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Lehman Brothers to Sell 2.5 Billion in Bankruptcy Claims

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Lehman Brothers Holdings Inc. said yesterday that it has agreed to sell $2.5 billion in bankruptcy claims that the failed investment bank holds against its U.S. brokerage arm, the Wall Street Journal reported yesterday. The claims will be sold for $619 million, or about 24.8 percent of face value. The Lehman parent company had said in late August that it intended to "explore monetization opportunities" related to the unsecured claims. Lehman's holding company, which officially exited bankruptcy in 2012, owns a $6.9 billion unsecured creditor claim against its U.S. brokerage arm. Most of the brokerage business was sold to Barclays PLC following Lehman's September 2008 collapse. The proposed sale of the claims would raise funds to pay off the billions the holding company owes its customers and other creditors. All told, more than 2,600 unsecured claims totaling about $20 billion have been allowed against the brokerage, and another $6.8 billion in claims are still unresolved.

Judge Rules Momentive Creditors Cannot Change Votes on Bankruptcy Plan

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Bankruptcy Judge Robert Drain ruled yesterday that senior bondholders of bankrupt Momentive Performance Materials cannot change their votes to accept the quartz and silicone maker's proposed restructuring, Reuters reported yesterday. Knocking down what he viewed as an effort to avoid a less desirable payout, Judge Drain denied the bondholders' request to switch their votes. Waterford, N.Y.-based Momentive, owned by Apollo Global Management, filed for protection under chapter 11 protection in April with a contentious proposal to cut $3 billion in debt and transfer control to a class of junior bondholders that also included Apollo. The offer by senior bondholders to change their votes met with resistance from Momentive, which viewed the shift as an effort to avoid repayment in the form of a long-term note, rather than cash.

Giants Stadium Sues Lehman for 302 Million Swaps Claim

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Giants Stadium LLC, an entity created by the New York football team to finance a new stadium during the financial crisis, sued Lehman Brothers Holdings Inc. seeking payment of a $301.8 million bankruptcy claim, Bloomberg News reported yesterday. The defunct lender and one of its affiliates breached a 2007 swap agreement tied to the stadium’s financing when Lehman failed to pay the owed amount on Oct. 2, 2008, about two weeks after the bank collapsed, Giants Stadium said in a filing yesterday in bankruptcy court. The claim was made in response to a lawsuit filed by Lehman against Giants Stadium in October seeking about $100 million for early termination of interest-rate swap transactions when the investment bank filed for bankruptcy. Each side says that the other defaulted on the deals, according to court papers.

Judge Concerned Freedom Industries Wont Clean Up Elk River Facility

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A federal bankruptcy judge is becoming increasing concerned that Freedom Industries may abandon its former Elk River chemical storage facility without completing a proper environmental cleanup of the site of the January chemical spill that contaminated the drinking water supply for hundreds of thousands of residents across the region, the Charleston (W. Va.) Gazette reported today. Bankruptcy Judge Ronald Pearson says that the Freedom bankruptcy proceeding has not progressed adequately, and that too much of the company’s limited cash is being earmarked for attorneys, perhaps leaving inadequate funds to complete remediation required by existing enforcement orders from the state Department of Environmental Protection. In a seven-page order filed on Friday, Judge Pearson said recent bankruptcy case filings by Freedom’s lawyers cause him “to fear [Freedom] is not sufficiently committed to compliance with the demolition and cleanup orders of the” DEP or “other agencies of the state and federal government.” Judge Pearson cited language in Freedom’s proposed plan for liquidating the company stating that, while efforts “will be undertaken to remediate the site,” there are “financial limitations” to what Freedom “can viably undertake by way of compliance with” the remediation plan for its Etowah Terminal, site of the Jan. 9 leak of Crude MCHM and other chemicals into the Elk River.

Energy Future Holdings Bondholders Seek Answers About NextEra Offer

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Energy Future Holdings Corp. bondholders are asking what happened to a proposal from NextEra Energy Inc. that would have meant more money for creditors of the Texas energy seller, which is working out its financial troubles in bankruptcy, Dow Jones Daily Bankruptcy Review reported today. The trustee for some $3.5 billion worth of bonds said in a court filing on Friday that the facts leading to NextEra's decision to withdraw the offer are "entirely undisclosed" and "must be fully explored." In July, NextEra went public with a proposal to infuse value into Energy Future's bankruptcy to acquire the company's stake in Oncor, a Texas transmissions business. In August, the offer was withdrawn, after Energy Future said that it would hold an auction.

