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Southcross Energy: Parent Company May File for Bankruptcy

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Natural gas pipeline company Southcross Energy Partners LP said that its parent, Southcross Holdings LP, has reached a restructuring deal "in principle" with its owners, lenders and others, that would be implemented under chapter 11, Reuters reported yesterday. The restructuring is contingent upon, among other things, final documentation and necessary approvals, Southcross Energy said. About 40 oil and gas producers across the globe have filed for bankruptcy since oil prices began to decline in late 2014, and up to a third of all energy companies may fail unless prices recover.
 
Will exploration and production hit bottom in 2016? Be sure to attend ABI's Annual Spring Meeting in Washington, D.C., from April 14-17, as a panel of experts will be addressing this topic. Register today!
 
Get a better understanding of what happens when an oil, gas or other natural resources company goes bankrupt with ABI’s When Gushers Go Dry: The Essentials of Oil & Gas Bankruptcy.

 

Port Trucker Files for Bankruptcy Protection

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One of Southern California's largest port trucking companies has filed for bankruptcy after losing several legal battles with independent-contractor drivers who claimed they should be treated as full-time employees, Nasdaq reported yesterday. Premium Transportation Services Inc., which is known locally as Total Transportation Services Inc. (TTSI), filed for chapter 11 protection in federal court in Delaware. The company said that "downward pricing pressure from some of its major clients over the past year" along with mounting costs of litigation with independent drivers had proven more than it could manage. TTSI has lost nearly a dozen misclassification claims before the California Labor Commission and 14 lawsuits in state court, which together amounted to roughly $3.5 million in awards and damages. Legal fees for those cases, along with several other lawsuits currently proceeding before the commission and the courts, have cost the trucking company an additional $4 million.

Please Touch Museum Is Out of Bankruptcy

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Philadelphia-based Please Touch Museum, driven into bankruptcy by $60 million in debt used to pay for its 2008 move to Memorial Hall in Fairmount Park, won a judge's blessing Wednesday to shed that debt for a payment of $11.25 million, the Philadelphia Inquirer reported today. "It is a great burden lifted for the organization," said Patricia Wellenbach, who had been an adviser to Please Touch since November and will become chief executive when it formally exits bankruptcy, likely early next week. The tax-exempt children's museum, which will celebrate its 40th anniversary this fall, raised $5.75 million from donors and the remainder out of reserves from the museum's 2006 bond sale. In all, the museum has raised $7.86 million since filing for bankruptcy protection in September. The William Penn Foundation provided $1.3 million, the Neubauer Family Foundation $1 million, and the Hamilton Family Foundation $350,000. The largest donation was $3.25 million from an anonymous individual. To persuade foundations and philanthropists to contribute, Wellenbach had to sell them on the possibility of rejuvenating the institution for new generations of children. As part of the bankruptcy resolution, Please Touch will pay about $150,000 to lawyers and other professionals involved in the bankruptcy and $380,000 to unsecured creditors.

Tribune Publishing Buys Orange County Register

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Chicago-based Tribune Publishing, which already owns the Los Angeles Times and the Chicago Tribune, has purchased the Orange County Register in a winning bankruptcy bid, Crain’s Business reported today. The Register's parent, Freedom Communications, has been reorganizing under a chapter 11 filing. As part of that process, Tribune provided financing to keep Freedom operating while it is in bankruptcy, with an eye to buying the company. Tribune Publishing has agreed to pay $56 million in cash for Freedom Communications and its owned real estate in Santa Ana and Riverside, Calif. The deal is subject to the bankruptcy court approval in a hearing scheduled for March 21.

Coal's ‘Last Man Standing’ Dragged to the Brink of Bankruptcy

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Peabody Energy Corp., the nation’s biggest miner, is on the verge of bankruptcy, crippled by $6.3 billion in debt, Bloomberg reported yesterday. The company’s announcement that it may file sent a decisive signal to the market: The U.S. coal industry is still too big. Peabody has lost 98 percent of its market value in 12 months and watched as its main rivals all filed for bankruptcy, crushed by falling demand, massive debt loads, mounting environmental regulations and competition from cheap natural gas. Coal prices have plummeted as much as 75 percent since 2011, and hundreds of mines across the country have been shuttered. Many analysts reckoned that Peabody would be the one to survive the downturn. As the biggest producer of them all, it has a diverse mix of operations from Illinois to Australia, but for all its reach, the 133-year-old company is now buckling under its debt.

