Skip to main content

%1

AMR Wins Labor Deals with Five Union Work Groups

Submitted by webadmin on

Five out of seven work groups represented by the largest labor union at AMR Corp's American Airlines voted to accept contract terms offered by the bankrupt airline that will cut thousands of jobs, the Transport Workers Union said yesterday, Reuters reported. The vote ends a court battle between the groups and AMR over the airline's bid to void its current collective bargaining agreements as it seeks to save $1.25 billion a year in labor costs, including $990 million from its unions. Had that request been successful, AMR might have been allowed to unilaterally impose even more stringent labor terms. That same court battle continues this week, however, for the TWU groups that turned down the deal, as well as two other unions representing AMR pilots and flight attendants who elected not to vote on the deal. Those groups are taking a higher-risk path, accepting the specter of deeper cuts on the hope that Bankruptcy Judge Sean Lane will deny AMR's bid.

House Hearing Focuses on Systemically Important Financial Institutions under the Dodd-Frank Act

Submitted by webadmin on

The House Financial Services Financial Institutions and Consumer Credit Subcommittee will hold a hearing today at 10 a.m. ET titled "The Impact of the Dodd-Frank Act: What It Means to be a Systemically Important Financial Institution." To view the witness list and prepared hearing testimony, please click here: http://financialservices.house.gov/Calendar/EventSingle.aspx?EventID=29…

Judge Denies Hostesss Bid to Scrap Teamsters Contract

Submitted by webadmin on

A judge on Monday denied Hostess Brands Inc.'s bid to shed deals with its biggest union, the Teamsters, sending the bakery company back to the drawing board as it tries to emerge from its second bankruptcy in recent years, Dow Jones Daily Bankruptcy Review reported. Just a week after clearing Hostess to reject labor deals with the second-biggest union in the case, Bankruptcy Judge Robert Drain reversed course when considering whether Hostess could use bankruptcy to replace its current collective bargaining agreements with the Teamsters with a fresh proposal engineered last month. The problem with Hostess's last offer to the union---which would have slashed benefits and ended the union employees' participation in its most risky pension plans---boiled down to a few concrete issues, Judge Drain said: a 1 percent difference between the pretax earnings projected under the company's proposal as compared to the union's proposal, and Hostess's intention to only shift existing employees into more stable multiemployer pension plans.

Coach America Gets Extension to File Chapter 11 Plan

Submitted by webadmin on

Bankruptcy Judge Kevin Gross has granted Coach America Holdings Inc. an extension to file its chapter 11 exit plan as it prepares to sell its assets, Dow Jones DBR Small Cap reported today. Judge Gross on Friday granted the company an extension through the end of July to file a plan that explains how it will divvy up the sale proceeds to its creditors, including first-lien lenders owed more than $300 million.

Ally to Keep U.S. Auto Loans after ResCap Filing

Submitted by webadmin on

Ally Financial is "absolutely not" looking to sell its core U.S auto lending business as it seeks ways to pay back $12 billion it owes to U.S. taxpayers after a government-funded bailout during the financial crisis, the company's CEO said yesterday, Reuters reported. Ally, the former in-house financing arm for General Motors Co. once known as GMAC, on Monday announced plans to sell some international operations at the same time that its Residential Capital (ResCap) mortgage unit filed for bankruptcy protection. ResCap received court approvals at a court hearing yesterday that will allow it to stay in business while in bankruptcy. Under its bankruptcy plan, ResCap will be able to preserve its mortgage servicing operations and other assets pending their planned sales. At the same time, the bankruptcy judge overseeing the hearing raised questions about the mortgage lender's plans to halt all home equity loans to its retail customers while in chapter 11. ResCap attorney Lorenzo Marinuzzi said in court that the company cannot afford the possible total payout of $400 million if the outstanding home equity lines were drawn down.

Justice Department Opens JPMorgan Inquiry

Submitted by webadmin on



ABI Bankruptcy Brief | May 15, 2012


 


  

May 15, 2012

 

home  |  chart of the day  |  blogs  |  bankruptcy code and rules  |  statistics  |  legislative news  |  volo
  NEWS AND ANALYSIS   

JUSTICE DEPARTMENT OPENS JPMORGAN INQUIRY



The Justice Department has opened an inquiry into JPMorgan Chase & Co.'s $2 billion-plus trading loss, the Wall Street Journal reported today. The probe is at an early stage and it is not clear what possible legal violation federal investigators may be focusing on. Last week, the Securities and Exchange Commission began its own review of the matter, examining the company's accounting and disclosures to investors. The trading loss has aroused intense scrutiny in Washington, D.C., where some lawmakers have been fighting efforts by big banks to delay or scale back regulations mandated by the 2010 Dodd-Frank financial overhaul. Read more. (Subscription required.)

