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Home-Equity Loans Pose Looming Threat to Banks

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The Office of the Comptroller of the Currency warned that more than half the amount borrowed on equity lines at national banks, or $221 billion out of $380 billion, will face higher payments from 2014 to 2017, exposing banks to the possibility of losses if some equity-line borrowers default, the Wall Street Journal reported today. Darrin Benhart, deputy comptroller for credit and market risk at the OCC, said that "banks are going to have to be thinking about ways that they're going to address" the problem, including debt restructuring. The OCC report, the first in a series of semiannual reports on financial risks in the banking system, also said that banks have shifted to higher-risk investments to boost interest rate returns, a development that could create future losses for banks. The OCC is separately studying which banks could be hit the hardest if interest rates rise. For larger banks the regulator said that it would focus on problems with mortgage servicing as well as underwriting standards for business loans and exposure to European institutions. The agency will also scrutinize smaller banks to look at loss exposure from commercial real estate loans and new types of auto and other lending products.

Barclays Demands 1.3 Billion in Lehman Brokerage Appeal

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Barclays Plc challenged a ruling in its court fight with defunct brokerage Lehman Brothers Inc., saying that it has an "unconditional" right to $769 million that a federal judge denied and wants an additional $507 million in margin assets delivered immediately, Bloomberg News reported yesterday. The London-based bank, which bought Lehman Brothers Holdings Inc.'s North American business during the 2008 credit crisis, won as much as $5.5 billion in last month’s ruling. U.S. District Judge Katherine Forrest ordered brokerage liquidator James Giddens to pay money owed to Barclays and renounce his claim to margin assets that backed trading operations the bank took over from Lehman. Barclays now wants all of the remaining $1.3 billion in assets that are in dispute, according to an appeal to the U.S. Court of Appeals in Manhattan.

Banks Ask N.Y. Judge to Throw Out LIBOR Antritust Suits

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More than a dozen banks including Citigroup Inc. and Bank of America Corp. asked a U.S. judge to dismiss a group of lawsuits in which they are accused of trying to manipulate the London interbank offered rate (LIBOR), Bloomberg News reported on Tuesday. Plaintiffs including the City of Baltimore and New Britain Firefighters’ Benefit Fund sued the banks in 2011, contending they "suppressed" the LIBOR -- a key metric to set interest rates for trillions of dollars in financial instruments. More than 20 cases have been aggregated before U.S. District Judge Naomi Reice Buchwald in New York. In some suits, the lenders are accused of antitrust violations, in others currency traders allege the manipulation injured investment returns.

Hedge Fund Files for Bankruptcy

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A hedge fund managed by the investment firm of Alphonse "Buddy" Fletcher Jr. has filed for bankruptcy protection in Manhattan, as the firm faces a mounting legal challenge, the Wall Street Journal reported today. The chapter 11 filing comes after a Cayman Islands judge in April appointed liquidators from Ernst & Young to wind up another fund run by New York-based Fletcher Asset Management. In the early 1990s, Fletcher made a splash on Wall Street, reporting 300 percent-a-year returns at his firm. The Ernst & Young liquidators were appointed after three Louisiana public pension funds that had invested with the Fletcher firm sought help from the Cayman court in January to get their money after other efforts last year failed, according to the pension funds' petition.

Lehman Sells Bank Units to Raise 1.5 Billion for Creditors

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Lehman Brothers Holdings Inc. said on Friday that it has sold its Aurora Bank FSB subsidiary, a move that should help funnel some $1.5 billion into the pockets of Lehman's creditors, the Wall Street Journal reported on Saturday. Home mortgage servicer Nationstar Mortgage Holdings Inc. said on Friday that it acquired about $63.7 billion in residential mortgage servicing rights from Aurora, while New York Community Bank said that it assumed $2.3 billion of Aurora's customer deposits. Ocwen Financial Corp. said it previously purchased $1.8 billion worth of Aurora's commercial servicing-rights portfolio. Read more. (Subscription required.)
http://online.wsj.com/article/SB100014240527023036495045774966142406029…

In related news, a hedge fund manager is demanding that the trustee unwinding the brokerage of Lehman Brothers Holdings Inc. use more than $3 billion in its reserves to quickly make payments to customer claimants, saying the trustee's "aspirational date" to pay those claims keeps slipping "further and further into the future," Dow Jones Daily Bankruptcy Review reported yesterday. In a court filing on Friday, New York-based Elliott Management said that the trustee unwinding the brokerage in accordance with the Securities Investor Protection Act, James W. Giddens, should make at least an initial distribution of the money in its reserves, even as it sorts out how much it owes to the Lehman parent and U.K. affiliate Lehman Brothers International Europe. According to Elliott's filings, the trustee should be forced to distribute $3.15 billion of $13.81 billion and still have more than $10 billion left in reserve.