Analysis: Fed Shows It Is Willing to Shift

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ABI Bankruptcy Brief
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March 17, 2016

 
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NEWS AND ANALYSIS

Analysis: Fed Shows It Is Willing to Shift

The Federal Reserve eased monetary policy on Wednesday, and the global economy is safer for it, according to an analysis in yesterday's Wall Street Journal. While the Fed didn't cut interest rates, Fed officials signaled they would raise rates only two more times this year instead of four. This wasn't a shock. Markets had already written off any chance of rates rising that much. But hearing it from the Fed still matters, because it proves the central bank means it when it says rate increases aren't on a preset path. The response in the financial markets said it all: The dollar fell, two-year bond yields dropped, the stock market rose and the price of oil jumped. The Fed hasn't eliminated the threat of recession by any means. But by showing a willingness to shift plans when that threat arises, the Fed cuts the odds that its own mistakes will be the cause of that recession.

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Watch Now: Video Provides Recap and Analysis of Oral Argument in In re Ritz

How did the late Justice Scalia's absence impact the oral argument in In re Ritz? Why is this bankruptcy case important? Watch ABI Editor-at-Large Bill Rochelle provide his take on the March 1 oral argument, including a potential outcome of the case.

For further analysis, read Bill's full recap of the oral argument in Rochelle's Daily Wire, appearing in ABI's Newsroom.

 

Analysis: U.S. Coal Sector Faces Reckoning

When Peabody Energy Corp. warned Wednesday that it could go bankrupt, it signaled the end of an era for listed U.S. corporate coal companies, even as their mines continue to fuel a big chunk of the country's power stations, according to an analysis in the Wall Street Journal yesterday. A chapter 11 filing by St. Louis-based Peabody, the U.S.'s largest coal miner, would be the latest in a wave of bankruptcies to hit top American coal producers, including Arch Coal Inc., Alpha Natural Resources, Inc., Patriot Coal Corp. and Walter Energy, Inc. U.S. coal miners are wrestling with high debt levels, low energy prices, new environmental regulations, the decline of steel production, and the conversion of coal-fired power plants to use natural gas made abundant by shale drilling. The industry's setbacks have been especially damaging in the coal strongholds of Wyoming and Appalachia. To be sure, this isn't the end for coal, according to the analysis. Just under one-third of the U.S. grid is still powered by coal, and hundreds of mines are still profitable and operating. What isn't sustainable are the publicly traded coal powers built atop the recent China-driven commodity boom, and the corporate structures — headquarters, salaries, pensions — they maintained.

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Will exploration and production hit bottom in 2016? Be sure to attend ABI's Annual Spring Meeting in Washington, D.C., from April 14-17, as a panel of experts will be addressing this topic. Register today!

 

Get a better understanding of what happens when an oil, gas or other natural resources company goes bankrupt with ABI's When Gushers Go Dry: The Essentials of Oil & Gas Bankruptcy.

Energy Companies Draining Loans Before Banks Clamp Down

Troubled U.S. energy companies, maneuvering for stronger negotiating positions if they wind up filing for bankruptcy, are racing to tap cash still available under existing reserve-based loan commitments before banks cut their credit access next month, Reuters reported today. In April, lenders, in semi-annual valuations of oil and gas reserves backing these loans, are expected to cut available credit to many energy companies based on deeply depressed collateral prices. “Every company out there is nervous that if they don’t draw in the next couple of weeks, with determinations coming up, banks will finally start saying ‘no,’” said one investor. Drawing down cash before banks’ contractual commitments change is a tactic used widely in other previously troubled industries, including autos and airlines. These “extraordinary draws” are a new concept in the oil and gas sector, however, said Buddy Clark, a partner with Haynes and Boone, LLP in Houston. More than a dozen companies, with debt totaling up to US$17bn to US$19bn, are already in default on interest payments, he said. Banks have been seen clamping down more aggressively on reserve-based lending than they were last fall, based on extended asset price weakness.

