Skip to main content

%1

Judge Says A123 Creditors Can Vote on Liquidation Plan

Submitted by webadmin on

Bankruptcy Judge Kevin Carey said yesterday that A123 Systems Inc.'s unsecured creditors can begin voting on the failed battery maker's liquidation plan that proposes to pay them about 65 cents on the dollar, but offers no repayment of some $133 million worth of government-funded grants, Dow Jones Daily Bankruptcy Review reported today. A123 filed for bankruptcy in October and sold its automotive battery business for $256.6 million to Wanxiang America, a subsidiary of China's Wanxiang Group, at a bankruptcy court auction.

Creditor Calls for Bankruptcy Trustee for Arcapita Unit

Submitted by webadmin on

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.

Too-Big-to-Fail Claim Disputed by Bank Groups

Submitted by webadmin on



ABI Bankruptcy Brief | March 12 2013


 


  

March 12, 2013

 

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

"TOO-BIG-TO FAIL" CLAIM DISPUTED BY BANK GROUPS



Lobbying groups for the largest U.S. banks pushed back against claims that they remain too big to fail, rebutting assertions by lawmakers and regulators that they enjoy a "taxpayer subsidy" because of their size, Bloomberg News reported yesterday. The Dodd-Frank Act, passed by Congress in response to the 2008 credit crisis, greatly diminished the advantage that the biggest lenders held over smaller rivals, five industry groups wrote today in a brief on the issue. "There is substantial evidence that the market recognizes the impact Dodd-Frank has had on investor expectations," the Clearing House, Financial Services Forum, Financial Services Roundtable, Securities Industry and Financial Markets Association and American Bankers Association said in their brief. “Given the sizable costs associated with new regulations, together with the new orderly liquidation framework, any purported TBTF-related funding advantage has clearly been reduced or even eliminated." The financial-industry groups, representing lenders such as JPMorgan Chase & Co., Bank of America Corp. and Citigroup Inc., are responding to complaints by lawmakers and regulators including Warren and Dallas Federal Reserve President Richard Fisher that Dodd-Frank did not do enough to rein in big lenders. Read more.

COMMENTARY: HOW TO SHRINK THE "TOO-BIG-TO-FAIL" BANKS



A dozen megabanks today control almost 70 percent of the assets in the U.S. banking industry as the concentration of assets has been in progress for years, but it intensified during the 2008–09 financial crisis, when several failing giants were absorbed by larger, presumably healthier ones, according to a commentary in today's Wall Street Journal. Meanwhile, the mere 0.2 percent of banks deemed "too big to fail" are treated differently from the other 99.8 percent, and differently from other businesses. Implicit government policy has made these institutions exempt from the normal processes of bankruptcy and creative destruction, according to the commentary. Without fear of failure, these banks and their counterparties can take excessive risks. The commentary offers a few steps to level the competitive landscape:

1) Roll back the federal safety net—deposit insurance and the Federal Reserve's discount window—to apply only to traditional commercial banks, and not to the nonbank affiliates of bank holding companies or the parent companies themselves, which the safety net was never intended to protect.

2) Require customers, creditors and counterparties of all nonbank affiliates and the parent holding companies to sign a simple, legally binding, unambiguous disclosure acknowledging and accepting that there is no government guarantee—ever—backstopping their investment. A similar disclaimer would apply to bank deposits outside the FDIC insurance limit and other unsecured debts.

3) Restructure the largest financial holding companies so that every one of their corporate entities is subject to a speedy bankruptcy process and, in the case of banking entities themselves, be of a size that is "too small to save."

Click here to read the full commentary. (Subscription required.)