Chief Executive of Barclays Resigns

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Robert E. Diamond Jr., the chief executive of Barclays, resigned today, less than a week after the British bank agreed to pay $450 million to settle accusations that it had tried to manipulate key interest rates for its own benefit, the New York Times DealBook Blog reported yesterday. Diamond's resignation, which was effective immediately, comes after mounting criticism of the bank's actions from politicians and shareholders. Prime Minister David Cameron had called on individuals within the bank to take responsibility, while other British politicians had said Diamond should resign. Jerry del Missier, who was promoted to Barclays' chief operating officer last month, is expected to resign as part of the shake-up following the rate manipulation scandal.

Analysis Countrywide Purchase Has Cost Bank of America More Than 40 Billion

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Bank of America Corp. thought it had a bargain four years ago when it paid $2.5 billion for tottering mortgage lender Countrywide Financial Corp., but the purchase has already cost the Charlotte, N.C., lender more than $40 billion in real-estate losses, legal expenses and settlements with state and federal agencies, the Wall Street Journal reported today. The acquisition of Countrywide, which was completed almost exactly four years ago, turned Bank of America into a huge mortgage lender just as the U.S. housing market collapsed. Current Bank of America CEO Brian Moynihan, who took over in 2010, has acknowledged that his bank purchased Countrywide "just when you shouldn't have done it."

Chairman of Barclays Resigns

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Marcus Agius, the chairman of Barclays, resigned today, less than a week after the big British bank agreed to pay $450 million to settle accusations that it had tried to manipulate key interest rates to benefit its own bottom line, the New York Times DealBook blog reported today. The resignation comes as Barclays tries to limit fallout from the case, which is part of a broad investigation into how big banks set certain rates that affect borrowing costs for consumers and companies. Since striking a deal with American and British authorities last Wednesday, the Barclays management team has faced increasing pressure from politicians and shareholders to take action.

JPMorgan Models Get Regulatory Spotlight

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Regulators have stepped up scrutiny of JPMorgan Chase & Co.'s internal controls by asking the bank to demonstrate that its risk models are designed and working properly, the Wall Street Journal reported today. The Office of the Comptroller of the Currency, the bank's primary regulator, has requested reviews of models that measure the possible effects of everything from trading losses to interest-rate moves. A change in one of these models contributed to losses in the bank's Chief Investment Office, a once-obscure unit that manages $370 billion in excess cash. The change effectively increased the amount of risk traders were allowed to take. JPMorgan's CIO unit was responsible for trading losses of more than $2 billion.

Commentary- Too Big to Fail Then Get a Living Will

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ABI Bankruptcy Brief | June 28, 2012


 


  

June 28, 2012

 

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  NEWS AND ANALYSIS   

COMMENTARY: TOO BIG TO FAIL? THEN GET A LIVING WILL



JPMorgan CEO Jamie Dimon's congressional testimony on trading losses has again stirred debate on the notion of "too-big-to-fail" banks, according to a Bloomberg News commentary yesterday by John C. Dugan, the former Comptroller of the Currency, and T. Timothy Ryan Jr., president and CEO of the Securities Industry and Financial Markets Association. JPMorgan Chase & Co.'s losses were buffered by a strong balance sheet and sufficient capital levels to avoid putting the bank at risk. However, opponents of the Dodd-Frank financial reform's resolution process have used this to resurrect their belief that "too big to fail" has not been eliminated, but instead been codified into law. As former bank regulators who both sat on the Federal Deposit Insurance Corp. board, Dugan and Ryan disagree that this step has taken place. The FDIC recently proposed a way of reorganizing a large financial institution under Dodd-Frank that would avoid runs by short-term depositors and creditors and prevent messy defaults on swaps and other derivatives. More important, the FDIC's proposal would also avoid taxpayer losses, which Dodd-Frank flatly prohibits. Instead, losses would be borne by shareholders and long-term creditors of the failed holding company. Long-term creditors would swap their debt for equity to recapitalize the company. The process would be functionally identical to a chapter 11 reorganization, according to the commentary, with two critical exceptions: It could be done much faster, and, if necessary, the Treasury Department could provide temporary loans (backed by collateral) to the reorganized company until market funding returns. Read the full commentary.

ANALYSIS: BREAKING UP BIG BANKS HARD TO DO AS MARKET FORCES FAIL



Politicians and regulators have resisted calls from some investors to split up conglomerates that were assembled over two decades by executives such as former Citigroup CEO Sanford "Sandy" Weill and former Bank of America CEO Ken Lewis, Bloomberg News reported yesterday. While these universal banks offered customers everything from checking accounts and insurance to derivatives trading and merger advice, the 2008 financial crisis and subsequent performance of the companies is calling that approach into question. Some investors, tired of unpredictable losses, costly regulation and legal headaches, have abandoned the banks in favor of more focused lenders such as Wells Fargo & Co. and U.S. Bancorp. Bank of America has traded below book value since 2009, while New York-based Citigroup has done so since 2010, according to data compiled by Bloomberg. "It is not clear why a bank needs to do lots of activities in financial services that aren't banking," said Ken Fisher, CEO and founder of Woodside, Calif.-based Fisher Investments, which manages about $44 billion in investments. "The universal bank model is broken," said David Trone, an analyst at JMP Securities LLC. Read more.

