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Wells Fargo Lending Program Didnt Cheat Investors

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Wells Fargo & Co. didn’t withhold material information about its securities-lending program from institutional investors and isn’t liable for any losses, a lawyer for the bank said at the end of a trial, Bloomberg News reported yesterday. Blue Cross Blue Shield of Minnesota and 11 other plaintiffs sued Wells Fargo in 2011, alleging that the company marketed a risky program as safe and cost investors millions of dollars. Wells Fargo has denied misleading the investors and blamed any losses on the financial crisis. The jury is set to begin deliberating today. A separate phase on punitive damages will follow if the jury finds against Wells Fargo on the claims of breach of fiduciary duty, fraud or deceptive trade practices.

DOJ Sues Bank of America over Mortgage Securities

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The Justice Department sued Bank of America yesterday, accusing the bank of defrauding investors by vastly underestimating the risk of mortgage backed securities, the New York Times DealBook blog reported yesterday. The lawsuit is the latest action by President Obama’s federal mortgage task force that has vowed to hold Wall Street accountable for misconduct in the packaging and sale of mortgage securities during the housing boom. Bank of America, the Justice Department said, cloaked the risk associated with $850 million worth of securities backed by residential mortgages. As Bank of America assembled securities in 2008, the government claimed, the bank ignored that more than 40 percent of the mortgages included did not meet underwriting guidelines. Even though Bank of America knew about the troubled mortgages, the government said, the bank sold the securities anyway.

Fed Should Reverse Commodity Policy CFTCs Chilton Says

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Commodity Futures Trading Commission member Bart Chilton said that the Federal Reserve should reverse a decade-old ruling that lets banks trade physical commodities, Bloomberg News reported yesterday. Banks including Citigroup Inc., JPMorgan Chase & Co. and Morgan Stanley, all based in New York, have been permitted to expand into commodities markets under a 2003 Fed decision and subsequent ones. The central bank said last month that it is reviewing the policy amid Senate scrutiny of whether such involvement allows Wall Street firms to control prices. JPMorgan, the biggest U.S. bank by assets, said days after a congressional hearing on the matter last month that it is weighing whether to sell or spin off holdings in physical commodities. The 10 largest Wall Street firms reaped about $6 billion in revenue from commodities in 2012, including dealings in physical materials as well as related financial products, analytics company Coalition Ltd. said in a Feb. 15 report.

Report Many Cant Pay Their Direct Federal Student Loans

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ABI Bankruptcy Brief | August 6, 2013


 


  

August 6, 2013

 

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  NEWS AND ANALYSIS   

REPORT: MANY CAN'T PAY THEIR DIRECT FEDERAL STUDENT LOANS

Just about four in 10 borrowers with direct federal student loans are paying them back, according to a report released yesterday that offers the first comprehensive snapshot of the program since the government created it in 2010, the Wall Street Journal reported today. Many of the 27.8 million borrowers with these newer direct federal loans aren't yet required to make payments: About 35 percent are still in school or within a six-month grace period after graduation, the report said. But about 18 percent are in programs designed to help distressed borrowers or have returned to school. Nearly 8 percent are in default, meaning the borrower hasn't made a payment in at least a year, according to the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau, the federal regulator that released the report. The report indicates that a significant number of borrowers in the new program are unable to repay. Excluding borrowers who don't yet have to make payments because they are still in school or within the grace period, more than a fifth -- about 22 percent -- are in default or forbearance. Read more. (Subscription required.)

Click here to read the CFPB's report.

