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Judge Approves Accord Between JPMorgan MF Global Parent

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Bankruptcy Judge Martin Glenn yesterday approved a settlement that will increase JPMorgan Chase & Co.'s potential recoveries from the liquidation of MF Global Holdings to as much as 76 cents for every dollar in claims, Reuters reported yesterday. The deal resolves a complaint from JPMorgan over the value of an intercompany settlement among MF Global affiliates. That complaint had posed a potentially significant obstacle to getting creditor support and court approval for MF Global's payout plan. Judge Glenn approved a supplement to the payback plan that raises the maximum projected recovery for JPMorgan for its $1.2 billion loan. Its recovery had maxed out at about 73 percent in an earlier version of the plan. The settlement also provides for a slight increase in the size of JPMorgan's claim.

Creditor Calls for Bankruptcy Trustee for Arcapita Unit

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A company that bought gas storage facilities from an Arcapita Bank subsidiary is bashing the bank's wind-down plan, saying that the subsidiary, Falcon Gas Storage Co., should be placed in the hands of an independent trustee, Reuters reported yesterday. In court papers filed on Monday in Arcapita's chapter 11 case, Tide Natural Gas Storage objected to the bank's plan to liquidate its assets and pay back creditors, saying that the plan would do little to satisfy Falcon's creditors. Tide in 2010 agreed to buy two gas storage facilities from Falcon for $515 million, $70 million of which remains in escrow. The deal has led to ongoing litigation, with Tide claiming that Falcon and Arcapita misrepresented financial information.

Courts Take Novel Approach to Nortel Networks Cash Fight

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A U.S. judge and a Canadian judge agreed on Friday to a joint, simultaneous trial to decide how to divide $9 billion from the liquidation of Nortel Networks, overruling objections that the unusual arrangement would lead to "chaos," Reuters reported on Friday. Bankruptcy Judge Kevin Gross told the parties on a conference call held jointly with a Canadian judge that the litigants should prepare for a trial late this year. Administrators for former Nortel units in Europe had requested the judges send the matter to binding arbitration. Gross and Ontario Superior Court Justice Geoffrey Morawetz in Toronto have been overseeing the liquidation of the former telecoms giant, which once had a market value of $250 billion and global operations that employed 93,000. After Nortel filed in 2009 for protection from creditors in courts around the world, its units in the United States, Canada and Europe agreed to sell Nortel's operations as global businesses as a way to increase their value. However, those units in different countries never tackled the complex question of how to split the money that was raised.

1250 Oceanside Partners Files for Bankruptcy Protection

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1250 Oceanside Partners and two affiliates, owners of more than 1,800 acres of land on the Island of Hawaii, filed for bankruptcy to restructure more than $500 million in debt, Bloomberg News reported yesterday. Oceanside listed assets of more than $10 million in chapter 11 documents filed on Wednesday. Affiliates Front Nine LLC and Pacific Star Co. also sought court protection. Developer Lyle Anderson controlled the three companies until 2008, when Bank of Scotland LLC declared a default on about $1 billion in debt and exercised its right to replace the directors, including Anderson. The debt was secured by projects in New Mexico, Arizona and Hawaii. Sun Kona Finance I LLC acquired the portion secured by Hawaiian assets in December. The total balance due on that debt was about $625.2 million, according to court papers.

Struggling Life of Pi Special-Effects House Rhythm & Hues Gets Bidder

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Visual-effects company Rhythm & Hues Studios Inc., the company behind the tiger and other effects in "Life of Pi," said in a court filing on Thursday that it received a bid valued at about $17 million from South Korean media company JS Communications Co., the Wall Street Journal reported today. On Friday a federal bankruptcy judge approved a request to make the Korean company the stalking-horse bidder for Rhythm & Hues, said the visual-effects company's attorney, Brian Davidoff, of Greenberg Glusker Fields Claman & Machtinger LLP. JS is offering to assume nearly $16 million of debtor-in-possession loans from two studios for which Rhythm & Hues is doing work and to pay $1 million in cash to help satisfy other liabilities.