ANALYSIS: BANKS TREAD A FINE LINE IN TRADING



When JPMorgan Chase revealed its $2 billion loss last week, it looked as though the big Wall Street banks were up to their old tricks, using their government-backed funds to make risky trades in a misguided effort to improve their profits, according to an analysis in the New York Times' Dealbook Blog on Sunday. While few other banks pursue the complex strategies that led to JPMorgan's losses, many traditional lenders regularly buy and sell securities, and make bets with derivatives, as part of their core operations. Financial firms say that such activities allow them to earn a basic return on the deposits they collect and to offset risks on their balance sheets. These widespread trading practices are creating a headache for regulators, who are trying to devise new rules to prevent another financial crisis. Regulators are putting the finishing touches on the so-called Volcker Rule, which would ban banks from making speculative bets with their own money. However, regulators face a dilemma when faced with the question of "what constitutes proprietary trading?" Such activities are easy to spot when financial firms run independent trading units devoted to making profits. Already, most big banks have moved to exit these businesses in preparation for the Volcker Rule. Regulators, however, are having a harder time telling when other trading activities — like market-making and portfolio hedging — cross the line. Big banks, even those with little presence on Wall Street, contend that their trading activities are part of prudent risk-management. Without the ability to invest in bonds and other securities, these companies argue that they would not be able to make loans or extend credit as easily. Read more.

DOJ NOT KEEPING STATS ON FINANCIAL CRISIS CONVICTIONS



The Department of Justice has been short on answers for congressional inquiries looking to find out how many executives have been convicted of criminal wrongdoing related to the financial crisis of 2008-09, as the department said that it does not keep count of the numbers of board-level prosecutions, according to a report today in the Wall Street Journal. In a response earlier this month to a March request from Sen. Charles Grassley (R-Iowa), the Justice Department said that it does not hold information on defendants' business titles. "Consequently, we are unable to generate the [requested] comprehensive list" of Wall Street convictions stemming from the 2008 meltdown, the letter from the Department of Justice to Grassley said. Prof. William Black, a former bank regulator, said that the government used to keep these figures. He points to a 1993 report by the Government Accountability Office on the savings-and-loan crisis of a generation ago. The report said that "30 percent of those prosecuted are the major corporate insiders—CEOs, presidents, shareholders, directors and officers" of the affected firms. Some other law-enforcement agencies are keeping a similar tally for the latest financial crisis. The Securities and Exchange Commission highlights on its website its civil crisis-related enforcement actions against senior corporate officers—a total of 55 so far. Read more. (Subscription required.)

In related news, the House Financial Services Committee will hold a hearing on Thursday titled "Examining the Settlement Practices of U.S. Financial Regulators." Click here to view the witness list.

COMMENTARY: SAYING NO TO STATE BAILOUTS



States that have followed Europe's economic policy model of unbridled spending are getting Europe's economic results: low growth and looming fiscal catastrophe, according to a commentary by Rep. Kevin Brady (R-Texas) and Sen. Jim DeMint (R-S.C.), members of the Joint Economic Committee (JEC), in today's Wall Street Journal. Compared with the 10 U.S. states with the lowest rates of economic growth since 1990, according to a JEC report released today, the states with the highest rates of growth had smaller unfunded pension ratios (by 26 percent); lower debt ratios (by 18 percent); less tax revenue collected (by 22 percent); and lower welfare benefits (by 31 percent). The report also shows that over the last decade, states with no income tax have much higher rates of job growth and population growth than states with the highest income taxes. The fuse on the U.S. debt bomb—which according to the National Bureau of Economic Research may be armed with as much as a $211 trillion fiscal shortfall—may prove to be the states' public-employee pension systems, according to the commentary. Years of overly optimistic growth projections, underfunding and overpromising by politicians, according to the commentary, have rendered many of these public pension systems toxic assets on states' books. Read more. (Subscription required.)

REGISTER FOR THE LABOR & EMPLOYMENT COMMITTEE'S "EVOLVING LABOR ISSUES IN CHAPTER 11" WEBINAR



Make sure to mark your calendars for May 23 from 2-3:30 p.m. ET for the ABI Labor and Employment Committee's "Evolving Labor Issues in Chapter 11" Webinar. A panel of experts will be discussing recent developments in several large complex bankruptcy cases, including Hostess, Kodak, Nortel and American Airlines. The expert panel includes Babette A. Ceccotti of Cohen, Weiss & Simon LLP (New York), former chief counsel of the PBGC Jeffrey B. Cohen of Bailey & Ehrenberg PLLC (Washington, D.C.), Marc Kieselstein of Kirkland & Ellis LLP (New York) and Ron E. Meisler of Skadden, Arps, Slate, Meagher & Flom LLP.
Issues to be discussed include:

• Hostess' efforts to eliminate their multi-employer pension plan contribution liability through motions to reject their labor agreements under Section 1113.