COMMENTARY: MOTOWN'S PENSION SHOWDOWN

Detroit's unions have found an unlikely ally in Michigan's Republican Attorney General Bill Schuette, who has taken up their argument that the state constitution precludes federal bankruptcy court from reducing pension benefits, according to an editorial in the Wall Street Journal today. If this view holds, according to the editorial, unions and politicians in financially strapped cities will be able to use chapter 9 as a new political default to shed their bond debts. The Detroit case is likely to set precedents because it's the first large city that has tried to force haircuts on pensioners through bankruptcy. Politicians in the bankrupt cities of Vallejo and Stockton, Calif., sidestepped the issue of whether federal bankruptcy law pre-empts state pension protections after the California Public Employees' Retirement System threatened an expensive legal fight. But with $3.5 billion in unfunded pension liabilities, Detroit can't afford to duck. While the U.S. Constitution's Supremacy Clause would seem to give federal bankruptcy law the upper hand, Congress has traditionally sought to straddle the U.S. system of dual sovereignty by including explicit pre-emptory language in statutes that are intended to supersede state laws. Chapter 9's language doesn't explicitly pre-empt state laws, according to the editorial, but there's a strong case to be made that pre-emption is intrinsic to municipal bankruptcy. The legal tension comes because Michigan's constitution, which passed in 1963, holds that "accrued financial benefits of each pension plan and retirement system of the state and its political subdivisions shall be a contractual obligation thereof which shall not be diminished or impaired thereby." Read more. (Subscription required.)

A similar commentary in yesterday's New York Times finds that while it isn't politically feasible for the federal government to bail out Detroit, President Obama and Congress must step in to avert the worst fiscal collapse in urban American history. The commentary makes the case that the government must intervene because the symptoms of the municipal illness that made Detroit, with an estimated $18 billion in liabilities, the largest city in American history to declare bankruptcy are showing up in other cities. Emergency response times are lengthening in cash-starved cities. Libraries, parks and recreation facilities are shortening their hours or closing. Potholes go unfilled, sidewalks unrepaired and trees untrimmed. All that makes urban life rewarding and uplifting is under increasing pressure, in large part because of unaffordable public employee pension and health care costs. Read the full commentary.

For the latest information and analysis about the Detroit case, be sure to visit ABI's dedicated website, http://news.abi.org/Detroit.

PRIVATE-EQUITY PAYOUT DEBT SURGES

Private-equity firms are adding debt to companies they own in order to fund payouts to themselves at a record pace, as fears are mounting that the window for these deals will close if interest rates rise, the Wall Street Journal reported today. So far this year, $47.4 billion of new loans and bonds have been sold by companies to pay dividends to the private-equity firms that own them, according to data provider S&P Capital IQ LCD. That is 62 percent more than the same period last year, which wound up being the biggest year on record, with $64.2 billion sold to fund private-equity payouts. The added debt, known as a recapitalization, can increase companies' risk of default, according to a recent study by Moody's Investors Service. As dividend deals increase, many also are unusually risky lately, carrying low credit ratings and paying historically low interest rates to investors. "This is the leveraged-finance debt market that you can't quite kill," said Richard Farley, a lawyer with Paul Hastings LLP who represents banks in buyouts. Read more. (Subscription required.)

ANALYSIS: RETURN OF MEGA-MERGERS REFLECTS GROWING CONFIDENCE IN ECONOMY



Analysts say that the recent spike in merger activity reflects the return of the mega-merger and a gradual uptick in business confidence in the economy, the Washington Post reported today. It has been most evident in the ongoing battle for Dell computers, with founder Michael Dell upping his bid for the company to $25 billion Friday, and the high-profile buyout of H.J. Heinz by Warren Buffett's Berkshire Hathaway. Although the number of mergers is down compared with the corresponding period last year, a series of mega-mergers has helped increase the value of merger activity in 2013 to $607 billion from $486 billion during the corresponding period in 2012. Activity is picking up after an uneventful 2012, when no mega-mergers were announced, analysts said. But it is still far from 2011 levels, when low valuations contributed to a rush for deals. Read more.

CONSUMER SPENDING, INCOME CLIMB IN JUNE



U.S. consumer spending increased and inflation pushed higher in June, which could strengthen expectations that the Federal Reserve will curtail its bond purchases later this year, Reuters reported on Friday. The Commerce Department said on Friday that consumer spending rose 0.5 percent, lifted by automobile purchases and higher gasoline prices. May's increase was revised down to 0.2 percent from a previously reported 0.3 percent. June's increase in consumer spending, which accounts for more than two-thirds of U.S. economic activity, was in line with economists' expectations. With prices picking up, consumer spending adjusted for inflation nudged up 0.1 percent. The consumer spending numbers were included in the second-quarter GDP report on Wednesday, which showed that the economy grew at a 1.7 percent annual pace after expanding at a 1.1 percent rate in the first three months of the year. Read more.

