A preliminary agreement between Iceland and creditors of three failed banks could pave the way to a resolution of one of the most popular bets for U.S. hedge funds to come out of the financial crisis.

Iceland's government on Monday announced deals with steering committees representing creditors of three banks that foundered in November 2010. The agreements hinged on turning over some of the banks' money and assets to Iceland's populist government, while leaving large enough recoveries for the hedge funds, some of which have held the debt for years. Under the draft restructurings, creditors of Kaupthing Bank hf, Glitnir Bank hf and LBI hf would be repaid with combinations of cash, new bonds and bank shares.

The steering committee for Kaupthing includes Abrams Capital Management LP, Centerbridge Partners LP, Och-Ziff Capital Management Group, Taconic Capital Advisors LP and York Capital Management, a person familiar with the matter said. The leaders of the Glitner creditor group include Davidson Kempner Capital Management and Silver Point Capital LP, according to people familiar with the matter.

The steering groups comprised some of the largest holders of the bank debt, who signed confidentiality agreements and accepted trading restrictions during negotiations, the people familiar with the matter said. The plans are now being presented to all creditors who must ultimately vote on them.

The government is pressuring creditors to agree by threatening to apply a 39% exit tax to creditors not participating in the state-sanctioned agreements. If creditors ratify the restructuring they can expect to pay about half that amount to the government, a person involved in the talks said.

At least 70 hedge funds not involved in the negotiations hold Icelandic bank claims and most of them are still analyzing the complex restructuring proposals. Prices of the claims rose about one-and-a-half percentage points on the announcement with Glitnir claims quoted at 35.25% of face value and Kaupthing euro-denominated claims quoted at 25.25%, a trader said.

Hedge funds that specialize in distressed debt snapped up Icelandic bank claims as early as 2010 when the country's banking system collapsed. While other casualties of the financial crisis were eventually liquidated or bailed out, and creditors were repaid, Iceland's insolvent banks remained in the limbo created by the island nation's capital controls.

Some large hedge funds such as Elliott Management Corp. and Paulson & Co. Inc. bought into the claims, then sold some or all of their holdings as Iceland's government refused to negotiate directly with creditors and waged a publicity campaign against them.

The glacial pace of restructuring thawed about seven months ago, when the governmental task forces assigned to the bank workouts began regular talks with lawyers and financial advisers to the hedge funds, according to a person familiar with the matter. The government became more focused on a resolution as momentum grew domestically to release the capital controls that had been dampening economic growth.

A breakthrough in negotiations came in May when the Kaupthing creditor committee proposed a plan that set the framework for the ultimate agreement, people familiar with the matter say.

Write to Matt Wirz at matthieu.wirz@wsj.com

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