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Energy Future Bondholders to Challenge Make-Whole Defeat

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Bondholders who lost an $890 million court fight with Energy Future Holdings Corp. are maneuvering to get a hearing in a federal appeals court before the power company's $42 billion bankruptcy is over and done, Dow Jones Daily Bankruptcy Review reported today. Once Energy Future exits bankruptcy, bondholders risk being told their appeal would upset too many other investors with big money riding on the company's chapter 11 plan, lawyers for the bondholders said in court papers. They are seeking permission to make a beeline to a federal appeals panel in Philadelphia to challenge their bankruptcy court losses. A court contest over Energy Future's chapter 11 plan is slated to begin next week, but chances are the company won't be ready to implement its turnaround plan until April, or even later, bondholders say.

Bankruptcy Judge Approves $5.7 Million Sale of Nurses Registry to Louisiana Company

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Bankruptcy Judge Gregory R. Schaaf authorized the sale of Nurses Registry and Home Health Corp. to a Louisiana company called LHC Group for $5.7 million, the Lexington (Ky.) Herald-Leader reported today. In an order authorizing the sale of the Lexington-based company, Judge Schaaf wrote that LHC Group's proposed purchase "is fair and reasonable, represents the highest and best offer for the purchased assets, and is in the best interests of the debtor, its creditors and its estate." Of the net sale proceeds, 70 percent will go to the U.S. government and 30 percent will go to the bankruptcy estate, according to an order approving the settlement agreement. Another company, Five Points Healthcare LLC in Atlanta, had submitted a bid of $3.5 million for Nurses Registry at a court-authorized auction, but its bid was not accepted. Based in Lafayette, La., LHC Group is a national provider of home health, hospice and comprehensive post-acute health care services.

Lynas Weighs Molycorp Bid as Rare Earths Suitors Open Talks

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Australian miner Lynas Corp Ltd. is weighing a bid for bankrupt rare-earths producer Molycorp Inc. as the company begins drawing interest from potential buyers in Asia and Europe, Bloomberg News reported yesterday. Lynas, one of only two major rare earths producers outside China, is “interested to understand" the cost savings that could be available from a combination with Molycorp, the company said. Others that have held discussions about buying the assets include German chemicals giant BASF SE. Molycorp, which filed for bankruptcy in June, announced on Oct. 21 it was looking to sell the entire company, including the idled Mountain Pass mine in California. It said it was in the process of signing confidentiality agreements giving 17 potential buyers access to detailed business information.

Energy Future Battles in Court on $460 Million Interest Claim

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While lawyers tried to cut deals in the hallway, Energy Future Holdings Corp. battled in court on Wednesday in a bid to defeat bondholder demands for some $460 million in interest, Dow Jones Daily Bankruptcy Review reported today. Slightly more than half of the investors who own a $1.6 billion issue of Energy Future bonds have agreed to a settlement that gives them about 60 percent of the interest they claim they are owed. If the court fight plays out, the settlement could be a better deal for bondholders than Judge Christopher Sontchi will rule is appropriate. Energy Future, a Dallas-based electricity giant, filed for chapter 11 bankruptcy-court protection in April 2014 and is trying to clear away potential trouble spots before hearings start next week on its chapter 11 emergence plan.

Caesars Cancels Mississippi Tunica Auction Amid Lack of Bidders

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Caesars Entertainment Corp.’s bankrupt operating group said in a court filing that it has cancelled the auction of property at its failed Harrah's Tunica Casino in Mississippi amid a lack of bidders, Reuters reported today. Casino operator Caesars Entertainment Operating Co., which filed for chapter 11 in January with $18 billion of debt, had been trying to sell Tunica for two years before closing its doors amid a slump in gambling and tough local competition. Caesars said that it would ask Bankruptcy Judge Benjamin Goldgar to approve the sale of Tunica to stalking-horse bidder TJM Properties Inc, a Florida real estate investment firm that develops senior living facilities, at a Nov. 2 hearing. TJM has offered $3 million cash for the leftover property at Tunica.