IN CASE YOU MISSED IT - abiLIVE WEBINAR DISCUSSING § 1111(b) ELECTION, PLAN FEASIBILITY AND CRAMDOWN ISSUES RECORDING IS NOW AVAILABLE!



If you were not able to attend ABI's recent abiLIVE webinar examining § 1111(b), a recording of the program is now available for downloading! Utilizing a case study, ABI's panel of experts explored the issues surrounding a lender's decision on whether or not to make an election under § 1111(b), plan feasibility and voting. The abiLIVE panel also walked attendees through the necessary mathematical analyses used to examine these issues. The 90-minute recording is available for the special price of $75 and can be purchased here.

abiLIVE WEBINAR ON AUGUST 20: HOW WILL THE NEW U.S. TRUSTEE FEE GUIDELINES IMPACT YOU?



The new U.S. Trustee Fee Guidelines will affect all attorneys and firms who work on larger chapter 11 cases filed on or after Nov. 1. ABI's Ethics & Professional Compensation Committee will present a panel of experts, including Clifford J. White, the director of the U.S. Trustee Program, to discuss some of the ways 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. Register today to hear government, attorney and academic perspectives speak on this important and timely topic.

ABI GOLF TOUR UNDERWAY; NEXT STOP IS THE MID-ATLANTIC BANKRUPTCY WORKSHOP ON FRIDAY



The 5th stop for the ABI Golf Tour is the Hershey Country Club, held in conjunction with this week's Mid-Atlantic Bankruptcy Workshop. Final scoring to win the Great American Cup — sponsored by Great American Group — is based on your top three scores at seven scheduled ABI events, so play as many as you can before the tour wraps up at the Winter Leadership Conference in December. 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 Conference. There's no charge to register or participate in the Tour.

ABI IN-DEPTH

ASSOCIATES: ABI'S NUTS & BOLTS ONLINE PROGRAMS HELP YOU HONE YOUR SKILLS WHILE SAVING ON CLE!



Associates looking to sharpen their bankruptcy knowledge should take advantage of ABI's special offer of combining general, business or consumer Nuts & Bolts online programs. Each program features an outstanding faculty of judges and practitioners explaining the fundamentals of bankruptcy, offering procedures and strategies tailored for both consumer and business attorneys. Click here to get the CLE you need at a great low price!

NEW CASE SUMMARY ON VOLO: CHARLES W. RIES V. SCARLETT & GUCCIARDO, PA, ET AL. (8TH CIR.)



Summarized by Michael Cooley of Akin Gump Strauss Hauer & Feld LLP

Applying the plain language of Fed. R. Civ. P. 15(c)(1), the Eighth Circuit affirmed the principle that whether the party seeking to amend a pleading knew, when the original pleading was filed, of the identity of the party left out is irrelevant to the question of whether the amended pleading may relate back to the date of the original pleading. Rather, the ability to relate back an amendment to the date of the original pleading depends on whether the party to be added knew or should have known that, but for the mistake, it would have been named in the original pleading. Additionally, this case serves as an important reminder of the value in structuring settlement agreements to safeguard against the possibility that a bankruptcy filing thereafter could leave the nondebtor party to disgorge settlement payments as preferential transfers without the ability to resurrect the claims originally settled in consideration therefore.

There are more than 900 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: ONLY CONGRESS THINKS MAIN STREET BANKS ARE "TBTF"

The Bankruptcy Blog Exchange is a free ABI service that tracks 35 bankruptcy-related blogs. Removing the arbitrary size designation for systemically important financial institutions would reduce costly regulation for regional banks, encourage industrywide competition and concentrate regulators' efforts on firms that actually warrant attention, 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

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

- Mid-Atlantic Bankruptcy Workshop

    August 8-10, 2013 | Hershey, Pa.

- abiLIVE Webinar: How Will the New U.S. Trustee Fee Guidelines Impact You?

     August 20, 2013

- 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.