CALIFORNIA FORECLOSURE-PREVENTION MEASURE NEARS FINAL PASSAGE



A foreclosure-prevention measure is one step away from final passage in the California Legislature, the Los Angeles Times reported yesterday. A two-house conference committee yesterday, on a partisan 4-1 vote, sent identical measures to the floors of the California Assembly and Senate with final votes scheduled for Monday. The bills, S.B. 900 and A.B. 278, are the most controversial elements of a Homeowner Bill of Rights legislative package sponsored by California Atty. Gen. Kamala D. Harris. The bills aim to protect homeowners in two ways:

  • They ban "dual tracking," when mortgage loan servicers allow borrowers to open an application for loan modification to lower their payments while at the same time the foreclosure process continues to move forward. Servicers would be required to provide homeowners with "a single point of contact" so that they will not suffer from bureaucratic runarounds.


  • They give owner-occupier, first-mortgage holders a right to sue financial institutions, under limited conditions, if the lenders have willfully, intentionally or recklessly violated the law.

Bankers, the state Chamber of Commerce and the securities industry oppose the bills, saying that they are overly complicated, lack legal clarity and could spur many unnecessary lawsuits. The bills would take effect on Jan. 1 if approved, as expected, by Democratic majorities in both houses. Gov. Jerry Brown (D) has not indicated whether he would sign the measures, though sponsors have said they do not expect a veto. Read more.

ANALYSIS: SOME STUDENT LOANS TO BECOME MORE EXPENSIVE DESPITE DEAL



College students are still facing a roughly $20 billion increase in the cost of their federal loans, despite a much-heralded deal by Congress to contain the expense of higher education, according to a Washington Post analysis yesterday. Starting Sunday, students hoping to earn the graduate degrees that have become mandatory for many white-collar jobs will become responsible for paying the interest on their federal loans while they are in school and immediately after they graduate, meaning that they will have to pay an extra $18 billion out of pocket over the next decade. Meanwhile, the government will no longer cover the interest on undergraduate loans during the six months after students finish school. That is expected to cost those borrowers more than $2 billion. Much of the recent debate about the nation's soaring student debt burden has centered on how to prevent the interest rate on new federally subsidized undergraduate loans from doubling to 6.8 percent on Sunday. This week, Senate leaders announced that they had finally reached a compromise on how to pay the estimated $6 billion cost of freezing the rate for one year. Congress is expected to approve the deal by Friday. Read more.

FIRMS RESIST NEW PAY-EQUITY RULES



As the final shareholder votes on executive pay round out this year's proxy season, companies are fighting another rule that could force them to disclose the gap between what they pay their CEOs and their median pay for employees, the Wall Street Journal reported yesterday. The rule's supporters - a group that includes labor unions, institutional shareholders and left-leaning activists - say that it would force companies to consider rank-and-file workers during boardroom discussions over CEO pay and could put the brakes on executive compensation, which has been rising faster than inflation and the average worker's pay. The so-called internal pay equity provision, passed as part of the July 2010 Dodd-Frank package of financial reforms, is intended to expose the income disparity within public companies and help investors better evaluate the firms. Read more. (Subscription required.)

ABI IN-DEPTH

LATEST CASE SUMMARY ON VOLO: LEVESQUE V. SHAPIRO (IN RE LEVESQUE; 9TH CIR.)



Summarized by Emil Khatchatourian of the U.S. Bankruptcy Court for the Eastern District of California

The Ninth Circuit Bankruptcy Appellate Panel held that the chapter 7 trustee had standing to appear with respect to the debtors' motion to reopen their chapter 7 case and motion to convert the chapter 7 case to one under chapter 11, and that the bankruptcy court did not abuse its discretion in denying the debtors' motion to convert.

More than 500 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: FSB REPORTS REGULATOR REFORM IS ADVANCING, BUT SLOWLY



The Bankruptcy Blog Exchange is a free ABI service that tracks 35 bankruptcy-related blogs. A recent post looks at a June 19 report by the Financial Stability Board (FSB) on the steps FSB member nations have taken to implement financial reforms designed to improve the stability of the global financial system. The FSB concluded that its member nations have made significant progress in implementing globally agreed upon financial reforms, but large strides are still necessary to protect the global economy against future financial crises.

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 full-payment rule in section 1325's "hanging paragraph" for new car PMSIs should be repealed to level the playing field between car lenders and other partially and fully unsecured creditors.

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

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