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Detroit Seeks 350 Million DIP Financing

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Detroit yesterday filed a request for proposals for $350 million in unprecedented financing, the city emergency manager's office said, Reuters reported yesterday. Detroit is the first large U.S. city to seek debtor-in-possession (DIP) financing after asking for bankruptcy court protection. The city plans to use about $250 million to terminate a complicated swaps deal related to previous bonds issued to finance pension debt, said Bill Nowling, press secretary for Detroit's state-appointed emergency manager, Kevyn Orr. About $100 million would "provide the city with adequate liquidity throughout the restructuring case to start reinvesting in Detroit today," Nowling said. It would be a line of credit the city could draw from, but it may not use all of it, he said. Nowling also said that Orr plans to use proceeds from the financing to invest in "quality of life" improvements for Detroit's nearly 700,000 residents.

For more information about DIP financing, be sure to pick up ABI's Debtor-in-Possession Financing guide, and for further analysis of municipal distress and the situation in Detroit, be sure to read Municipalities in Peril: The ABI Guide to Chapter 9, Second Edition.

Congressman to Hold Forum on Fallout of Detroit Bankruptcy Filing

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Rep. John Conyers (D-Mich.) said yesterday that he will convene a forum next week to discuss legal and other implications stemming from Detroit’s bankruptcy filing, the Detroit Free Press reported yesterday. Radio host, author and Georgetown University professor Michael Eric Dyson will host the forum to be held at Fellowship Church on West Outer Drive in Detroit, at 6 p.m. on Sept. 6. Harvey Hollins III, director of Gov. Rick Snyder’s Office of Urban and Metropolitan Initiatives, is expected to be there, as is Wayne County Executive Robert Ficano and other local elected officials, clergy and civic leaders, including officers of the NAACP and the American Federation of State, County and Municipal Employees. Conyers said that the forum will “examine the full range of issues facing Detroit as a result of the bankruptcy filing, including the impact on pensions, the state of possible conflicts of interests and other issues raised by an unelected official making the filing, such as whether the filing was made in good faith.”

Detroits Woes Add to Angst Over Municipal Debt

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Municipal-bond prices have fallen further than other debt amid rising U.S. interest rates this summer, exacerbating investor jitters spurred by Detroit's record-setting bankruptcy filing, the Wall Street Journal reported today. Bonds from some financially troubled issuers, like Puerto Rico and Chicago, have been particularly hard hit. Debt from the Windy City, which was downgraded by Moody's Investors Service last month amid questions about its pension liabilities, now yield about 1.50 percentage points more than a municipal market benchmark, up from about one percentage point in early July, according to Dan Toboja, senior vice president in fixed-income trading at investment bank and broker-dealer B.C. Ziegler & Co. in Chicago. Higher yields indicate lower prices. Yields on investment-grade municipal bonds have risen to almost the same as similarly rated corporate bonds. That is a rare occurrence, considering municipal bonds have lower default rates and the interest is generally tax free. As of Tuesday, yields on corporate bonds were 3.37 percent and yields on municipal bonds were 3.33 percent, according to investment-grade indexes from Barclays. Typically, municipal bonds yield about 25 percent less than corporate bonds. Debt prices in general have weakened since May. The Federal Reserve has discussed slowing its easy-money policies as the economy improves, prompting long-term bond yields to increase.

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Detroit Can Keep Casino Tax Revenue Judge Rules

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Cash-strapped Detroit can continue to access an estimated $11 million a month in casino tax revenue, Bankruptcy Judge Steven Rhodes ruled yesterday, while the court takes up a deal with creditors related to the revenue, Reuters reported yesterday. Judge Rhodes ruled that bond insurer Syncora Guarantee Inc. cannot block the city from using taxes paid by the city's three casinos. Judge Rhodes said that Syncora does not have a lien on the money used as collateral since 2009 to secure Detroit's obligations on interest-rate swap agreements. Detroit entered into those agreements in conjunction with the sale of pension debt for its two retirement funds.