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Lenders Are Getting Choosier When It Comes to Risky Real Estate Deals

Lenders are getting stingier when it comes to funding risky U.S. real estate developments, putting pressure on landlords in need of fresh funding to keep their projects afloat, according to a Bloomberg Business report Tuesday. Banks are proceeding with caution as the specter of slowing economic growth rattles financial markets and shakes investor confidence in a six-year recovery that’s helped lift property values to record levels. Lenders are going to be more selective and discriminating as the year progresses, said Mark Myers, head of the commercial real estate business at Wells Fargo & Co., the largest U.S. commercial-property lender. Real estate investors are bracing for repercussions as loan costs start climbing, threatening to drag down the value of their holdings and raising the risk of defaults. Credit for commercial-property owners was already contracting at the end of last year as banks reported tighter underwriting standards for property financing across the board, according to the Federal Reserve’s senior loan officer survey released in January.

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Consumer Credit Default Rates Remain Stable

Consumer credit default rates started to stabilize in December 2015, and that trend is continuing based on the latest data on consumer borrowing and debt released by S&P Dow Jones and Indices and Experian for the month of February, according to an Association of Credit and Collection Professionals press release yesterday. The S&P/Experian Consumer Credit Default Indices show a composite rate of 0.97 percent in February, which is within one basis point of the rate for the previous two months. The bank card default rate increased four basis points to 2.56 percent in February, according to a news release from S&P and Experian. Auto loan defaults increased slightly in February to 1.05 percent, while the first-mortgage default rate remained unchanged at 0.84 percent. “Low and stable consumer credit default rates confirm the positive picture of the consumer economy seen in recent data on personal income and consumption,” said David M. Blitzer, managing director and chairman of the Index Committee at S&P Dow Jones Indices.

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Have you signed up for Rochelle's Daily Wire in the ABI Newsroom? Receive Bill Rochelle's exclusive perspectives and analyses of important case decisions via e-mail!

Tap into Rochelle's Daily Wire via the ABI Newsroom and Twitter!

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Upcoming Webinars Provide Update on New Bankruptcy Forms and the Importance of Pre-Bankruptcy Planning

Join us for two FREE and compelling abiLIVE webinars that both feature optional CLE!

- Enjoy a follow-up webinar on March 29 to our popular program from last year looking at the new bankruptcy forms (enacted on Dec. 1). Covered in this new program will be forms B 410 (proof of claim) and B 410 - A (supplement for a secured claim). Hear experts discuss the pros and cons of both new forms; attendees will have time to ask questions and provide feedback. Register here.

- When it comes to pre-bankruptcy planning, what is on your "checklist?" ABI's Business Reorganization Committee will be hosting a free abiLIVE Webinar on April 4 to help you identify potential pitfalls and privacy issues, and gain a few tips on best practices. Register here.

 
 

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Bankruptcy in Practice - 5th Edition

 

 

 

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UPCOMING EVENTS
Judge Alexander L. Paskay Memorial Bankruptcy Seminar March 31-April 2, 2016 Clearwater Beach, Fla.
Annual Spring Meeting April 14-17, 2016 Washington, D.C.
6th Annual Steven M. Yoder Memorial Golf Tournament May 2, 2016 Avondale, Pa.
Credit & Bankruptcy Symposium May 5-6, 2016 Mashantucket, Conn.
New York City Bankruptcy Conference May 12, 2016 New York, N.Y.
Central States Bankruptcy Workshop June 16-19, 2016 Geneva, Wisc.
Midwest Regional Bankruptcy Seminar August 18-19, 2016 Cincinnati, Ohio
Click here for Full calendar

BLOG EXCHANGE

New on ABI's Bankruptcy Blog Exchange: Postal Banking Didn't Work in 1910 — and It Won't Now

A recent blog post explains why a proposed U.S. postal banking system, touted by Democratic presidential candidate Bernie Sanders and Sen. Elizabeth Warren (D-Mass.), might not work.

