Foreclosure Starts Down on Annual Basis in October
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Bakers Footwear Group Inc. is asking a bankruptcy court to allow the company, on an emergency basis, to replace its bankruptcy financing with a new $9.5 million loan that has a later maturity date as the repayment deadline on its original financing draws near, Dow Jones DBR Small Cap reported today. The bankruptcy court approved access to $22 million in bankruptcy financing from Crystal Financial LLC on Nov. 5. That financing, which included a $17.8 million rollup of pre-petition debt, was to be paid back on Nov. 16, or Bakers would have to begin liquidating the entire chain, it said, per the financing agreement.
Professional fees and expenses have topped $200 million in the bankruptcy case of American Airlines Inc., parent AMR Corp. and various affiliates, the Dallas Morning News reported yesterday. Through Tuesday’s filings in the case, the law firms, financial advisers and other professionals involved in the airline reorganization have billed $191.4 million in fees and $9.2 million for expenses for a total of $200.6 million. AMR, American and the other companies filed chapter 11 petitions on Nov. 29, 2011.
AMR Corp. Chief Executive Tom Horton yesterday told creditors that a merger with rival US Airways Group Inc. would need to result in creditors receiving the lion's share of equity in a combined airline for a deal to proceed, the Wall Street Journalreported today. His remarks indicate the two companies are moving closer to a possible agreement on a merger, even as AMR pursues its own plan from emerging from bankruptcy proceedings as an independent airline. Horton made the comments as part of an update on merger discussions during a gathering of the airline's official creditors committee. While not spending too much time on specific figures, Horton made it clear that American, the No. 3 U.S. airline by traffic, expects its creditors to receive more than 70 percent of the shares of a combined airline.
Bankruptcy Judge James Peck yesterday approved nearly $158 million in lawyers' and other fees in Lehman Brothers' liquidation, Reuters reported yesterday. Yesterday's hearing covered $157.86 million split between 25 law firms and other professionals. That included about $80 million to Alvarez & Marsal, which managed Lehman's assets during bankruptcy, and about $40 million to Houlihan Lokey, financial adviser to Lehman's creditors' committee. Total fees in the case, the largest-ever chapter 11 bankruptcy, are about $1.8 billion, though only about another $985 million is subject to court approval.
Hostess Brands Inc. announced yesterday that it would move to liquidate its iconic baking business if striking union members did not return to work by this evening, the Wall Street Journal reported today. The company, which was on the cusp of moving forward with a reorganization plan when work stoppages hamstrung about two-thirds of its 36 plants, said that it cannot continue operating unless members of the Bakery, Confectionary, Tobacco Workers and Grain Millers Union return to work. The union launched the strikes last Friday in protest of a fresh labor deal, featuring deep cuts to wages and benefits, that Hostess implemented during its bankruptcy.
Congressional investigators took aim yesterday at a former colleague, Jon S. Corzine, blaming the onetime senator's risk-taking at MF Global for accelerating the brokerage firm's demise, the New York Times DealBook blog reported yesterday. In excerpts from a broader MF Global report to be released today, Republican members of a Congressional panel outlined a withering critique of Corzine's 19-month tenure at the firm. Corzine, a former Democratic senator and governor from New Jersey, resigned as MF Global's chief executive last fall after the firm raided customer accounts during a futile fight for its life. While the Republican report avoided pinning blame on Corzine for the missing customer money, sidestepping whether a crime was committed, it argued that his fixation with risk positioned him as a central player in the firm's collapse. In a series of potential missteps, the report said, Corzine missed warning signs about MF Global's weak liquidity position and he torpedoed an overhaul of the firm's risk controls. Read more.
http://dealbook.nytimes.com/2012/11/14/congressional-report-blames-corz…
Click here to read the committee’s press release on the report.
http://financialservices.house.gov/news/documentsingle.aspx?DocumentID=…
The bankruptcy trustee recovering money for victims of the Ponzi scheme operated by imprisoned Minnesota businessman Tom Petters is suing BMO Harris Bank, accusing it as the owner of M&I Bank of aiding and abetting the fraud, the Associated Press reported yesterday. The lawsuit filed in bankruptcy court in yesterday accuses the formerly Milwaukee-based M&I Bank of turning a blind eye to $35 billion that flowed in and out of the main bank account that Petters Company Inc. used to finance the $3.65 billion Ponzi scheme for more than five years.
Eastman Kodak Co. won court permission yesterday to retain exclusive control of its bankruptcy case through Feb. 28 as it tries to execute a $793 million financing offer from a group of bondholders, Reuters reported yesterday. Bankruptcy Judge Alan Gropper approved the extension, allowing Kodak to move forward with its plan without creditors pushing competing proposals. The extension was supported by most creditors. It was opposed by a group of bondholders, some of whom had made an unsuccessful effort to finance Kodak's emergence from chapter 11.
AMF Bowling Worldwide Inc., the world's largest bowling alley operator, filed for bankruptcy protection for the second time in 12 years saying that recent economic weakness has cost it business and left it with an unmanageable debt burden, Reuters reported yesterday. The Mechanicsville, Va.-based company said that it has agreed on a plan to significantly reduce its debt and turn over control to its lenders, enabling it to emerge from chapter 11 before the end of April 2013. AMF and 15 affiliates sought protection from creditors saying that the company had between $100 million and $500 million of both assets and liabilities.