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Bed Bath & Beyond Says Banks Have Cut Off Its Credit Lines

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Bed Bath & Beyond Inc. said it doesn’t have the funds to repay its banks after they determined the retailer has defaulted on its credit lines, WSJ Pro Bankruptcy reported. The home-goods chain said Thursday it received a notice of default from JPMorgan Chase & Co. on Wednesday. The banks are calling for an immediate repayment of all outstanding loans under the credit agreement. The company has $550 million in loans outstanding from the banks led by JPMorgan, as well as $375 million from a facility provided by Sixth Street Partners, according to a securities filing. It had $154 million in unrestricted cash and equivalents in late November. As a result of the default, Bed Bath’s interest rate goes up by 2 percentage points, according to the filing, and it is required to put up cash collateral to back letters of credit, which are often tapped for payments to suppliers. The company has $186 million in outstanding letters of credit. Bed Bath & Beyond has racked up losses as its sales have plummeted, the result of a failed turnaround that swapped name brands such as KitchenAid mixers and Calphalon cookware for private-label goods that didn’t resonate with shoppers. The chain has had trouble stocking its stores after it fell behind on payments to suppliers.

FTX Opposes New Bankruptcy Investigation as It Probes Bankman-Fried Connections

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FTX has objected to a U.S. Department of Justice request for an independent investigation into the once-prominent crypto exchange's collapse, saying it is already conducting a wide-ranging probe that includes family members of FTX founder Sam Bankman-Fried, Reuters reported. FTX said in a court filing in Wilmington, Delaware, late on Wednesday that the DOJ's proposed review would only add cost and delay to its bankruptcy case. FTX acknowledged "fraud, dishonesty, incompetence, misconduct, mismanagement, and irregularity" in its past conduct, but said that its previous wrongdoing is already being probed by the company's new management, its creditors and law enforcement agencies. As part of its own investigation, FTX asked U.S. Bankruptcy Judge John Dorsey, who is overseeing its chapter 11 proceedings, to help it secure documents from Bankman-Fried, members of his family and other insiders with information about FTX transactions that used "misappropriated and stolen" funds. These transactions, it said, include a $16.7 million Bahamian real estate purchase under the name of Bankman-Fried's parents, Joseph Bankman and Barbara Fried. FTX is also seeking information about political donations by Mind the Gap, a political action committee founded by Barbara Fried, and Guarding Against Pandemics, an advocacy organization founded by Sam Bankman-Fried and his brother, Gabriel Bankman-Fried. FTX said Guarding Against Pandemics' multimillion-dollar Washington, D.C., headquarters was purchased with misappropriated funds.

Bankrupt BlockFi Asks Court to Approve Bonuses to Keep Staff

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New Jersey-based cryptocurrency lender BlockFi has requested the court to approve bonus paychecks for its staff so the company can keep its talent throughout its bankruptcy proceedings, according to court documents filed on Monday, YahooFinance.com reported. “Despite an incredibly turbulent time in the digital asset industry, the opportunities for participants elsewhere have not dried up,” BlockFi Chief People Officer Megan Crowell said in a submitted declaration. “The war for talent remains active, and the participants have many opportunities inside and outside the cryptocurrency sector.” Last week, Zodia Markets, a digital asset exchange based in London, hired the former BlockFi head of international’s institutional sales in Asia, Paul Howard, as its own head of sales. BlockFi fired about two-thirds of its workforce and filed for chapter 11 bankruptcy in late November following the collapse of the Bahamas-based cryptocurrency exchange, FTX.com. Sam Bankman-Fried, the founder of the exchange, had agreed to a deal to rescue BlockFi from earlier financial woes in July, before FTX filed for its own bankruptcy on Nov. 11. The unsecured creditors' committee has submitted objections to BlockFi’s retention plan, while the U.S. Trustee in the case objected to the lender’s decision to seal from the public details on the proposed payments and recipients. A lawyer representing the unsecured creditors' committee argued in the court filings that BlockFi is seeking permission to spend US$12.3 million for retention payments and up to another $12 million in estate resources and fees.