Sequestration Hits the Legal System as Courts Keep Bankers Hours

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U.S. Bankruptcy Judge Martin Glenn will no longer be holding his usual hearings after hours in his Manhattan courtroom because of the billions of dollars in congressionally mandated federal spending cuts that took effect this month, Bloomberg reported today. “As long as sequestration lasts, 5 p.m. will be the stop time,” Judge Glenn recently told lawyers for bankrupt mortgage company Residential Capital LLC (ALLY). Companies in bankruptcy often keep courts open late seeking approval to continue operating, pay employees or settle creditor disputes. Debtors and creditors may find themselves having to wait longer, now that Judge Glenn and his colleagues are facing their own financial squeeze. Alongside the courts, law enforcement agencies and other components of the U.S. justice system are anticipating shortages of staff, security, and even paper. Congress mandated $1.2 trillion in across-the-board cuts over nine years, including $85 billion over the next seven months, as part of a 2011 deal to increase the U.S. debt limit. For the federal judiciary this year, sequestration will require cutting $332 million, about 5 percent of its current $6.97 billion budget. The courts are scheduled to learn today how much money they can expect for local court personnel and operations through Sept. 30, the end of the fiscal year, if sequestration lasts.

Ambac Asks Judge to Bar Creditors Board Nominee

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Bond insurer Ambac Financial Group Inc. is aiming to block investment strategist Charles Lemonides from assuming a role on the company's board of directors when it exits chapter 11 bankruptcy, accusing him of "offensive" conduct, Reuters reported yesterday. Lemonides, chief investment officer for asset manager ValueWorks LLC, is a member of Ambac's creditors’ committee, which nominated him to serve as a director of Ambac after it exits bankruptcy under the ownership of its creditors. He is one of four nominees scheduled to join the board. But Ambac is asking Bankruptcy Judge Shelley Chapman to bar Lemonides from the role and direct the creditors’ committee to appoint someone else. Ambac said in a court filing on Monday that Lemonides pressured its chief financial officer, David Trick, to hire an unqualified candidate as Ambac's chief investment officer and tried to exclude other board nominees from overseeing the search process.

ResCap Wins More Time to File Exclusive Plan

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Residential Capital LLC won more time to file an exclusive plan to reorganize while the bankrupt mortgage company remains in mediation with creditors, who say talks have stalled, Bloomberg News reported yesterday. Bankruptcy Judge Martin Glenn yesterday extended the company's exclusive right to file a reorganization plan to April 30. The order came after ResCap settled a dispute with noteholders by dropping a provision that would have given the unsecured creditors' committee a "veto role" over any plan the company may file by that date. Judge Glenn approved ResCap's request to hire a new chief restructuring officer, Lewis Kruger, and said that he deserves time to try to put together a plan. The company requested 60 days during which no creditor is allowed to propose one.

Dewey Settles Unfinished Business Claims with Paul Hastings

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The law firm Paul Hastings and two of its partners are expected to pay nearly $1.6 million to the estate of Dewey & LeBoeuf in exchange for a release from potential litigation, Reuters reported yesterday. Under the settlement, the trustee for Dewey will not seek to recover profits on legal business that former partners brought with them to Paul Hastings, according to the filing that Dewey counsel Scott Ratner filed in court on Monday. The new deal follows the approval of Dewey's liquidation plan on Feb. 27 by Bankruptcy Judge Martin Glenn in which more than 450 partners agreed to pay $71.5 million in exchange for a release from potential lawsuits seeking to claw back compensation paid out before Dewey collapsed in May 2012. The $71.5 million settlement did not resolve the "unfinished business" claims, in which Dewey's estate could move to recover profits on legal business former partners took with them to their new law firms.