Bankruptcy Judge Detroit Pension Protests Are Premature

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Detroit's bankruptcy judge has set a September court hearing for dozens of Michigan residents to voice opposition to the city's bankruptcy, but warned that a popular argument—that bankruptcy violates the state's constitution—won't persuade him to throw out the case at this point, Dow Jones Daily Bankruptcy Review reported today. Bankruptcy Judge Steven Rhodes named 90 individuals who will get three minutes each to argue for the city's bankruptcy to be dismissed at a Sept. 19 hearing. But in his 11-page order filed to the U.S. Bankruptcy Court in Detroit, he said that many of the arguments against the case have improperly focused on whether Emergency Manager Kevyn Orr's bankruptcy exit plan for the city would involve cutting back on the $3.5 billion worth of pension promises that city officials have made to more than 23,000 retired workers, firefighters and police.

Detroit Bankruptcy Judge Speeds Up Part of Eligibility Fight

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Detroit’s bankruptcy judge will hear some legal arguments one month earlier than planned about why the record-setting, $18 billion case should be thrown out, Bloomberg News reported yesterday. Bankruptcy Judge Steven Rhodes will also block objections related to any potential cuts to city-worker pensions until later on in the case, saying that fight should wait until a plan to adjust the city’s debt has been filed. Any objections to the city’s bankruptcy that don’t involve a dispute over facts, only the interpretation of legal issues raised by creditors, will be heard on Sept. 18 in federal court in Detroit, Judge Rhodes said in an order released yesterday. The original hearing on eligibility, set for Oct. 23, will remain unchanged and will be reserved for disputes over facts.

Detroit Mediator Orders Syncora Into Swaps Accord Talks

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Detroit’s lead bankruptcy mediator ordered the city and bond-insurer Syncora Guarantee Inc. into talks in their dispute over a proposed $253 million swaps settlement, Bloomberg News reported yesterday. The city is seeking to buy its way out of an interest-rate swaps contract to save about $50 million a year, a proposal that Syncora asked a bankruptcy judge to reject when it comes before the court next month. The mediator in the case, U.S. District Judge Gerald Rosen, ordered Syncora, the city and swaps holders including Merrill Lynch Capital Services Inc. to meet with a bankruptcy judge from Oregon to try to settle their differences. After Detroit filed the biggest-ever U.S. municipal bankruptcy last month, the city’s emergency manager, Kevyn Orr, asked the judge overseeing the $18 billion case to approve the settlement with Merrill Lynch and UBS AG. Syncora, which sold insurance on the swaps, opposes the settlement, claiming that ending the contract too early could hurt its economic interests.

Current Former Union Officials among Nine Named to Detroit Bankruptcy Panel

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The nine-member committee that will represent city of Detroit retirees during the city's bankruptcy case includes former and current union officials, among others, Crain’s Detroit Business reported yesterday. Per a court filing on Thursday, the committee members include Ed McNeil, special assistant to the president of the American Federation of State, County and Municipal Employees Michigan Council 25; Wendy Fields-Jacobs, executive administrative assistant to the president of the United Auto Workers; Michael Karwoski, retired assistant corporation counsel for the city of Detroit; Shirley Lightsey, president of the Detroit Retired City Employees Association; Terri Renshaw, retired senior vice president and general council, Comerica Inc. and deputy corporation counsel for city of Detroit; Robert Shinske, treasurer of the Detroit Fire Fighters Association, Local 344; Donald Taylor, president of the Retired Detroit Police and Fire Fighters Association; Gail Wilson Turner, former deputy chief of police for Detroit; and Gail M. Wilson, vice president of human resources for the Detroit-based Legal Aid and Defender Association and formerly director of human resources for the 36th District Court in Detroit. The committee will represent 23,500 Detroit retirees in court and during negotiations.