Bankruptcy Judge Approves United Furniture's Chapter 11 Trustee

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The chapter 11 trustee for a collapsed United Furniture Industries Inc. was approved on Wednesday by a bankruptcy judge, the Winston-Salem (N.C.) Journal reported. Derek Henderson was selected as the trustee by a federal bankruptcy trustee after being signed off on by United and its creditors, led by Wells Fargo & Co. The chapter 11 motion approved on Jan. 18 for United gives the manufacturer the opportunity to direct the sale of its assets with the oversight of a trustee. United unexpectedly shut down Nov. 22, immediately ending employment and health insurance benefits for 530 Triad employees and about 2,700 companywide. Among its assets is the 850,000-square-foot production facility at 401 W. Hanes Mill Road in Winston-Salem. Wells Fargo filed a motion for chapter 7 liquidation of the manufacturer’s assets and the appointment of a bankruptcy trustee. The bank said in a Dec. 30 court filing requesting the chapter 7 liquidation of United that it is owed $99.21 million in secured debt. However, the bank acknowledged it “estimates that any recoveries from liquidation of (United’s) collateral will result in a recovery equal to a fraction of this amount.”

Tampa Food Hall Operator Files for Bankruptcy to Reorganize Debt

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A Tampa, Fla.-based food hall operator has filed for chapter 11 protection to reorganize the debt on an Orlando location, the Tampa Bay Business Journal reported. Jamal Wilson, who launched his food halls with The Hall on Franklin in 2017, told the Tampa Bay Business Journal on Wednesday that he is reorganizing his debt "due to high construction costs" during the COVID-19 pandemic. Wilson's Orlando location, The Hall at the Yard, opened in 2021. The bankruptcy filing will not affect day-to-day operations at The Hall at the Yard, Wilsons said, and he doesn't plan to file for bankruptcy protection for any other locations. "The cost of the tenant improvements was higher than expected," according to the bankruptcy filing. "Unfortunately, the debtor borrowed funds from various MCA lenders. The debt to the MCA lenders and the exorbitant fees and costs associated therewith has been crippling. The debtor filed this case to restructure its debts and reorganize for the benefit of all creditors." The filing lists 10 MCA lenders who are owed a combined $901,055, though the amount owed to G and G Funding Group LLC is unidentified. The lenders are owed amounts ranging from $44,000 to $181,000. Secured debt also includes a $4.2 million loan to Newtek Small Business Finance. There is also a $359,000 Paycheck Protection Program loan from Kabbage LLC that is "likely unsecured," according to the filing. The largest unsecured creditors have claims that range from unknown to $119,000.

Sinclair’s Sports Channels Prepare Bankruptcy, Putting Team Payments at Risk

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America’s largest owner of local sports channels is heading toward a complex $8.6 billion debt restructuring in bankruptcy court as it stakes its future on a new direct-to-consumer streaming service, Bloomberg News reported. After leveraging up to buy regional sports networks from Walt Disney Co. in 2019, Diamond Sports Group LLC is suffering from a decline in cable-TV subscribers, spurring negotiations with creditors and major sports leagues about its viability as a going concern. The outcome will have serious implications for the $55 billion world of sports-media rights: the company’s channels showcase Major League Baseball, National Basketball Association and National Hockey League games to fans from Detroit and Phoenix to San Diego. With financial troubles mounting, the Sinclair Broadcast Group Inc.-owned firm will likely skip $140 million in interest payments due mid-February, kickstarting a 30-day grace period, according to people familiar with the matter. A stark divide is emerging between would-be winners and losers: its $630 million first-lien loan is trading at 92 cents on the dollar, while nearly $5 billion of lower-ranked bonds change hands for under 10 cents — signaling a near-total wipeout for subordinated creditors. The restructuring plan favored by many creditors and the company itself would see the largest lenders becoming owners, turning much of its debt into equity through a pre-arranged chapter 11 process, according to people with knowledge of the matter, who declined to be identified citing the private nature of the talks.