ANALYSIS: AS ASBESTOS CLAIMS RISE, SO DO WORRIES ABOUT FRAUD



With dozens of asbestos-related manufacturers forced into bankruptcy, a burgeoning swath of the legal action has shifted out of the courtroom and into a world of trusts that evaluate claims and authorize payouts with little outside scrutiny, according to an analysis yesterday in the Wall Street Journal. Fraud allegations have periodically dogged the trusts, and even though the worst asbestos-related diseases are finally starting to taper off, there is growing concern that the trusts will run out of money before America runs out of asbestos victims. Three decades after Manville Corp. collapsed under an avalanche of asbestos litigation, personal-injury claims in the case continue to pile up at a rate of 85 per day. By last March, a Manville bankruptcy trust had already paid out nearly $4.3 billion. "Right now there are a lot of suggestions that fraud and abuse are present," says House Judiciary Chairman Bob Goodlatte, a Republican from Virginia, who has scheduled a hearing Wednesday on a bill requiring trusts to publish detailed claims reports to help ensure that money goes only to legitimate victims. In recent months, judges across the country who handle asbestos cases involving still-viable companies have granted defense requests to subpoena bankruptcy trusts to sniff out potentially false and conflicting evidence. Many defendants believe such data could help expose fraudulent or inflated claims that could potentially save them hundreds of millions of dollars in jury verdicts. Read more. (Subscription required.)

Click here to review the bill text of H.R. 982, the "Furthering Asbestos Claim Transparency (FACT) Act of 2013" introduced by Rep. Blake Farenthold (R-Texas), which will be examined tomorrow at a hearing before the House Judiciary Subcommittee on Regulatory Reform, Commercial and Antitrust Law at 2:30 p.m. ET.

COMMENTARY: ENTERPRISE VALUE TAX PROPOSAL WOULD HIT FIRMS THAT HAVE NOTHING TO DO WITH "CARRIED INTEREST"



The Enterprise Value Tax (EVT) has been inserted into congressional proposals to "fix" carried interest, but the legislation would claw back significantly more money than investment managers and other financial professionals have ever saved by taking legal, proper and open advantage of the carried-interest tax treatment, according to a commentary in today's Wall Street Journal. Under current law, entrepreneurs of all types who sell their companies are taxed on the profits at the capital-gains rate. The EVT seeks to change this, but only for the sale of certain businesses—namely investment-service partnerships, the sale of which would now be taxed as regular income. The EVT is designed to claw back entrepreneurs' supposedly ill-gotten carried-interest gains from the past. Worse, the commentary says that the proposed new tax would mostly affect people who do not currently benefit much, if at all, from the tax treatment of carried interest. The savings afforded to carried interest have benefited only a small subset of investment managers who have substantial performance-fee earnings in the form of long-term capital gains. That category does not include many hedge funds, whose gains are mostly short-term, or traditional money managers, who do not center their businesses around performance fees. The EVT would raise the bulk of its revenue from investment-services partnerships that have little or no carried-interest earnings, or whose carried interest is already taxed at the same rate as ordinary income because the performance fee results from ordinary income or short-term capital gains. Read the full commentary. (Subscription required.)

For insight, the Cato Institute released an analysis last year on the dangers of the proposed enterprise value tax. Click here to read the analysis.

REPORT: APPEALS COURT ACTIVITY RISES, BANKRUPTCY COURTS AND DISTRICT COURTS SEE DROP-OFF IN CASELOADS IN FY2012



Appeals court activity increased in fiscal year 2012 (12-month period ending Sept. 30, 2012) as filings dropped in bankruptcy courts and district courts, according to the "Judicial Business of the U.S. Courts" report released today by the Administrative Office of the U.S. Courts. The regional U.S. courts of appeals reported that filings rose 4 percent to 57,501. In the U.S. district courts, total filings fell 5 percent to 372,563 as civil case filings decreased 4 percent to 278,442 and criminal defendant filings declined 9 percent to 94,121. Petitions filed in the U.S. bankruptcy courts dropped 14 percent to 1,261,140. To read the report and review the caseload totals, please click here.