To read more on this blog and all others on the ABI Blog Exchange, please click here.

 

 
 
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Cliffs Natural Investors Sue for Being Shut Out of Debt Swap

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Cliffs Natural Resources Inc. was sued by investors claiming to have suffered losses because they were shut out of a private debt swap that was reserved for institutional buyers, Bloomberg reported on Tuesday. Two investors said in a proposed class-action or group suit that the company violated federal securities law when it executed the private debt exchange that only allowed a select group of institutional bondholders to exchange their unsecured corporate bonds for secured bonds, wrongfully denying retail bondholders an opportunity to participate. Cliffs Natural, the biggest U.S. iron-ore producer, on Jan. 27 reported a smaller-than-estimated quarterly loss after lower costs stemmed the effects of slumping sales. That day, Cliffs Natural offered certain bond investors the ability to swap six types of unsecured notes they held for as much as $710 million of better-ranked, so-called 1.5-lien notes that paid 8 percent and matured in 2020, the company said in a Jan. 27 statement. Only qualified institutional buyers could participate in the exchange. The company issued $218.5 million of the new 1.5-lien notes in February. The suit is Waxman v. Cliffs Natural Resources Inc., 16-cv-01899, U.S. District Court, Southern District of New York (Manhattan).

The Financial Alchemy That’s Choking SunEdison

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If SunEdison enters into bankruptcy, the autopsy will no doubt reveal a suicide, finding the solar energy company done in by financial engineering that was too clever and by a failure of its executives and investment bankers to remember the lessons of the financial crisis, The New York Times reported yesterday. SunEdison is not dead yet, but it is floundering. The immediate cause of its distress is the now-terminated agreement to acquire Vivint for $2.2 billion that was struck last July. The highly leveraged deal flashed caution from the start. SunEdison agreed to acquire Vivint Solar, but could not afford to pay the $2.2 billion. Instead, the deal consisted of cash and SunEdison common stock. SunEdison did not have the cash so it arranged to borrow $500 million from Goldman Sachs Bank USA. That was not enough so SunEdison also agreed to issue $350 million in convertible notes to Vivint holders, debt instruments that SunEdison would pay out later at 2.25 percent interest. This type of self-financed debt is the last resort of acquirers.

Linn Energy: Bankruptcy May Be “Unavoidable"

Submitted by ckanon@abi.org on
Linn Energy LLC said that bankruptcy may be unavoidable as the oil-and-gas producer missed interest payments amid a slump in oil prices, Reuters reported on Tuesday. The company, which operates in California, Wyoming and North Dakota shale fields, said that there was substantial doubt about its ability to continue as a "going concern" after it decided to skip interest payments due on Tuesday. It said it has a grace period of 30 days to make interest payments totaling around $60 million. With around $10 billion in debt, Linn would be the largest U.S. oil company to seek bankruptcy protection in the current energy rout.
 
Will exploration and production hit bottom in 2016? Be sure to attend ABI's Annual Spring Meeting in Washington, D.C., from April 14-17, as a panel of experts will be addressing this topic. Register today!
 
Get a better understanding of what happens when an oil, gas or other natural resources company goes bankrupt with ABI’s When Gushers Go Dry: The Essentials of Oil & Gas Bankruptcy.

 

Ybrant Unit Files for Bankruptcy over Price on Lycos Deal

Submitted by ckanon@abi.org on
A unit of India's Ybrant Digital Ltd. has filed for chapter 11 protection to deal with a $36.6 million loss in a legal fight over its acquisition of the Lycos search engine, Nasdaq reported yesterday. Ybrant Media Acquisition Inc. will be looking for financing or a settlement to pay the court-ordered award to South Korea's Daum Global Holdings Corp., which had sold Lycos to Ybrant in 2010, according to court papers filed late Monday. The filing stalls action by Daum, which is poised to take control of Ybrant's 56 percent ownership stake in Lycos Inc., through a receivership petition. The bankruptcy proceeding is the latest development in the saga of Lycos, one of the earliest search engines and Web portals, created from research at Carnegie Mellon University in the mid-1990s and now a far-distant competitor of Google.