Fitch Some Past Chapter 11 Filers Again at Risk of Default
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An Iowa grand jury is expected to hear testimony from Peregrine Financial Group's president this week as it begins considering alleged wrongdoing at the failed futures brokerage, Reuters reported on Friday. Russell Wasendorf Jr., Peregrine's president and the son of the brokerage's accused chief executive, has been subpoenaed by the grand jury and will likely testify. Russell Wasendorf Sr., Peregrine's founder and CEO, was arrested on July 13 on charges of lying to federal regulators in connection with an alleged massive financial fraud at the company. Prosecutors have said that they expect to expand charges against him.
Wall Street banks and hedge funds like Goldman Sachs and D.E. Shaw are not entitled to ask Lehman Brothers to chip in for their legal fees in the biggest chapter 11 case of all time, according to U.S. Trustee Tracy Hope Davis, the Wall Street Journal reported yesterday. Davis is asking a judge to knock out, reduce or scrutinize more than $33 million in attorneys' and advisers' fees that Lehman creditors such as Goldman Sachs Group Inc., Bank of America Corp. and D.E. Shaw & Co. want to put on Lehman's tab. The banks and hedge funds say that they are entitled to be reimbursed for the fees on the grounds that their work made a "substantial contribution" to the Chapter 11 case, during which Lehman has already racked up more than $1 billion in professional fees.
Hawker Beechcraft yesterday defended its plan to pay more than $5.3 million in bonuses to eight top executives, the Associated Press reported yesterday. The Wichita, Kansas-based plane maker filed the document just hours before a hearing in New York over the disputed bonus plan for senior management. The company, which filed for bankruptcy in May, also is seeking an additional $1.9 million in bonuses for 31 other management-level employees. U.S. Trustee Tracy Hope Davis and the machinists union have filed objections to the bonus plan. Hawker Beechcraft Corp. is owned by Onex Partners and GS Capital Partners, a Goldman Sachs private equity fund. The bankruptcy court has approved exclusive talks with a Chinese firm that has offered nearly $1.8 billion to buy the company's business jet and general aviation operations.
The House Financial Services Capital Markets and Government Sponsored Enterprises subcommittee will hold a hearing tomorrow at 9:30 a.m. ET titled "The 10th Anniversary of the Sarbanes-Oxley Act." To access the witness list and prepared hearing testimony, please click below.
Peregrine Financial Group's bankruptcy trustee has hired a team of forensic accountants to help figure out what remains at the failed futures brokerage after its CEO's arrest and confession to years of stealing from customers, Reuters reported yesterday. PricewaterhouseCoopers was hired over the weekend and started work on Monday, trustee Ira Bodenstein told Reuters on Wednesday. Their task is to secure data and gather information, he said. Peregrine filed for bankruptcy on July 10, a day after the firm's CEO Russell Wasendorf Sr. attempted suicide and left a signed note describing how he bilked customers of more than $100 million over a nearly 20-year period, forging bank statements and intercepting mail between his bank and the firm's auditors at the National Futures Association.
John Bryson resigned late Wednesday as commerce secretary, less than two weeks after suffering a seizure and hitting two cars in an incident still shrouded in some mystery, The Washington Post reported yesterday. Bryson, who spent only eight months in his Cabinet post, said in a letter to President Obama that new leadership was needed since the seizure he suffered “could be a distraction” during a crucial time for the U.S. economy. A former energy executive from California and co-founder of the Natural Resources Defense Council, Bryson was recruited last year to Commerce in part so he could serve as an administration liaison to the business community, but those plans failed to pan out. Bryson rarely appeared at high-profile business events or as a prominent spokesman in the news media. Administration officials admitted that he wasn’t as effective an advocate as they had initially hoped. Deputy Secretary Rebecca M. Blank has been running the department on an interim basis since last week.
The Senate Banking Committee yesterday delved into the nuances of JPMorgan’s trading loss, quizzing the bank’s primary regulators about how the blunder would affect the outcome of Wall Street regulation, the New York Times' DealBook blog reported yesterday. While the watchdogs were largely reticent in their views, saying that it was too soon to tell, some acknowledged that the losses would weigh on their deliberations over the Volcker Rule. "I would think our experience here with JPMorgan Chase would inform our views in the final rule-making," Comptroller of the Currency Thomas J. Curry told lawmakers. Neal S. Wolin, deputy secretary of the Treasury Department, called the JPMorgan incident "an important input" in creating a "strong Volcker Rule." Efforts to draft a final version of the new regulation, named after Paul A. Volcker, the former chairman of the Federal Reserve, gained a fresh push after JPMorgan disclosed last month that it lost at least $2 billion on dubious derivatives trading. The rule would ban banks from trading with their own money, a practice known as proprietary trading.
Click here to read the prepared testimony from yesterday's hearing.
http://banking.senate.gov/public/index.cfm?FuseAction=Hearings.Hearing&…
Warren Buffett's Berkshire Hathaway Inc has asked a U.S. court to appoint an independent examiner in the Residential Capital LLC bankruptcy case to investigate some transactions between the company and its parent, Reuters reported yesterday. Berkshire, a major ResCap creditor which tried to buy the company before it filed for bankruptcy, termed the transactions with Ally Financial Inc "potentially improper" and said the examiner should evaluate potential claims arising from them. ResCap, which is Ally Financial's mortgage unit, filed for bankruptcy protection last month. Ally, the former in-house financing arm for General Motors Co, had said that it would sell some international operations to help repay $12 billion in U.S. government bailout money.
LightSquared Inc., the wireless-network company backed by billionaire Philip Falcone, received a second weeklong extension from creditors to delay a potential bankruptcy, Bloomberg News reported on Friday. The move gives LightSquared more time to negotiate before having to revisit a waiver that is keeping its debt from going into default. Before the original April 30 deadline, Falcone conditionally agreed to a request by creditors that he step down from the Reston, Va.-based company's board and executive committee.