SMU DEDMAN SCHOOL OF LAW TAKES TOP HONORS AT 21st ANNUAL DUBERSTEIN MOOT COURT COMPETITION



Students from Southern Methodist University Dedman School of Law prevailed over a record 60 other student teams to win first place at the 21st Annual Conrad B. Duberstein National Bankruptcy Moot Court Competition, held March 9-11 in New York. The competition is co-sponsored by the American Bankruptcy Institute and St. John’s University School of Law. Florida Coastal School of Law took second place in the competition, while the University of Florida Frederic G. Levin College of Law and a team from Stetson University College of Law shared the honors for third place. The University of Miami School of Law won the award for the Best Brief of the competition, and Nicholas Andrews of Mississippi College School of Law took the honor of Best Advocate. Nearly 1,000 members of the New York-area insolvency community attended the final-night awards dinner at Pier 60 on the Manhattan waterfront. For more information on ABI's Conrad B. Duberstein National Bankruptcy Moot Court Competition, please go to http://www.stjohns.edu/academics/graduate/law/academics/llm/duberstein.

LATEST ABI PODCAST EXAMINES THE EFFECTIVENESS OF CHAPTER 11 FOR CHURCH FINANCIAL DISTRESS



The latest ABI Podcast features ABI Resident Scholar Scott Pryor speaking with Prof. Pamela Foohey of the University of Illinois College of Law discussing her recent paper examining church reorganizations that filed for chapter 11 protection, titled "Bankrupting the Faith." Foohey discusses her empirical study looking at church bankruptcies from 2006-11 to draw out the characteristics of the filings and case outcomes to see if bankruptcy is an effective solution to the institution's financial problems. Click here to listen.

To read Prof. Foohey's study, please click here.

DON'T MISS ABC'S FREE EVENT, "THE AUTO BANKRUPTCIES: CHECKING THE REARVIEW MIRROR," ON MARCH 22!



ABI members are encouraged to register for the American College of Bankruptcy's "The Auto Bankruptcies: Checking the Rearview Mirror" on March 22 at Boston College Law School in Newton, Mass. The afternoon event will feature key players looking back at the events that led to GM and Chrysler being placed into bankruptcy and the lessons that have been learned from the cases. Panelists include:

Corrine Ball of Jones Day (New York), who served as lead bankruptcy counsel to Chrysler.

Matthew A. Feldman of Willkie Farr and Gallagher LLP (New York), who served as chief legal advisor to the Obama administration's Task Force on the Auto Industry.

• Hon. Arthur J. Gonzalez, a Senior Fellow at New York University School of Law and formerly the Chief Bankruptcy Judge for the U.S. Bankruptcy Court for the Southern District of New York, who presided over the Chrysler chapter 11 proceedings.

Harvey R. Miller of Weil, Gotshal & Manges LLP (New York), who served as lead bankruptcy counsel to GM.

The moderator will be Mark N. Berman of Nixon Peabody LLP (New York).

Registration for the afternoon event is free, so be sure to sign up today before it reaches capacity!

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

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: COOK V. BACA (10TH CIR.)



Summarized by Steven T. Mulligan of Bieging Shapiro & Barber LLP

The court affirmed the dismissal of the pro se appellant's complaint in part and remanded with instructions to modify a portion of the dismissal from a dismissal with prejudice to one without prejudice for lack of subject-matter jurisdiction. The court found that the appellant lacked the standing to argue that a violation of the automatic stay had occurred because the BAP had already found that such claims belong to the bankruptcy estate, so the appellant lacked standing to bring such arguments.

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: PROBLEMS AT FHA TOO BIG FOR CONGRESS TO IGNORE

The Bankruptcy Blog Exchange is a free ABI service that tracks 35 bankruptcy-related blogs. A recent blog post found that reform efforts could result in a much smaller scope of permissible lending at the FHA, with a renewed focus on its traditional core of low-income customers, higher credit score requirements and increased down payments.

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.

Have a Twitter, Facebook or LinkedIn Account?

Join our networks to expand yours.