February Bankruptcy Filings Decrease 21 Percent from Previous Year Commercial Filings Fall 29 Percent

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ABI Bankruptcy Brief | March 5 2013


 


  

March 5, 2013

 

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  NEWS AND ANALYSIS   

FEBRUARY BANKRUPTCY FILINGS DECREASE 21 PERCENT FROM PREVIOUS YEAR, COMMERCIAL FILINGS FALL 29 PERCENT



Total bankruptcy filings in the United States decreased 21 percent in February over last year, according to data provided by Epiq Systems, Inc. Bankruptcy filings totaled 82,285 in February 2013, down from the February 2012 total of 104,537. Consumer filings declined 21 percent to 78,611 from the February 2012 consumer filing total of 99,378. Total commercial filings in February 2013 decreased to 3,674, representing a 29 percent decline from the 5,159 business filings recorded in February 2012. Total commercial chapter 11 filings also decreased 21 percent, to 609 filings in February from the 756 commercial chapter 11 filings recorded in February 2012.

While bankruptcies were down from a year ago, February’s bankruptcy filings trended upward from January. Total bankruptcy filings for the month of February represented a 5 percent increase over the 78,565 total filings registered in January 2013. The total noncommercial filings for February also represented a 5 percent increase from the January 2013 noncommercial filing total of 74,831. Although the February commercial filing total represented a 2 percent decline from the January 2013 commercial filing total of 3,734, February commercial chapter 11 filings represented a 27 percent increase when compared to the 481 filings the previous month. Read the ABI press release.

STATES, PRIVATE PLAINTIFFS PRESS SUIT AGAINST WALL STREET REFORM LAW



The plaintiffs that are challenging the constitutionality of the Wall Street reform law and the leadership of the Obama administration's new consumer protection agency are fighting to keep alive a suit in Washington, D.C., federal district court, the Legal Times reported on Friday. The private plaintiffs, including advocacy group Competitive Enterprise Institute and Texas-based State National Bank of Big Spring, on Feb. 27 responded to the U.S. Justice Department's effort to end the litigation. The 11 states that have joined the suit include Texas, South Carolina, Oklahoma, Michigan, and Ohio. The attorneys for the private plaintiffs, including O'Melveny & Myers partner Gregory Jacob and C. Boyden Gray, said in their court papers that the plaintiffs have presented sufficient evidence that the Dodd-Frank Wall Street Reform and Consumer Protection Act gave "unchecked and unprecedented powers" to federal agencies, including the newly created Consumer Financial Protection Bureau (CFPB). The states that joined the lawsuit are only challenging the government's ability to liquidate the largest banks, not the composition of the CFPB. Read more.

COMMENTARY: BLEEDING THE BORROWER DRY



Though 15 states have banned predatory, high-interest loans that payday lenders commonly use to pillage low-income borrowers, offshore lenders increasingly get around state laws by issuing predatory loans over the Internet, according to an editorial in yesterday's New York Times. About 12 million borrowers turn to payday lenders each year. A new study by the Pew Charitable Trusts found that only about 14 percent of borrowers can afford to take enough out of their monthly budget to repay the average payday loan. Instead, average borrowers carry a debt for five months, during which time they pay repeated fees to renew the loan. By the fifth month, someone who borrowed $375 will have paid about $520 in interest alone. Many also resort to borrowing from additional payday lenders. Not surprisingly, payday borrowers are more likely than others to default on credit card debt, to file for bankruptcy or to lose their bank accounts because of abuse of overdraft privileges. A bill pending in the Senate known as the Safe Lending Act would require all online lenders to comply with state laws that provide stronger consumer protections than the federal statutes. It would establish once and for all that payday loan borrowers have the right to stop lenders from raiding their bank accounts. State and federal regulators also need to prohibit banks from giving payday lenders access to the automatic payment system in states where predatory, high-interest loans are illegal. Read the full editorial.