First BanCorp Puerto Rico Wants Quick Win in Lehman Claim Fight

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First BanCorp Puerto Rico wants a quick win in a fight with Lehman Brothers Inc., arguing that its $63.5 million claim relating to an old swap agreement should be paid in full as a "customer" claim against the Lehman brokerage, the Wall Street Journal reported today. Lawyers for First BanCorp in a Friday court filing pressed their case that because Lehman's brokerage maintained a "securities account" for First BanCorp, the swap agreement technically makes the bank a Lehman customer. "FirstBank entrusted its securities to LBI for safekeeping in its role as securities intermediary, and LBI treated FirstBank as the owner of those securities at all times," lawyers for FirstBancorp said in their filing. James W. Giddens, the trustee unwinding Lehman's brokerage, is also asking for a quick ruling in his favor over the claim or asking for it to be expunged completely. Giddens said in court filings last month that if First BanCorp has a claim in the case at all, it isn't with the brokerage unit but rather with a Lehman derivatives unit, Lehman Brothers Specialty Finance.

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Analysis Energy Futures Turnaround May Get Surprise Boost from New York Judge

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Bankruptcy Judge Robert Drain’s ruling on Aug. 26 in the unrelated bankruptcy of chemical maker Momentive Performance Materials could end Energy Future's $1 billion battle with creditors and reinvigorate its restructuring, Reuters reported on Friday. The two cases are linked by disputes over “make-whole” provisions in bond contracts. Make-wholes are an early redemption payment to bondholders to compensate them for the loss of anticipated interest. Bondholders have become increasingly willing to fight for the make-whole payments in recent bankruptcies such as American Airlines in part because there are few places to invest their money to earn above-market returns given the current low-rate landscape. Energy Future filed one of the largest corporate bankruptcies in U.S. history in April with a plan that was premised in part on refinancing high-coupon secured bonds. Bondholders sued, arguing that the company was wrongfully denying them $1 billion in make-whole payments. Momentive proposed a plan that had similar elements, and last week Judge Drain swept aside objections from bondholders.
http://www.reuters.com/article/2014/09/05/us-energy-future-bankruptcy-a…

For further analysis of “make-whole” provisions and the effect of the Momentive Performance Materials decision, be sure to sign up for tomorrow’s abiLIVE webinar, “Understanding Make-Whole and No-Call Provisions: Key Takeaways from Recent Decisions.”
http://www.abiworld.org/webinars/2014/0909Web/index.html

Momentive Revises Chapter 11 Plan to Include Higher Interest

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Momentive Performance Materials Inc. amended its restructuring plan to comply with a bankruptcy judge's requirement that the silicone and quartz producer pay its top-ranking bondholders a slightly higher interest rate, Dow Jones Daily Bankruptcy Review reported today. With the updated plan, filed on Wednesday in bankruptcy court, Momentive took what is likely to be the final step in securing Judge Robert Drain’s signature on its proposal to slash more than $3 billion from its balance sheet. Under the revised plan, first-lien bondholders will receive an added 0.5 percentage points for a total interest rate of about 4.1 percent.

Dewey Defendants Again Urge Dismissal of Criminal Charges

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Four former Dewey & LeBoeuf executives filed new motions late last week asking the New York State Supreme Court to throw out charges of grand larceny and fraud linked to the firm’s 2012 collapse, claiming that Manhattan prosecutors failed to produce evidence of criminal intent and incorrectly instructed a grand jury about accounting rules the men are accused of abusing, the American Law Journal reported today. Dewey’s former chairman Steven Davis, former executive director Stephen DiCarmine, former chief financial officer Joel Sanders and former client relations manager Zachary Warren filed their motions on Friday following the Manhattan District Attorney’s response to their previous motions to dismiss the indictment. Lawyers for Davis, DiCarmine and Sanders wrote that “despite somewhere between one and two million emails and apparently almost 4,000 pages of grand jury testimony, the prosecutors and the grand jury have no direct evidence of these defendants’ larcenous intent.”

Appeals Court Denies Unfinished-Business Fees for Coudert

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The administrator for the now-defunct Coudert Brothers LLP can’t seek fees earned from former partners who now work at other firms, a federal appeals court in New York held, Bloomberg News reported today. The U.S. Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit yesterday reversed a ruling by U.S. District Judge Colleen McMahon, who had found that “the uncompleted client matters were assets of Coudert, and as such recoverable by the bankruptcy estate.” The circuit court relied on a July 1 opinion from the New York Court of Appeals, the state’s highest court, which held that the profit on unfinished business can’t be considered the property of a firm that has filed for bankruptcy. That court made the ruling because it had surfaced in the bankruptcy of Thelen LLP as well as Coudert. The administrator, Development Specialists Inc., was seeking fees from firms including Dechert LLP, Morrison & Foerster LLP and K&L Gates LLP. The group of firms is represented by Miller & Wrubel PC.