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MF Global Claims Trade Higher as Customers Seek 100 Percent Back

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MF Global Inc. customers who had money trapped when the U.S. broker collapsed are rushing to sell their claims at higher prices after a prediction they could recover 100 percent of what was lost, Bloomberg News reported yesterday. Louis Freeh, the trustee for the brokerage's parent, MF Global Holdings Ltd., said yesterday at a U.S. Senate Agriculture Committee hearing that customers may eventually recoup all of their money. His testimony was at odds with that of a trustee for the brokerage, James Giddens, who predicted customers will eventually get a recovery of about 90 percent. Those who buy customer claims said that prices and volumes are increasing today as a result.

Peregrine Clients Sue CEO Wasendorf for Theft of More Than 200 Million

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Several customers of Peregrine Financial Group are suing the failed futures brokerage's chief executive officer, Russell Wasendorf Sr., and other top management for allegedly stealing more than $200 million in client funds, Reuters reported yesterday. Peregrine clients filed three separate lawsuits in July in federal court in Chicago, each seeking class-action status. Late on Tuesday, lawyers for two of those cases filed requests to be reassigned to U.S. District Judge Rebecca Pallmeyer, who is already hearing the Commodity Futures Trading Commission's civil case against the firm and its CEO. A judge will hear the motions today.

AIG Pushing Plan for Independence

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American International Group Inc. is looking to buy back a large amount of its shares from the government in a push that could make the U.S. a minority shareholder by the fall and enable the insurer to fully repay its bailout sooner than expected, the Wall Street Journal reported today. AIG, which was effectively nationalized by the government four years ago as part of a controversial financial-industry bailout, has been accumulating billions of dollars in cash that it can use for share repurchases and other activities. Several analysts who follow the company say that the government's stake could be cut below 30 percent before the November elections, if asset sales expected by AIG in the coming months help the company raise a total of $10 billion to $15 billion in excess capital. The buybacks are likely to accompany one or more public share offerings of AIG stock by the Treasury, which over the past 16 months has reduced its stake from a peak of 92 percent through a series of at-market sales.

SEC Loses Lawsuit Against Ex-Citigroup Official Stoker

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The Securities and Exchange Commission lost a jury verdict in its lawsuit against former Citigroup Inc. official Brian Stoker over a deal at the center of the bank's proposed $285 million settlement with regulators over subprime residential mortgage securities, Bloomberg News reported yesterday. The SEC had accused Stoker, the former director of Citigroup’s collateralized debt obligation structuring group, of violating securities law in putting together the assets underlying a $1 billion CDO. The SEC claimed New York-based Citigroup structured and sold the CDO without telling investors that it helped pick about half the underlying assets and was betting they would decline in value by taking a short position. "This verdict should not deter the SEC from continuing to investigate the financial industry, to review current regulations, and modify existing regulations as necessary," the jury said in rendering its decision that Stoker was not liable.

Ally Financial Reports Loss on Bankruptcy-Related Charge

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Ally Financial Inc., the auto lender 74 percent owned by U.S. taxpayers, reported a second-quarter loss today as it took a $1.2 billion charge related to the bankruptcy filing by its mortgage subsidiary, Reuters reported. The Detroit-based lender said that it lost $898 million after taking the previously disclosed charge, compared with a $113 million profit a year before. Ally, previously known as GMAC Financial, was once the auto lending arm of what is now General Motors Co. Its Residential Capital mortgage unit filed for chapter 11 bankruptcy court protection on May 14 in a move that aims to protect the parent company from mortgage liabilities as it seeks to repay government bailouts.

Peregrine Trustee Wants to Subpoena 10 Banks

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The trustee overseeing Peregrine Financial Group Inc. wants to subpoena financial records from 10 banks involved with the collapsed U.S. brokerage, the Wall Street Journal reported today. A federal judge is being asked to allow court-appointed trustee Ira Bodenstein to issue subpoenas to JPMorgan Chase & Co., US Bank, Citigroup Inc., Morgan Stanley and Goldman Sachs Group Inc. and five other institutions, according to a court filing late yesterday. Bodenstein said in the filing that he was seeking information related to open and closed Peregrine accounts at the institutions. The trustee also wants information from Bank of New York Mellon Corp., First Premier, Jefferies Bache, Royal Bank of Scotland Group PLC and Commerzbank AG. The request is due to be heard by the judge at a hearing on Aug. 7.