REPORT: YOUNG ADULTS RETREAT FROM PILING UP DEBT



Young people are racking up larger amounts of student debt than ever before, but fresh data suggest they are becoming warier of other kinds of borrowing: Total debt among young adults dropped in the last decade to the lowest level in 15 years, the Wall Street Journal reported today. A typical young U.S. household—defined as one led by someone under age 35—had $15,000 in total debt in 2010, down from $18,000 in 2001 and the lowest since 1995, according to a recent Pew Research Center report and government data. Total debt includes mortgage loans, credit cards, auto lending, student loans and other consumer borrowing. In addition, fewer young adults carried credit card balances, and 22 percent did not have any debt at all in 2010—the most since government tracking began in 1983. Read more. (Subscription required.)

ANALYSIS: MOST BIG M&A DEALS FACED LEGAL CHALLENGES IN 2012



A study released by Cornerstone Research on Thursday found that it was rare for a merger or acquisition deal in 2012 to escape legal challenges from shareholders, Corporate Counsel reported on Friday. Nearly 96 percent of M&A deals valued at more than $500 million and 93 percent of those valued at more than $100 million engendered suits, according to Cornerstone's report titled, "Shareholder Litigation Involving Mergers and Acquisitions." On average, the report found that deals attracted more than 4.8 suits per transaction, with some filed within hours after an announcement. The average time between announcement of a deal and commencement of a legal challenge was 14 days, the report said. Read more.

DON’T MISS THE ABI LIVE WEBINAR ON APRIL 5 - "LEGACY LIABILITIES: DEALING WITH ENVIRONMENTAL, PENSION, UNION AND SIMILAR TYPES OF CLAIMS"



A panel of experts has been assembled for a webinar on April 5 from 1-2:15 p.m. ET to discuss environmental and pension liabilities, the statutory schemes under which these liabilities arise and the key players involved. Are non-monetary environmental claims dischargeable? Do post-petition expenditures for environmental cleanup constitute administrative expenses? When can an employer terminate a pension plan in bankruptcy, what is the process and what are the consequences? Learn the answer to these questions and more from the comfort of your own office. Special ABI member rate is available! Register here as this webinar is sure to sell out.

ABI'S ANNUAL SPRING MEETING: CONSUMER PROGRAMMING WITH CROSS-OVER APPEAL



With four session tracks looking at issues geared toward chapter 11 restructurings, financial advisors, professional development and consumer bankruptcy, a number of sessions at ABI's Annual Spring Meeting have cross-over appeal for both consumer and business practitioners. Sessions include:



The Appellate Process: This distinguished panel will explore recent issues in appellate practice that are of interest to both consumer and business practitioners, including the ability to bypass intermediary appellate courts and take appeals directly to the circuit courts.

Consumer Class Actions: This panel will explore the potential benefits and pitfalls of class actions by debtors/trustees against creditors in chapter 13 cases, which are highlighted by two recent decisions of the Fifth Circuit. Many of the issues discussed during this panel will be useful in business cases as well.

The Individual Conundrum - Chapter 7, 11 or 13?: Deciding on the appropriate chapter for a high net worth individual contemplating a bankruptcy filing can be a daunting task. This panel will explore the considerations that guide the practitioner in advising individual clients in making this decision.

To register for the Annual Spring Meeting and to see the full schedule of program tracks and events, please click here.

ABI IN-DEPTH

MARK YOUR CALENDARS FOR APRIL 10 TO TAKE PART IN ABI’S LIVE WEBINAR "STUDENT LOANS: BANKRUPTCY MAY NOT HAVE THE ANSWERS – BUT DOES CONGRESS?"



Do not miss the "Student Loans: Bankruptcy May Not Have the Answers - But Does Congress?" webinar presented by ABI's Consumer Bankruptcy Committee on April 10 from noon-1:15 ET. ABI's panel of experts will provide an overview of the student loan industry, examine the numbers behind and causes of student loan debt, and discuss federal loan programs as well as federal consolidation and forgiveness programs. Faculty on the webinar includes:

  • Prof. Daniel A. Austin of Northeastern University School of Law (Boston)


  • Edward "Ted" M. King of Frost Brown Todd LLC (Louisville, Ky.)


