EUR1.3 billion ($1.48 billion) of euro-denominated bonds Argentina issued in exchange for bonds it defaulted on over the past decade.

Argentina tried to pay at least EUR226 million on its euro-denominated bonds last year but Bank of New York Mellon Corp. and Euroclear PLC, the trustee and clearing house administering the payments, refused to transfer the funds because of Judge Griesa's order.

The hedge funds, including Knighthead Master Fund and George Soros's Quantum Partners, won a victory on Feb. 13 when the London Chancery Court ruled the bonds are governed by U.K. law and that Bank of New York Mellon's obligations as trustee "are unaffected" by the U.S. court decision. They are seeking a similar ruling for Euroclear in Belgium, where the clearing house is based.

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