CARACAS/NEW YORK (Reuters) - Venezuela’s cash-strapped government insisted it had successfully begun efforts to refinance some $60 billion in bonds, though creditors disagreed following fruitless talks and a ratings firm declared the nation in selective default.

Venezuelan bonds slid on Tuesday after S&P Global Ratings announced that Venezuela was in selective default for failing to make $200 million in overdue coupon payments on its 2019 and 2024 global issues within a 30-day grace period.

Investors, meanwhile, voiced concern after President Nicolas Maduro’s negotiators met briefly with bondholders in Caracas on Monday but failed to present firm proposals to alleviate the OPEC nation’s crippling foreign debt amid an unprecedented economic meltdown.

“The process of refinancing Venezuela’s foreign debt began with resounding success,” the socialist government said late Monday, complaining about U.S. financial sanctions and what it called unfair assessments from international ratings agencies.

The government repeated pledges to honor all its foreign debt and said Monday’s talks were attended by 100 or so participants, including bondholders from Venezuela, the United States, Panama, Britain, Colombia, Chile, Japan and Argentina.

However, attendees at the meeting came away confused over how Venezuela plans to avoid a default, given its parlous state finances, and how any refinancing could be worked out amid U.S. President Donald Trump’s sanctions.

The U.S. measures block the issuance of any new Venezuelan debt and impose sanctions on the country’s chief negotiators, Vice President Tareck El Aissami and Economy Minister Simon Zerpa, on drug and corruption charges.

Venezuela has dismissed those accusations as politically motivated fabrications by Washington to tarnish the country’s reputation.

“The bondholder meeting in Venezuela was a non-event, lasting only 20-30 minutes with reports of only 10 non Caracas-based investors...and the only official that spoke was drug kingpin VP Tareck El Aissami” said Siobhan Morden, head of Latin American fixed-income strategy at Nomura, who did not attend.

Four years of recession in the South American nation, fueled by failing socialist economics and a plunge in global oil prices, have hit Venezuelans hard. Many skip meals or suffer from malnutrition and preventable diseases, due to severe shortages of food and medicine and triple-digit inflation.

With some $9 billion in payments looming for 2018, a default would be a short-term relief for the government, enabling Maduro to spend on desperately-needed food and medicine imports ahead of next year’s presidential election.

But that strategy could also backfire if it sparks aggressive legal challenges from abroad, including moves to seize assets of state oil company PDVSA, [PDVSA.UL] which is the cash-cow for Venezuela’s socialist system.

RATINGS AGENCIES CHIDE VENEZUELA

Despite concern that U.S. sanctions could prevent Venezuela hiring advisors, the government has appointed lawyer David Syed - a former partner at Orrick, Herrington & Sutcliffe - to advise it, working alongside a team at global law firm Dentons, according to IFR, a Thomson Reuters news service.

On another flank of the country’s creditworthiness, a committee of the International Swaps and Derivatives Association (ISDA) is looking into whether PDVSA triggered a credit event through late payment of its 2017N bond this month.

The group said it would reconvene on Thursday to continue discussions of whether or not PDVSA was in default.

ISDA also said on Tuesday it had received another request from investors as to whether Venezuela had triggered a credit event due to the late payment of the coupon on its sovereign bonds.

Venezuela's President Nicolas Maduro speaks during a meeting with ministers in Caracas, Venezuela November 6, 2017. Miraflores Palace/Handout via REUTERS/Files

Bondholders had told Reuters on Monday they had not yet received payments on the 2019 and 2024 bonds but were unconcerned about the delay, which they said was partly due to increased bank vigilance following the U.S. sanctions.

In its statement on Monday, S&P Global Ratings said it could raise Venezuela’s ratings again if the government made payments on the overdue coupons and remained timely on other payments before the restructuring is completed.

However, it said it saw a one-in-two chance that Venezuela could default again within the next three months and it listed a further four bonds with overdue coupon payments due in the coming weeks, with unpaid obligations totaling $420 million.

The Luxembourg Stock Exchange said on Tuesday said it was temporarily halting trading of Venezuela’s 2019 and 2024 bonds due to the “event of default” in order to make changes to the way in which the securities are traded.

Fitch Ratings also downgraded PDVSA due to “payment default” on notes due on Oct. 27 and Nov. 2 after “processing delays that resulted in bondholders receiving principal payments up to one week after the due date.”

Venezuela's sovereign bonds, already the most distressed in the benchmark JPMorgan Emerging Markets Bond Index Plus (EMBI+) 11EMJ, have whipsawed over the past week.

The index measures the spreads of 13 Venezuelan sovereign bonds versus benchmark U.S. Treasuries.

Last week, as the Caracas talks loomed, investors bought Venezuela’s bonds on speculation there might be progress in finding a solution, driving a 1,095 basis-point narrowing in spreads from Nov. 7 through Monday.

However, on Tuesday, spreads ballooned by 714 basis points as investors dumped Venezuelan bonds.

(For a graphic on 'Venezuela's economy' click tmsnrt.rs/2pPJdRb)