Bankruptcy Trustee Tells Congress There Is Hope for MF Global Client Recoveries

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A bankruptcy trustee sifting through the remains of MF Global Holdings Ltd. expressed confidence that the failed securities firm's U.S. customers will get all their money back, the Wall Street Journal reported today. In written testimony submitted to the Senate Agriculture Committee for a hearing today, trustee Louis J. Freeh said that farmers, ranchers, traders and other investors still owed an estimated $1.6 billion "eventually will be made whole." After MF Global collapsed in October under the weight of a customer panic caused by the New York company's giant bets on European debt, investigators worried they might never recover the missing customer money. The shortfall occurred when MF Global dipped into customer accounts as it scrambled to stay alive. Prosecutors and regulators are trying to determine who is responsible for withdrawing money from the customer accounts, which under U.S. rules should have been kept separate from MF Global's own money. Freeh, former director of the Federal Bureau of Investigation, has been working to recover as much money as possible for creditors of the defunct company, while trustee James Giddens is trying to recoup funds for its U.S. brokerage firm's customers.

For further details on the hearing, including the witness list and prepared testimony, please click here:
http://www.ag.senate.gov/hearings/examining-the-futures-markets-respond…

U.S. Consumer Spending Falls in June Incomes Rise

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ABI Bankruptcy Brief | July 31, 2012


 


  

July 31, 2012

 

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  NEWS AND ANALYSIS   

U.S. CONSUMER SPENDING FALLS IN JUNE; INCOMES RISE



Consumer spending in the U.S. fell slightly in June and marked the second straight decline even though wages rose sharply, according to the latest government data, MarketWatch.com reported. Spending fell less than 0.1 percent last month on a seasonally adjusted basis, the Commerce Department said today, and spending for May was revised down slightly to a 0.1 percent decrease. Personal income, meanwhile, jumped 0.5 percent in June. Since incomes rose faster than spending, the personal savings rate rose to 4.4 percent from 4.0 percent. Read more.

REPORT: COMPLETED U.S. FORECLOSURES HOLD STEADY IN JUNE



CoreLogic reported today that the amount of completed U.S. home foreclosures held steady in June compared to the month before, although the level was down from a year ago, according to Reuters. There were 60,000 finished foreclosures in June, the same as in May and down from the 80,000 seen in June 2011, CoreLogic said. Since the financial crisis erupted in September 2008, there have been about 3.7 million foreclosures.
About 1.4 million homes, or 3.4 percent of homes with a mortgages, were in some stage of the foreclosure process. That was down from 1.5 million homes, or 3.5 percent, a year ago and unchanged from May. The five states with the highest number of foreclosures in the last 12 months were California, Florida, Michigan, Texas and Georgia. Those states alone accounted for 48.4 percent of all completed foreclosures. Read more.

ANALYSIS: CALIFORNIA LURING MOST MUNICIPAL FUND INVESTMENT SINCE 2007, DEFIES BANKRUPTCY WAVE



California municipal funds are garnering the most demand since 2007, helping fuel the biggest rally in the state's debt since May and allaying concerns that bankruptcies might curb the appetite of individual investors, Bloomberg News reported yesterday. With local yields close to their lowest rates since the 1960s, investors seeking tax-free income are willing to take the added risk of debt from Standard & Poor's lowest-rated U.S. state. Bond funds focusing on California issuers have added assets for 18 straight weeks, the longest streak since 2007, according to Lipper US Fund Flows data. The funds increased even as three municipalities in the past six weeks from the most-populous state decided to file for bankruptcy protection, including San Bernardino and Stockton, a city east of San Francisco that is trying to set a precedent by imposing losses on bondholders. Read more.

MUNI RATES EXAMINED FOR SIGNS OF RIGGING



Attention has swung to a set of benchmark interest rates that help determine how much cities and states pay to borrow money in the bond market, the New York Times reported today. The scrutiny of the Municipal Market Data (or M.M.D.) index comes on the heels of revelations that a broader financial industry benchmark, the London Interbank Offered Rate (Libor), was manipulated by banks before and after the financial crisis. Libor is used to help determine the costs of products like mortgages and credit cards. Thomson Reuters, which owns Municipal Market Data, said yesterday that it "has been involved in discussions with regulators" about the rates, which influence the prices of bonds and derivatives in the $3 trillion municipal bond market. The M.M.D. rates influence a much smaller market than Libor, but it is one that is crucial to how cities and states across America borrow money to maintain roads and bridges and provide essential services such as public education. The scrutiny of the M.M.D. rates comes as a number of other events are drawing attention to the transparency and fairness of the municipal bond market. Three former bankers at UBS yesterday went on trial in Manhattan on charges that they had colluded to steer municipal bond transactions to specific banks in exchange for kickbacks. Separately, the Securities and Exchange Commission will release a lengthy report soon that recommends reforms for the municipal bond market so that investors are put on more even footing. Read more.