  

 

UP NEXT:

 

BBW 2013

March 22, 2013

Register Today!

 

 

 

 

 

COMING UP

 

 

 

BBW 2013

April 5, 2013

Register Today!

 

 

 

 

 

BBW 2013

April 10, 2013

Register Today!

 

 

 

 

ASM NAB 2013

April 18, 2013

Register Today!

 

 

 

 

 

ASM 2013

April 18-21, 2013

Register Today!

 

 

 

 

 

NYCBC 2013

May 15, 2013

Register Today!

 

 

 

 

 

ASM 2013

May 16, 2013

Register Today!

 

 

 

 

ASM 2013

May 21-24, 2013

Register Today!

 

 

 

 

ASM 2013

June 7, 2013

Register Today!

 

 

 

 

 

ASM 2013

June 13-16, 2013

Register Today!

 

 

 

 

 

NE 2013

July 11-14, 2013

Register Today!

 

 

 

 

 

ASM 2013

July 18-21, 2013

Register Today!



 

   
  CALENDAR OF EVENTS
 

2013

March

- 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.

July

- Northeast Bankruptcy Conference and Northeast Consumer Forum

     July 11-14, 2013 | Newport, R.I.

- Southeast Bankruptcy Workshop

     July 18-21, 2013 | Amelia Island, Fla.


 
 

ABI BookstoreABI Endowment Fund ABI Endowment Fund
 


GM Creditors Appeal 1.5 Billion Fight with JPM Lenders

Submitted by webadmin on

Unsecured creditors of General Motors Co are appealing a defeat in a $1.5 billion fight with the company's lenders that shows the potentially drastic implications of a paperwork error, Reuters reported on Friday. Through an appeal lodged on Thursday in bankruptcy court, the creditor group continued a three-year fight over whether lenders, led by JPMorgan Chase & Co, should have to pay for accidentally filing a financing document that may have terminated their lien on GM's assets. After the automaker, or "Old GM," filed for bankruptcy in 2009, its best assets were sold to the new General Motors Co. The remainder of the company was liquidated for the benefit of creditors, who have been litigating various matters in hopes of recovering money. In this case, the creditor group claimed JPMorgan and a host of other holders of a syndicated $1.5 billion term loan may have terminated their lien on GM's assets, resulting in unsecured creditors being entitled to at least a portion of those assets. In a March 1 opinion, Bankruptcy Judge Robert Gerber explained that, as part of a process to terminate a lien on an unrelated loan, GM and JPMorgan accidentally submitted a filing under Uniform Commercial Code guidelines whose language effectively nixed the lien for the term loan.

ResCaps Bondholders Call for Rival Restructuring Plans

Submitted by webadmin on

Bondholders say allowing Residential Capital LLC to retain control of its stalled restructuring is "the surest path to nuclear war" and urged a judge to allow creditors to propose rival restructuring plans, Dow Jones Daily Bankruptcy Review reported yesterday. A group of junior secured bondholders is asking a bankruptcy judge to deny ResCap's request for a three-month extension of its exclusive right to file the restructuring plan describing how it will pay creditors, settle disputes and exit chapter 11 protection. According to the bondholders, the request is based on the "false assumption" that ResCap's long-running restructuring negotiations will result in a breakthrough that will take the mortgage lender out of bankruptcy. The bondholders say that the plan talks, which have gone to mediation with a sitting bankruptcy judge, have only further entrenched warring creditors in their respective positions.

Creditors File Involuntary Bankruptcy Against Commerce Corp.

Submitted by webadmin on

Several creditors of Commerce Corp. filed an involuntary bankruptcy petition against the Maryland-based distributor of lawn and garden supplies, the Baltimore Sun reported today. In the petition filed last week, five creditors claim they are owed a combined $1.73 million from the Curtis Bay distributor and want it placed in a chapter 7 liquidation. Commerce, founded by CEO Richard Lessans' family in the 1920s, has been under financial stress, and early last month notified the state it was laying off up to 70 employees.