  • Craig Zimmerman of the Law Offices of Craig Zimmerman (Santa Ana, Calif.)

CLE credit will be available for the webinar. This webinar is sure to sell out; register now for the special ABI member rate of $75!

NEW BANKRUPTCY PROFESSIONALS: DON'T MISS THE NUTS AND BOLTS PROGRAM AT ABI'S ANNUAL SPRING MEETING! SPECIAL PRICING IF YOU ARE AN ASM REGISTRANT!



An outstanding faculty of judges and practitioners explains the fundamentals of bankruptcy in a one-day Nuts and Bolts program on April 18 being held in conjunction with ABI's Annual Spring Meeting. Ideal training for junior professionals or those new to this practice area!

The morning session covers concepts all bankruptcy practitioners need to know, and the afternoon session splits into concurrent tracks, focusing on consumer and business issues. The session will include written materials, practice tip sessions with bankruptcy judges, continental breakfast and a reception after the program. Click here to register!

LATEST CASE SUMMARY ON VOLO: PAUL V. ALLRED (IN RE PAUL; 8TH CIR.)



Summarized by Michael Tamburini of Polsinelli Shughart, PC

The BAP affirmed the order of the bankruptcy court concluding that the debtor had abandoned the subject property as his homestead, and therefore was not permitted to claim a homestead exemption on it.

There are more than 750 appellate opinions summarized on Volo, and summaries typically appear 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: ASSIGNMENT OF RENTS: GOVERNMENT BENEFIT CARDS CAN OPEN DOORS TO BANKING SYSTEM

The Bankruptcy Blog Exchange is a free ABI service that tracks 35 bankruptcy-related blogs. Cards preloaded with unemployment insurance, child support, food stamps and other government benefits can be viewed as potential bank accounts, waiting to be opened by people with the fewest quality opportunities to connect to the financial mainstream, according to a recent blog post.

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

As a result of the RadLAX decision, the right to credit-bid will likely chill bidding at auctions, as potential purchasers may be dissuaded from participating in the bidding process.

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.

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THURSDAY:

 

 

 

Paskay 2013

March 7-9, 2013

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COMING UP

 

 

 

 

BBW 2013

March 22, 2013

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BBW 2013

April 5, 2013

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BBW 2013

April 10, 2013

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BBW 2013

April 18, 2013

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ASM 2013

April 18-21, 2013

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NYCBC 2013

May 15, 2013

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ASM 2013

May 16, 2013

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ASM 2013

May 21-24, 2013

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ASM 2013

June 7, 2013

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ASM 2013

June 13-16, 2013

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  CALENDAR OF EVENTS
 

2013

March

- 37th Annual Alexander L. Paskay Seminar on Bankruptcy Law and Practice

     March 7-9, 2013 | St. Petersburg, Fla.

- Bankruptcy Battleground West

     March 22, 2013 | Los Angeles, Calif.

April

- ABI Live Webinar: "Legacy Liabilities : Dealing with Environmental, Pension, Union and Similar Types of Claims"

     April 5, 2013

- ABI Live Webinar: "Student Loans: Bankruptcy May Not Have the Answers - But Does Congress?"

     April 10, 2013

- "Nuts and Bolts" Program at ASM

     April 18, 2013 | National Harbor, Md.

- Annual Spring Meeting

     April 18-21, 2013 | National Harbor, Md.


  

 

May

- "Nuts and Bolts" Program at NYCBC

     May 15, 2013 | New York, N.Y.

- ABI Endowment Cocktail Reception

     May 15, 2013 | New York, N.Y.

- New York City Bankruptcy Conference

     May 16, 2013 | New York, N.Y.

- Litigation Skills Symposium

     May 21-24, 2013 | Dallas, Texas

June

- Memphis Consumer Bankruptcy Conference

     June 7, 2013 | Memphis, Tenn.

- Central States Bankruptcy Workshop

     June 13-16, 2013 | Grand Traverse, Mich.


 
 

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