ANALYSIS: THOUGH SPLITTING UP WAS CONSIDERED, BANK OF AMERICA EXECUTIVES VOTED AGAINST THE IDEA



Long before Sanford Weill suggested last week that big banks should split up, Bank of America Corp. executives and directors considered the idea and then decided against it, the Wall Street Journal reported yesterday. While the Charlotte, N.C.-based company's exploration of a possible breakup in 2010 and 2011 came and went, it illustrates the powerful and contradictory forces buffeting giant financial companies even as the financial crisis recedes. Stung by public revulsion to the bailouts of 2008, regulators are pushing rules that would tax the biggest firms based on size. Big-bank share prices have tumbled, and even some bankers who spent their careers assembling sprawling conglomerates are questioning whether combining traditional lending with trading and deal-making makes sense. At Bank of America, Chief Executive Brian Moynihan and his team looked at a possible bankruptcy of Countrywide Financial Corp., the troubled mortgage operation it purchased in 2008. Management also studied whether it made sense to break off Merrill Lynch, the securities firm it purchased in 2009. Moynihan ultimately recommended to his board that neither action made sense. The company decided that Merrill had become too big of a profit center and that splitting it off could expose the brokerage firm to the sort of funding problems that killed off other Wall Street firms in 2008. Meanwhile, it felt that a bankruptcy of Countrywide might invite more legal and reputational troubles for Bank of America while exposing other subsidiaries to problems. Read more. (Subscription required.)

ABI IN-DEPTH

LATEST CASE SUMMARY ON VOLO: IN RE PHILADELPHIA NEWSPAPERS LLC (3D CIR.)



Summarized by Suzanne Iazzetta of Becker Meisel LLC

The Third Circuit ruled that when deciding whether an appeal is equitably moot, a court must consider all five factors set forth in In re Continental Airlines, 91 F.3d 553, 560 (3d Cir. 1996). In particular, a court must consider whether allowing the appeal to go forward would undermine the plan, an analysis that the court must undertake even if the plan has already been "substantially consummated."

Additionally, under applicable Pennsylvania law, the debtor’s post-petition publication of an article that included hyperlinks to a previously published allegedly defamatory article was not a "republication" such that it could be deemed a separate act of defamation. Therefore, the tort claimant did not sustain its burden to show its entitlement to a § 503(b)(9) administrative expense claim based on the debtor's post-petition publication.

More than 570 appellate opinions are summarized on Volo typically 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: HOW LONG UNTIL RESCAP LIQUIDATES?



The Bankruptcy Blog Exchange is a free ABI service that tracks 35 bankruptcy-related blogs. A recent post examines the $109 million loss by Rescap in the first 45 days of its chapter 11 case and ponders whether there will be a liquidation in the case.

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

The Twombly/Iqbal rule for pleading ‘plausible’ claims has been applied too stringently in dismissing avoidance actions for failure to state a claim.

Click here to vote on this week's Quick Poll. Click here to view the results of previous Quick Polls.

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  CALENDAR OF EVENTS
 

August

- Mid-Atlantic Bankruptcy Workshop

     August 2-4, 2012 | Cambridge, Md.

September

- Complex Financial Restructuring Program

     September 13-14, 2012 | Las Vegas, Nev.


- Southwest Bankruptcy Conference

     September 13-15, 2012 | Las Vegas, Nev.

- 38th Annual Lawrence P. King and Charles Seligson Workshop on Bankruptcy & Business Reorganization

     September 19-20, 2012 | New York, N.Y.

October

- Nuts & Bolts for Young and New Practitioners - KC

     October 4, 2012 | Kansas City, Mo.

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- Bankruptcy 2012: Views from the Bench

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Bank of America Barclays Credit Suisse Sued over Libor Manipulation

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Bank of America Corp., Barclays Plc and Credit Suisse Group AG were among the banks sued by an investor over alleged manipulation of the Libor benchmark interest rate, Bloomberg News reported yesterday. The investor, 33-35 Green Pond Road Associates LLC, bought an interest rate swap with a floating rate tied to the U.S.- dollar Libor, it said in a complaint filed court yesterday. Green Pond Road seeks to represent a class of investors that bought U.S. dollar Libor-based derivatives beginning on Aug. 1, 2007. Green Pond Road claims the banks illegally colluded to fix Libor, injuring investors in securities based on the rate. The suit seeks unspecified damages, which could be tripled under U.S. antitrust law.

Lehman Raises 4.7 Billion in Second Quarter for Payment

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Lehman Brothers Holdings Inc., the bankrupt investment bank planning a second payment to creditors in September, said that it raised $4.7 billion in the second quarter from real estate sales, derivatives and settlement of a lawsuit, Bloomberg News reported today. Overseen by a new board since its emergence from bankruptcy in March, the company plans semi-annual distributions and is focused on maximizing cash for that purpose, it said in a regulatory filing yesterday. Allowed claims for payment have been cut to $303 billion from $1.3 trillion originally, with another $58 billion that may be deemed valid, out of disputed claims of $193 billion, Lehman said.