• Kodak's attempt to terminate retiree health benefits.

• The effect of the automatic stay upon efforts by the U.K. Pension Protection Fund and the U.K. Nortel Pension Plan to enforce its powers under the U.K. Pensions Act.

• American Airlines' efforts to reduce legacy costs in bankruptcy.

Click here to register.

U.S. TRUSTEE PROGRAM RE-OPENS COMMENT PERIOD ON PROPOSED GUIDELINES FOR ATTORNEY COMPENSATION IN LARGE CHAPTER 11 CASES



The U.S. Trustee Program has re-opened the comment period until May 21, 2012, on proposed guidelines for reviewing applications for attorney compensation in large chapter 11 cases ("fee guidelines"). The USTP also scheduled a public meeting for June 4, 2012, at the U.S. Department of Justice in Washington, D.C. on the proposed fee guidelines. Click here for more information on submitting comments or attending the public hearing.

ABI IN-DEPTH

JUNE 5 WEBINAR WILL EXAMINE HOW TO HANDLE AN ADMINISTRATIVELY INSOLVENT ESTATE



Panelists from one of the top-rated sessions at the 2011 Winter Leadership Conference are going to reconvene for an ABI and West LegalEd Center webinar on June 5 titled, "Handling the Administratively Insolvent Estate- What to Do When Your Chapter 11 Goes South." CLE credit will be available for the webinar, which will last from 11 a.m. - 12:30 p.m. ET.

Speakers include:

Robert J. Feinstein of Pachulski Stang Ziehl & Jones LLP (New York)

Cathy Rae Hershcopf of Cooley LLP (New York)

Robert L. LeHane of Kelley Drye & Warren LLP (New York)

Robert J. Keach of Bernstein Shur (Portland, Maine) will be the moderator for the webinar.

The webinar costs $115, and purchase provides online access for 180 days. If you are purchasing a live webcast, you will receive complimentary access to the on-demand version for 180 days once it becomes available. Click here for more information.

LATEST CASE SUMMARY ON VOLO: MCNEAL V. GMAC MORTGAGE, LLC (IN RE MCNEAL; 11TH CIR.)



Summarized by Melissa Youngman of McCalla Raymer, LLC

The Eleventh Circuit held that a wholly unsecured junior lien on a chapter 7 debtor's home may be "stripped off" pursuant to Section 506(d) of the Bankruptcy Code.

More than 500 appellate opinions are summarized on Volo typically within 24 hours of the ruling. Click here regularly to view the latest case summaries on ABI’s Volo website.

NEW ON ABI’S BANKRUPTCY BLOG EXCHANGE: FURTHER INSIGHT ON HOW THE SUPREME COURT MAY APPROACH CREDIT BIDDING IN THE RADLAX CASE



The Bankruptcy Blog Exchange is a free ABI service that tracks 35 bankruptcy-related blogs. A blog post provides further insight on a few approaches that the Supreme Court may take on the credit-bidding issues presented in the RadLAX case.

Hear a discussion of the RadLAX post-argument featuring lead counsel David Neff by clicking here. ABI will hold a webinar on the Court’s decision as soon as it is announced in late June.

Be sure to check the site several times each day; any time a contributing blog posts a new story, a link to the story will appear on the top. If you have a blog that deals with bankruptcy, or know of a good blog that should be part of the Bankruptcy Exchange, please contact the ABI Web team.

ABI Quick Poll

The Constitutional scheme of uniform federal bankruptcy is a bad idea; the states should have more leeway to adopt their own different approaches to financial distress, at least for their own individual citizens and companies with purely intra-state operations. Click here to vote on this week's Quick Poll. Click here to view the results of previous Quick Polls.

INSOL INTERNATIONAL



INSOL International is a worldwide federation of national associations for accountants and lawyers who specialize in turnaround and insolvency. There are currently 37 member associations worldwide with more than 9,000 professionals participating as members of INSOL International. As a member association of INSOL, ABI's members receive a discounted subscription rate. See ABI's enrollment page for details.

Have a Twitter, Facebook or LinkedIn Account?

Join our networks to expand yours.

  

 

NEXT EVENT

ABI'S "Evolving Labor Issues in Chapter 11" Webinar

May 23, 2012

Register Today!


COMING UP

 

MEMPHIS 12

June 1, 2012

Register Today!

