Bankruptcy Judge: San Bernardino Must Provide More Information

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Rep. Tom Marino (R-Pa.), who has balked at legislation that would let some Puerto Rico government agencies seek bankruptcy, said that he’s instead pushing for the creation of a federal board to advise the island on its finances, Bloomberg News reported yesterday. Marino, chairman of the House Judiciary Subcommittee on Regulatory Reform, Commercial and Antitrust Law, said that the panel would be appointed by Congress and the Obama administration. He said that it would suggest how the territory could cut spending and take other steps — such as seeking an exemption from the minimum wage — to put an end to its chronic budget deficits and spur the economy. It wouldn’t take direct control. "Strictly advisory," he said. "This takes it out of the hands of the passions of the people of Puerto Rico." Read more.
For further developments on Puerto Rico’s debt crisis, be sure to visit ABI’s “Puerto Rico in Distress” webpage.
A federal judge today ruled against Detroit pension beneficiaries who had appealed the city’s final bankruptcy plan of adjustment, the post-bankruptcy blueprint for city finances and operations after it emerged from the nation’s largest-ever municipal insolvency, the Detroit Free Press reported today. U.S. District Judge Bernard Friedman tossed out appeals by city retirees who had asked the federal court to remove pension cuts from the city’s December 2014 bankruptcy settlement with thousands of creditors, deals that helped the city shed $7 billion in debt. The retirees, including members of the Detroit Active and Retired Employee Association (DAREA), had sought full restoration of pension benefits, even though a majority of retirees in the city’s General Retirement System voted to accept the settlement. Detroit’s lawyers asked Judge Friedman to reject the appeals, arguing they were “equitably moot,” a legal doctrine that says a bankruptcy exit plan shouldn’t be reopened once it is substantially consummated, because doing so could hinder the success of the plan and harm other parties who’ve reached settlements.
The top Democrat on the U.S. House Natural Resources Committee is pushing for a congressional hearing into the role of hedge funds in Puerto Rico’s debt crisis, Bloomberg News reported yesterday. Making the request yesterday, Rep. Raul Grijalva (D-Ariz.) pointed to a Sept. 4 report by his staff asserting that some hedge fund managers are trying to affect the outcome of the crisis to pad profits rather than accept losses from investment miscalculations. “This behavior, while profitable, is reprehensible,” Grijalva wrote in a letter to committee Chairman Rob Bishop (R-Utah). Republicans who lead both chambers of Congress have signaled little urgency in extending aid to Puerto Rico, while President Barack Obama’s administration has made clear it won’t bail out the commonwealth.
The Swiss bank UBS has agreed to pay about $34 million to resolve charges by federal financial regulators that the bank failed to adequately supervise the sale of investments in troubled Puerto Rico mutual funds, the New York Times reported today. At issue are a series of UBS mutual funds that are heavily invested in Puerto Rico municipal bonds and that used high amounts of leverage to lift returns. With the island in the midst of an unprecedented restructuring, the mutual funds have collapsed in value, decimating the retirement savings of thousands of Puerto Rico residents. The agreement with the Securities and Exchange Commission settles charges that a UBS branch manager, Ramiro L. Colon III, in Puerto Rico, did not monitor the sale of the mutual funds to everyday Puerto Ricans. The bank was also fined on Tuesday by the Financial Industry Regulatory Authority for failing to monitor the amount of borrowed money and concentrations of Puerto Rico bonds in the mutual funds.
Puerto Rican officials pressed Senate lawmakers on yesterday to allow the island access to chapter 9 of the Bankruptcy Code as the U.S. territory wrestles with its debt, MarketWatch.com reported yesterday. They found support from Democrats at a Senate Finance Committee hearing but met skepticism from the Republican chairman of the panel. Melba Acosta-Febo, president of the Government Development Bank for Puerto Rico, and Pedro Pierluisi, Puerto Rico’s representative in Congress, told a finance committee hearing the bankruptcy power should be available to the island in the same way it is available to other U.S. entities. Acosta-Febo also described the financial situation in Puerto Rico as having “passed the tipping point.” “Puerto Rico, in the face of an immediate liquidity crisis, has no access to the capital markets on sustainable terms and faces significant financing gaps over the next decade,” she testified. Height Securities said in a note yesterday that it expects Puerto Rico to run out of cash by November. Read more.
For more information on Puerto Rico’s financial crisis, be sure to visit ABI’s “Puerto Rico in Distress" webpage.
Rep. Pedro Pierluisi is the invited keynote speaker at this year’s Winter Leadership Conference. The early-bird rate is expiring soon, so register by Friday to save!
The California city of Stockton's series 2006 lease revenue bonds were upgraded by Moody's Investors Service on Monday to Ba2 from Ba3, Reuters reported today. The rating agency also affirmed the Ca rating of Stockton's 2007 pension obligation bonds. The rating action, which affects approximately $71 million of bonds, comes almost a year after a bankruptcy court confirmed Stockton's plan to exit chapter 9. While the exit plan did not impact the series 2006 lease-revenue bonds, it did impose significant losses to bond insurer Assured Guaranty Municipal Corp in the series 2007 pension obligation bonds. Moody's estimated a loss of approximately 59 percent of principal from the date the city first defaulted on the series 2007 bonds. Under the reorganization plan, Assured will receive annual payments from the city, and it could receive a higher recovery if the city exceeds certain performance benchmarks beginning in fiscal year 2018, Moody's reported.