Commentary: Will Caesars' Bankrupt Casino Operating Unit Attract Buyers?

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Potential bidders for CEOC, a casino-operating unit of Caesars Entertainment would be wading into the middle of a costly and complicated bankruptcy, and they note that Caesars has left key assets — including a crucial piece of its big-data customer loyalty program — out of the package, according to a Reuters commentary yesterday. Analysts and some junior creditors have suggested that Caesars isn't serious about selling its CEOC operating unit and expressed doubt that the offering will attract any bidders. In court documents, the operating unit itself noted that the bidding process "may not result in any offers" and that if there is a successful bid "there is no guarantee that the transaction will close." One major factor behind buyers' skepticism about Caesars' proposed sale, designed to test CEOC's value under a plan to emerge from its $18 billion bankruptcy, is that the operating unit lacks clear control of its Total Rewards loyalty program, analysts and industry players said. The program manages sought-after information on its 45 million members' spending habits, and it instantly adds value to any casino brought into the program. Under a complex operating structure, CEOC owns Total Rewards. But a separate, non-bankrupt unit called Caesars Enterprise Services controls the licensing agreement that channels business between casinos putting that piece of the program out of reach of bidders for the casino operating unit. Read more

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Oncor Creditors Line Up Against Energy Future's Chapter 11 Plan

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Creditors linked to the valuable transmissions business that is the centerpiece of Energy Future Holdings Corp.'s bankruptcy-exit plan criticized the company's turnaround strategy as unfair and illegal, Dow Jones Daily Bankruptcy Review reported today. The objections came as the Dallas energy company readies for the start of a court contest over its strategy for appeasing creditors owed $42 billion. Creditors with claims on Oncor, the transmissions business, contend that the deal at the heart of Energy Future's bankruptcy emergence plan strips them of rights and sticks them with risk. Energy Future wants to sell its Oncor transmissions business and pay off creditors of one division while spinning out its other division as a separate company, owned by senior creditors.

Arch Coal Noteholders Reject Debt Swap Amid Looming Bankruptcy

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Arch Coal Inc. moved closer to bankruptcy after noteholders rejected a debt exchange proposal aimed at boosting the coal miner's liquidity, Reuters reported today. Heavily-indebted Arch Coal has been hit by weak demand and stricter regulation, factors that have already pushed Alpha Natural Resources and Patriot Coal into chapter 11 protection. Arch Coal said today that it is currently working with creditors to restructure its balance sheet. Arch's debt restructuring plan includes swapping existing debt for longer-term securities with the aim of reducing total debt and annual interest expenses by around 20 percent. Last week, a request by a unit of GSO Capital Partners that holds some of Arch Coal's unsecured notes seeking to prevent a group of senior lenders from blocking the debt swap was turned down by a New York State Supreme Court judge. Senior lenders have argued that the terms of the debt exchange reduce the amount they stand to recover, while junior bondholders have said a debt swap deal is necessary to keep the company from filing for bankruptcy.

Group Objects to Deal Allowing Wyoming Coal Permit Renewal

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An agreement that would enable a coal company seeking bankruptcy protection to renew a state mine permit despite not meeting pre-existing state bonding requirements ignores the law, the organizer of a landowner group said, the Associated Press reported yesterday. The agreement falls short of enabling the state to secure the almost $200 million that would be needed to reclaim Alpha Natural Resources’ Eagle Butte mine near Gillette, said Shannon Anderson of the Powder River Basin Resource Council. Instead, the deal would give Wyoming priority access to $61 million in case either or both of the company’s two mines in Wyoming closed and needed to be reclaimed. The full sum of the company’s $411 million in required reclamation bonding for the two mines would be a lower creditor priority. Meanwhile, the state’s pre-existing bonding requirements would not prevent the company from getting a new mine permit, according to the agreement filed in bankruptcy court.