Detroit Bankruptcy Judge Allows Property Tax Appeals

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Hon. Steven Rhodes cleared the way yesterday for the state to hear hundreds of Detroit owners’ property assessment appeals, The Detroit News reported yesterday. But it is not clear when the city will pay out refunds if state officials find that owners were overtaxed. Judge Rhodes had frozen all lawsuits and claims against the city in its bankruptcy case, but he issued an order Thursday allowing the Michigan Tax Tribunal appeal hearings to proceed. The order says that the stay is “not modified” to permit collection of refunds, but city officials have said they plan on paying owners who successfully appeal. Southfield, Mich., attorney Yuliy Osipov, who represents firms that appeal Detroit assessments, said it is unclear when and how refunds will be paid, but the ruling is good news for owners. More than 800 appeals were filed with the tribunal this year as of Aug. 1, but that number could have grown in recent weeks as appeals were processed.

Analysis Critics of Detroits Bankruptcy Havent Offered Up Alternatives

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ABI Bankruptcy Brief | August 22, 2013


 


  

August 22, 2013

 

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  NEWS AND ANALYSIS   

ANALYSIS: CRITICS OF DETROIT'S BANKRUPTCY HAVEN'T OFFERED UP ALTERNATIVES

Objections to Detroit’s historic chapter 9 bankruptcy have been coming from the usual suspects. But none of them offers to change the fundamental reality facing America’s poorest major city, according to an analysis in The Detroit News on Tuesday. They can’t. Detroit’s government is insolvent and managerially spent, facts unaltered by complaints that Emergency Manager Kevyn Orr and his team failed to bargain in good faith. One month into the largest municipal bankruptcy in American history, it is clear that this won’t be a quick-rinse job akin to the General Motors Corp. or Chrysler LLC bankruptcies — but it is moving along nonetheless. The precedent-setting legal fight’s outcome could have a profound impact on unions, pension funds and the municipal finance market. The stakes are enormous, and financial creditors, unions, pension funds, retirees and ordinary citizens are objecting to Detroit’s bankruptcy filing because there are few opportunities otherwise to do so. Should U.S. Bankruptcy Judge Steven Rhodes accept the objections following an eligibility trial scheduled to begin Oct. 23, Orr, the city and their sponsors in Lansing would be back at square one with no Plan B. But experts say that Detroit’s case is progressing relatively rapidly. "For a case of this size — think about how complex it is — it’s moving quickly," says Douglas Bernstein, managing partner of Plunkett Cooney’s banking, bankruptcy and creditors’ rights practice group in Bloomfield Hills, Mich. Judge Rhodes is "way quicker than any of the others" in Alabama, California and Rhode Island, "and he’s got the biggest case of them all," Bernstein said. Click here to read the full analysis.

INVESTORS ARE SELLING MUNICIPAL BONDS AGAIN

Municipal bonds usually don’t get much attention unless something’s wrong, but they’re getting attention now, the Associated Press reported today. Investors have been running away from bonds issued by state and local governments for several months, even though they offer tax-free income. The worries began when interest rates started to rise in the spring and heightened after Detroit became the biggest city in the country ever to file for bankruptcy. The selloff is reminiscent of one that smacked municipal bonds in late 2010 and early 2011, following a prediction that a wave of defaults would hit the market. But now, like then, managers of municipal-bond mutual funds say that the worries have created a buying opportunity. Investors who bought in late 2010 did well: The average intermediate-term municipal bond fund returned 9 percent in 2011. Managers say such big gains aren’t likely this year, but long-term municipal bonds can offer tax-free yields of 5 percent and have the potential to increase in price if interest rates don’t take off, says John Miller, co-head of global fixed income for Nuveen Investments. Nearly every municipal bond mutual fund has lost money over the last three months. For a rebound in the municipal bond market to happen, it needs to snap out of the self-feeding selling cycle that has overtaken it. Click here to read the full article.