GenOn’s Power-Plant Owner Heritage Files Bankruptcy

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Heritage Power LLC, a power-plant operator owned by GenOn Holdings LLC filed for bankruptcy with a lender backed-plan to trim debt from its balance sheet, saying its business has struggled because of low electricity prices and operational problems during extreme winter weather last month, WSJ Pro Bankruptcy reported. Heritage said in papers filed Wednesday in the U.S. Bankruptcy Court in Houston that it has struck a deal with its owner, GenOn, and its lenders on a chapter 11 plan to either restructure $686 million in debt or explore selling its assets. The agreement is backed by lenders that own 80% of its $485 million in outstanding term loans, according to court documents. The bankruptcy marks the second time Heritage power plants have passed through chapter 11 since 2017. Heritage and its affiliates were part of the earlier bankruptcy of GenOn, which emerged from chapter 11 in December 2018. GenOn employees manage Heritage, which operates more than a dozen oil- and natural-gas-fired power plants in three states. Heritage President David Freysinge said GenOn formed the companies involved in the current bankruptcy in 2019 to separately own and operate the power plants in New Jersey, Pennsylvania and Ohio. Heritage sells its power to PJM Interconnection LLC, which operates a power grid serving roughly 65 million customers across 13 states and the District of Columbia.

College Sports-Marketing Firm Learfield, Creditors Tap Restructuring Counsel

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Lenders to Learfield, a multimedia and marketing provider to college sports teams, have engaged restructuring attorneys as the company faces more than $1 billion of debt coming due this year, WSJ Pro Bankruptcy reported. A group of lenders to Plano, Texas-based Learfield has engaged law firm Paul Weiss Rifkind Wharton & Garrison LLP, while the company is being advised by Kirkland & Ellis LLP. Learfield won’t be able to repay all its debts coming due this year based on its current cash balance and expected negative cash flow, S&P Global Ratings said in a report on the company last week. The ratings firm downgraded Learfield deeper into junk territory, saying that a distressed exchange or restructuring is likely over the next six months. Learfield didn’t immediately respond to a request for comment Wednesday. Paul Weiss and Kirkland also didn’t immediately respond. Learfield struggled during the coronavirus pandemic as many universities canceled sporting events, forcing the firm to try to renegotiate multimedia contracts.

Brazilian Retailer Americanas Files for Chapter 15 Bankruptcy to Protect U.S. Assets

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Brazilian shopping chain Americanas SA yesterday filed for chapter 15 bankruptcy, a move that protects its U.S. assets while insolvency proceedings play out in its home country, Bloomberg News reported. The retailer nosedived in January after becoming mired in an accounting scandal. The firm, backed by billionaire Jorge Paulo Lemann, filed for bankruptcy at a court in Rio de Janeiro on Jan. 19. In disclosures to investors, the firm implied it misreported numbers connected to some of its financing and wrongly deducted interest paid to lenders from its liabilities. In all, there were nearly $4 billion of accounting “inconsistencies,” according to a regulatory filing.

Florida Developer AD1 Puts Some Hotels Into Chapter 11

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Developer AD1 Global Hotels LLC put eight Florida properties using Marriott, Hilton, Hyatt and IHG brands under bankruptcy protection, blaming rising interest rates, Hurricane Nicole and allegedly unreasonable demands by lender HPS Investment Partners LLC, WSJ Pro Bankruptcy reported. The Hollywood, Fla.-based parent company of the hotels isn’t part of the bankruptcy. It plans to seek an equity investor for the properties, and potentially refinance their debt and sell assets. The bankruptcy filing covers eight newly constructed or renovated properties that owe $165 million to HPS Investment Partners, according to a filing Wednesday in the U.S. Bankruptcy Court in Wilmington, Del. AD1’s chief operating officer, Alex Fridzon, said in a declaration in bankruptcy court the portfolio of properties has been valued at $210.5 million to $262 million. AD1’s portfolio has more than 25 properties. Roughly a third, with a total of more than 1,200 rooms, are part of the bankruptcy case.