 

ABI'S "Handling the Administratively Insolvent Estate- What to Do When Your Chapter 11 Goes South?" Webinar

June 5, 2012

Register Today!

 

CS 2012

June 7-10, 2012

Fees Go Up Sunday! Register Today!

 

NE 2012

July 12-15, 2012

Register Today!

 

SE 2012

July 25-28, 2012

Register Today!

 

MA 2012

August 2-4, 2012

Early Bird Rate Expires Friday! Register Today!

 

   
  CALENDAR OF EVENTS

May

- ABI Labor and Employment Committee's "Evolving Labor Issues in Chapter 11" Webinar

     May 23, 2012



June

- Memphis Consumer Bankruptcy Conference

     June 1, 2012 | Memphis, Tenn.

- ABI'S "Handling the Administratively Insolvent Estate- What to Do When Your Chapter 11 Goes South?" Webinar

     June 5, 2012

- Central States Bankruptcy Workshop

     June 7-10, 2012 | Traverse City, Mich.

  


July

- Northeast Bankruptcy Conference and Northeast Consumer Forum

     July 12-15, 2012 | Bretton Woods, N.H.

- Southeast Bankruptcy Workshop

     July 25-28, 2012 | Amelia Island, Fla.

August

- Mid-Atlantic Bankruptcy Workshop

     August 2-4, 2012 | Cambridge, Md.

 
 

ABI BookstoreABI Endowment Fund ABI Endowment Fund
 


LightSquared Files for Chapter 11 Bankruptcy

Submitted by webadmin on

LightSquared Inc. filed for chapter 11 protection yesterday ahead of the expiration of a deal to keep hedge-fund manager Philip Falcone's venture from defaulting on its debt, Dow Jones Newswires reported yesterday. LightSquared reported assets and debts each exceeding $1 billion, according to the court petition. Falcone and his hedge fund Harbinger Capital Partners were LightSquared's main backer, investing billions of dollars into a venture that sought to compete with communications heavyweights like AT&T Inc. and Verizon Wireless. However, efforts to build a national network stalled as federal regulators argued the network would interfere with Global Positioning System signals. In its bankruptcy petition, LightSquared listed Boeing Satellite Systems Inc. as its biggest unsecured creditor with a disputed $7.5 million claim, followed by Alcatel-Lucent with a $7.3 million disputed claim.

Court Clears Solar Trust to Auction California Power Projects

Submitted by webadmin on

Financially struggling Solar Trust of America LLC is looking for buyers to rescue what is being billed as the world's largest solar power project in southern California--a project that is in jeopardy after its funding was cut off from its German majority owner, Dow Jones DBR Small Cap reported today. Solar Trust executives obtained court permission to hold a bankruptcy auction on June 21 to sell off its Blythe Solar Power Project, a 1,000-megawatt system that would have the capacity to power 300,000 homes by the company's own estimate.

ResCap Receives Interim Approval for 1.45 Billion Bankruptcy Loan

Submitted by webadmin on

Residential Capital LLC, the bankrupt mortgage company indirectly owned by the U.S. government, won interim approval to borrow $1.45 billion to help fund the company's operations, Bloomberg News reported today. Bankruptcy Judge James Peck, who was filling in yesterday for Bankruptcy Judge Martin Glenn in the case, agreed to approve the loan after initially criticizing the request because it asked Peck to make a legal finding that he said he did not have enough evidence to support. The company was in court yesterday seeking emergency approval to refinance two off-shore debt instruments in order to free up cash being held as collateral for the debt. Judge Peck said that he did not have enough evidence to find that a part of the loan transaction involved a "true sale." Judge Peck agreed to approve the transaction after ResCap agreed to remove the request for the finding from the initial loan request. The company will return to court in about 45 days to seek final approval.

Distressed-Debt Investors Circling Around Dewey

Submitted by webadmin on

Some hedge-fund investors are seeking to profit by snapping up the debts of beleaguered law firm Dewey & LeBoeuf LLP, which may soon shut its doors and owes more than $200 million to banks, bondholders and vendors, the Wall Street Journal reported today. Investors in recent days say that there has been a flurry of activity, with brokers showing Dewey's debt to potential buyers. As of the beginning of this year, Dewey was owed about $320 million on accounts receivables and works in progress by Dewey attorneys, according to two investors who studied the claims. In the case of a bankruptcy or dissolution, a trustee would likely seek to claw back compensation awarded to the firm's partners in anticipation of services they have yet to perform, said one of the investors. There are at least $125 million of Dewey bonds, and portions of those were trading at between 50 cents and 65 cents on the dollar over the past two weeks as hedge funds bought them from the insurance companies that initially purchased the debt in 2010, according to traders and investors.