BANKRUPTCY, EVEN FOR DETROIT, COMES WITH A COST

As if Detroit doesn’t have enough money problems, now the cash-strapped city faces a huge bill from its bankruptcy lawyers — which, according to a Marketplace.org report today, begs the question: Is bankruptcy worth it? For example, Lehman Brothers’s bankruptcy fees topped $2 billion. "It can get very expensive," says Prof. David Skeel of the University of Pennsylvania. He says plenty of bankruptcies cost millions of dollars these days. One reason is that no one wants to speak up. "Nobody that’s in the case wants to rat on somebody else and say, ‘Your fees are way too high,’" he says. Over the past 10 years, Skeel says more companies have decided to fold rather than deal with bankruptcy costs. But there’s also more oversight now, especially since the Department of Justice updated its fee guidelines to make bankruptcy fees more transparent. "I’ll call up the professional and say, ‘Tell me why you made this choice,’" says Prof. Nancy Rapoport of the University of Nevada, Las Vegas, who has been a fee examiner. "Sometimes it’s a great choice. Sometimes we talk about a reduction in fees." Oversight, she says, is essential. "If reasonable fees aren’t being charged, then something is wrong with the system," she says. Click here to read the full article.

In related news, ABI held a webinar on Tuesday about the new U.S. Trustee Fee Guidelines, which will affect all attorneys and firms who work on larger chapter 11 cases filed on or after Nov. 1. Presented by ABI’s Ethics & Professional Compensation Committee, a panel of experts, including Clifford J. White, the director of the U.S. Trustee Program, discussed some of the ways that the new guidelines could change day-to-day operations in firms, issues relating to the new market rate benchmarks, and how these changes might alter insolvency practice. Click here to download a recording of the webinar.

CREDIT CARD DEBT IS FALLING, BUT STILL VERY HIGH

Consumer credit card debt in the U.S. has been edging down in recent years after peaking in July 2008 at $1 trillion (about the size of Mexico's annual GDP), IB Times reported yesterday. According to data from the Federal Reserve, as of July 2013 the average indebted household in the U.S. carries average credit card debt of $15,325, although that figure is somewhat skewed by a small number of extraordinarily debt-stricken families and couples. But that average credit card balance pales in comparison with average mortgage debt ($147,924) and average student loan debt ($32,041). On the whole, American consumers currently owe an aggregate of $856.5 billion in credit card debt. This figure has been falling since the height of the global financial crisis — not just because some debtors are paying off their balances, but also due to rising defaults as credit card companies and banks simply wrote off seriously delinquent debts, a phenomenon that coincided with soaring unemployment and personal bankruptcies. Thus, credit card balances are falling for both good and bad reasons. "Overall, consumers have been much more cautious about spending on credit since the recession; they discovered what overleveraging can do when the economy is struggling," said Leslie Levesque, U.S. economist at IHS Global Insight. Click here to read the full article.

BILL ON BANKRUPTCY VIDEO: AFSCME SAYS BANKRUPTCY LAW UNCONSTITUTIONAL

The AFSCME labor union is opposing the Detroit bankruptcy by contending that the entire municipal bankruptcy scheme violates the U.S. Constitution, as Bloomberg Law's Lee Pacchia and Bloomberg News bankruptcy columnist Bill Rochelle discuss in their new video. Again this week, Rochelle and Pacchia cover the American Airlines bankruptcy, this time focusing on whether parent AMR Corp. can persuade the bankruptcy judge to approve the reorganization plan before there's resolution to the government's antitrust suit. Rochelle also mentions the newest statistics showing no increase in business for bankruptcy professionals. The video ends with discussion of an important new decision from the U.S. Eleventh Circuit Court of Appeals in Atlanta adopting a new theory for taking assets outside of a bankrupt estate. Click here to watch the video.

