Report: U.S., Canadian Oil Company Bankruptcies Surge 50 Percent in 2019
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The Federal Reserve capped off an unprecedented week of action on Friday by extending a lifeline to cash-strapped state and local governments that are about to borrow large sums as they deal with skyrocketing costs from coronavirus safety measures, the Washington Post reported. There has been a large selloff in municipal debt in recent days, driving up the borrowing costs for many states and localities that need to pay their bills. This was the ninth major action by the Fed last week to try to stabilize financial markets, prevent the downturn from worsening and keep credit flowing to companies and households. The Fed’s action Friday is a first step in that direction and is a new emergency aid that was not done during the 2008-09 financial crisis. The Fed will make loans available to financial institutions that can be secured by “high quality” state and local bonds. This will make owning these tax-exempt municipal bonds more attractive to big financial firms and should help ensure there is plenty of demand for these bonds as many states and cities begin to issue more debt in the coming weeks and months.
A decade of growth in the U.S. economy allowed cities to patch fiscal holes left by the financial crisis and recession, but a surprising number now see new signs of trouble, the Wall Street Journal reported. The proportion of American cities expecting general-fund revenue to drop more than 3 percent when the books close on the 2019 fiscal year increased to 27 percent from 17 percent in fiscal 2018, when adjusted for inflation. That is one of the findings from a Wall Street Journal analysis of data collected from 478 U.S. municipalities by the National League of Cities, an advocacy group. The total general-fund revenue reported by these cities — locales that span the U.S. — is expected to be lower in fiscal 2019 than in fiscal 2018, adjusted for inflation, the first such dip in seven years. Cities in the survey range in population from the low tens of thousands to the millions.
Competing bondholder groups and the oversight board supervising Puerto Rico’s debt restructuring have reached a tentative compromise that moves the U.S. territory closer to leaving bankruptcy, the Wall Street Journal reported. The deal settles a dispute between holders of Puerto Rico general obligation bonds that were issued before 2012 and owners of general obligation bonds issued more recently. The oversight board has previously contested the validity of the newer debt and proposed owners of those bonds receive lower recoveries. The agreement, which requires court approval, is expected to be announced next week. The board and the competing factions worked out the rough terms of their bargain during court-mandated mediation in recent months but are still discussing some legal points of disagreement. Hedge funds including Monarch Alternative Capital LP, GoldenTree Asset Management LP and Whitebox Advisors LLC were part of a committee advocating for owners of the older—or legacy—bonds while a group including Aurelius Capital Management LP and Autonomy Capital negotiated on behalf of investors in the newer bonds. Together, the older and newer bonds total more than $18 billion in debt. An early agreement between the legacy group and the oversight board contemplated paying about 64 cents on the dollar for the older bonds and between 45 and 35 cents on the newer bonds. The new deal involves a higher payment on the more recently issued bonds.
A new audit shows pension debt in Flint is in worse condition than what Detroit faced when it entered bankruptcy, but new Flint Mayor Sheldon Neeley said he’s confident the cash-strapped city can right its financial course, the Detroit News reported. Flint has more than $370 million in pension legacy costs that remain unfunded — a 30 percent funding rate that is worse than the 65 percent rate that a consultant for Detroit's emergency manager calculated in 2013 for Detroit's General Retirement employees. The Flint audit also uncovered a dozen material findings — significant errors and financial risks — questioning accounting practices under former Mayor Karen Weaver's administration that led to several errors, including miscalculated balances and a lack of internal controls over purchasing cards. But the city's current budget isn't running a deficit, so it isn't eligible to file for bankruptcy, experts said. On Jan. 2, the state of Michigan notified Flint that it had 30 days to submit a corrective action plan to address the audit problems and, on Jan. 3, the state told the city that it was delinquent in submitting a separate report detailing its 2019 funding levels for pension and retiree health care.