ResCap Creditors Press Ally for Larger Pact

Submitted by webadmin on

Negotiations are breaking down between creditors of bankrupt mortgage lender Residential Capital LLC and its parent, Ally Financial Inc., making it likely that the government-owned auto-finance company will face litigation as it seeks to sever ties, the Wall Street Journal reported today. The creditors, including Wilmington Trust Corp. and other members of a committee representing ResCap's unsecured creditors, are pushing Ally to provide more money to settle potential liabilities it could face as ResCap's parent. Ally, which is 74 percent-owned by the U.S. government, is working to cap its exposure to the subprime lender's mortgage business so it can move forward on efforts to repay its $17.2 billion crisis-era bailout and focus on its core auto-lending and online-banking businesses.

MF Global Payout Plan Approved for Creditor Vote

Submitted by webadmin on

Bankruptcy Judge Martin Glenn yesterday approved the outline of a plan by liquidators and creditors of failed brokerage MF Global to repay the company's creditors, a key step toward ending its $40 billion chapter 11 case, Reuters reported yesterday. The approved outline was amended to address minor concerns that Judge Glenn had raised in refusing to approve an earlier version of the outline last week. Under the payout plan, the company's trader customers would be repaid in full. Louis Freeh, the trustee liquidating the MF Global parent, has agreed if necessary to support an effort by customers' trustee James Giddens to allocate some of the parent's assets to customer accounts to ensure their full recovery.

Fitch Enterprise Valuation Key to Creditor Recoveries in Bankruptcies

Submitted by webadmin on

A Fitch Ratings analysis of corporate bankruptcies released yesterday found that fundamental estimates of reorganization enterprise value or negotiated settlement values used in bankruptcy reorganization plans are critical to the success of an issuer's reorganization process, Reuters reported yesterday. On average, the 75 defaulted issuers in Fitch's sample eliminated 68 percent of pre-petition debt through their bankruptcy processes, with debt reduction in 73 of 75 cases. Fifteen companies emerged with no debt outstanding due to being completely liquidated or emerging as going concerns with no debt. Relative position in the capital structure was also a key determinant of recovery. First-lien creditors fared much better than junior creditors in terms of ultimate recoveries: 54 percent of the 99 secured claims (all priorities) received plan distributions that resulted in recoveries of at least 91 percent of the claim amounts. Creditor recoveries on unsecured debt were more widely distributed: 43 percent of the 71 unsecured issues received distributions of 10 percent or less of their claim amount and 16 percent recovered at least 91 percent. Read more: http://www.reuters.com/article/2013/02/14/idUSWNB0035C20130214

Looking for further information and current analysis on the latest valuation topics? Don’t miss VALCON 2013 next week in Las Vegas. Not able to attend the conference? Be sure to pick up a copy of ABI’s latest title, A Practical Guide to Bankruptcy Valuation, from the ABI Bookstore.

Creditors Fire Back in Archdiocese of Milwaukees Bankruptcy

Submitted by webadmin on

The Archdiocese of Milwaukee's bankruptcy is at risk of becoming the first of its kind in the nation to fail to compensate sex abuse victims equitably, creditors say in a court filing this week, the Milwaukee Journal Sentinel reported yesterday. If the archdiocese is as broke as it said it was in a recent court motion, the creditors insist it should begin selling properties, tap what could be $150 million in its cemetery and Faith In Our Future funds and aggressively pursue newly discovered insurance policies that may cover its handling of the sex abuse crisis. The creditors are responding to an archdiocese motion asking Bankruptcy Judge Susan V. Kelley to let it halt most payments of its legal and professional fees, and fold those costs into its reorganization plan, arguing that they will soon hinder its ability to pay its monthly bills. Creditors blame the church's financial troubles on its unprecedented strategy of objecting to hundreds of the sex-abuse claims filed, and say failure to pay its fees would bar it from developing a reorganization plan.