ABI GOLF TOUR UNDERWAY; LAST STOP FOR 2013 IS WINTER LEADERSHIP CONFERENCE IN DECEMBER

The 7th and final stop for the 2013 ABI Golf Tour is on Dec. 5 at the Trump National Golf Club, held in conjunction with ABI’s Winter Leadership Conference. Final scoring to win the Great American Cup — sponsored by Great American Group — is based on your top three scores from the seven ABI events. See the Tour page for details and course descriptions. The ABI Golf Tour combines networking with fun competition, as golfers "play their own ball." Including your handicap means everyone has an equal chance to compete for the glory of being crowned ABI's top golfer of 2013! A 22-handicapper won the tour event at July’s Southeast Bankruptcy Workshop. There's no charge to register or participate in the Tour.

ABI IN-DEPTH

ABI’S VOLO PROJECT POSTS 1,000TH CIRCUIT COURT OPINION: PATRIOT COAL CORP. V. PEABODY HOLDING CO. (IN RE PATRIOT COAL CORP.; 8TH CIR.)

ABI now hosts more than 1,000 circuit court opinion summaries on its circuit court first-responder site, volo.abi.org. Appellate opinions are summarized within 24 hours of being issued and are then posted by a team of editors, led by Scott F. Gautier (Peitzman Weg LLP; Los Angeles). Opinion summaries also include links to the full text of each opinion.

Reversing the decision of the bankruptcy court, in Patriot Coal Corp. v. Peabody Holding Co. (In re Patriot Coal Corp.), Case No. 13-6031 (B.A.P. 8th Cir. Aug. 21, 2013), the Eighth Circuit Bankruptcy Appellate Panel held that Peabody Holding must continue to pay health care benefits for certain retired miners and dependents who worked for Heritage Coal Co., a Peabody subsidiary that was transferred to Patriot Coal in 2007.

Click here regularly to view the latest case summaries on ABI’s Volo website.

NEW ON ABI’S BANKRUPTCY BLOG EXCHANGE: TAX REFORM PROPOSAL BACKS CREDIT UNIONS INTO A CORNER

The Bankruptcy Blog Exchange is a free ABI service that tracks 35 bankruptcy-related blogs. A recent blog post explains how credit unions’ advocating to keep their tax-exempt status alive merely pass tax increases along to American businesses.

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

A class of claims should not be considered impaired for purposes of § 1129(a)(10) if the impairment results from the plan proponents' exercise of discretion (i.e., artificial impairment) and not driven by economic need. (In re Village at Camp Bowie I LP).

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 43 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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  CALENDAR OF EVENTS
 

2013

August

- Southwest Bankruptcy Conference

    August 22-24, 2013 | Incline Village, Nev.

September

- ABI Endowment Golf & Tennis Outing

    Sept. 10, 2013 | Maplewood, N.J.

- ABI Endowment Baseball Game

    Sept. 12, 2013 | Baltimore, Md.

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    Sept. 18-19, 2013 | New York

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     Sept. 24, 2013

- Bankruptcy 2013: Views from the Bench

    Sept. 27, 2013 | Washington, D.C.

October

- Midwestern Bankruptcy Institute Program and Midwestern Consumer Forum

    Oct. 4, 2013 | Kansas City, Mo.

- Professional Development Program

    Oct. 11, 2013 | New York, N.Y.


  


- Chicago Consumer Bankruptcy Conference

    Oct. 14, 2013 | Chicago, Ill.

- International Insolvency & Restructuring Symposium

    Oct. 25, 2013 | Berlin, Germany

November

- Complex Financial Restructuring Program

   Nov. 7, 2013 | Philadelphia, Pa.

- Corporate Restructuring Competition

   Nov. 7-8, 2013 | Philadelphia, Pa.

- Austin Advanced Consumer Bankruptcy Practice Institute

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- Detroit Consumer Bankruptcy Conference

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- ABI/St. John’s Bankruptcy Mediation Training

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