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

    Sept. 18-19, 2013 | New York

- abiLIVE Webinar: Complex Requirements and Ethical Duties of Representing Consumer Debtors

     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

   Nov. 10-12, 2013 | Austin, Texas

- Detroit Consumer Bankruptcy Conference

   Nov. 11, 2013 | Detroit, Mich.

December

- Winter Leadership Conference

    Dec. 5-7, 2013 | Rancho Palos Verdes, Calif.

- ABI/St. John’s Bankruptcy Mediation Training

    Dec. 8-12, 2013 | New York


 
 

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Obama to Outline Plans for Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac

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President Obama today will outline his long-awaited ideas for overhauling the mortgage finance giants Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac to significantly reduce the government’s risk in any future credit crisis, the New York Times reported today. Obama will endorse bipartisan efforts in the Senate to wind down the two companies and end their longtime implicit guarantee of a federal government bailout. The president, according to administration officials, will make clear that he will only sign into law a measure that puts private investors primarily at risk for the two companies, which buy and guarantee many mortgages from banks to provide an ongoing stream of money for lenders to provide to additional home buyers. An acceptable measure also must specify the government’s role and liabilities for Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, the officials said, and — unlike legislation in the Republican-controlled House — must ensure Americans’ continued access to a 30-year mortgage at a fixed interest rate. House Republicans would let the market determine whether to provide the long-standard mortgages, but the White House and the bipartisan Senate groups say that would make a 30-year, fixed-rate mortgage harder to get and more costly.

Capitol Bancorp FDIC Pressuring States to Close Banks

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Capitol Bancorp Ltd. says that the Federal Deposit Insurance Corp. is trying to hasten its demise by improperly pressuring state regulators to close its remaining community banks, a course of action that will end up costing the government agency more than if the banks are sold at a bankruptcy auction, Dow Jones Daily Bankruptcy Review reported today. The Michigan bank-holding company’s lawyers said in a court filing on Friday that the agency’s “unnecessary” seizures of four of its banks in recent months has undermined its ability to sell its subsidiary banks.

Freddie Mac Balks at ResCap Settlement with FGIC

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Freddie Mac says Residential Capital LLC’s $596.5 million mortgage-backed securities settlement with the Financial Guaranty Insurance Co. would unfairly harm investors involved in FGIC’s separate rehabilitation proceeding, Dow Jones Daily Bankruptcy Review reported today. In a court filing on Thursday, lawyers for Freddie Mac said that while it doesn’t have problems with a settlement itself, it does have a problem with a key provision that could damage its recoveries in FGIC’s rehabilitation program under the control of the state of New York. That provision calls for the termination of insurance policies issued by FGIC that guarantee the principal and interest on certain ResCap-related mortgage-backed securities, which, according to Freddie Mac, “will significantly and negatively impact Freddie Mac’s recoveries” in the New York rehabilitation.

Judge Dismisses Constitutional Challenge to CFPB

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A federal judge dismissed a constitutional challenge to the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau, finding the plaintiffs didn’t have standing to sue because they failed to show they suffered harm, the Legal Times reported on Friday. The plaintiffs argued the Dodd-Frank Act violated the separation of powers by “delegating effectively unlimited power” to the bureau and another entity created under the Dodd-Frank Act, the Financial Stability Oversight Council. U.S. District Judge Ellen Segal Huvelle found that the plaintiffs failed to allege actual injuries and that claims of future injuries were too speculative to meet the legal standard for being able to sue. Texas-based State National Bank of Big Spring, think tank Competitive Enterprise Institute and advocacy group the 60 Plus Association sued the U.S. Department of the Treasury and the bureau last June. They were later joined by the attorneys general of Alabama, Georgia, Kansas, Michigan, Montana, Nebraska, Ohio, Oklahoma, South Carolina, Texas and West Virginia. The case was one of several filed against the government over the creation of the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau. Earlier lawsuits focused on President Barack Obama’s recess appointment of Richard Cordray as the bureau’s director, but those cases were dismissed after the Senate confirmed his appointment last month.

Patriot Coal Seeks to Change Loan Accord to Avoid Default

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Patriot Coal Corp., the bankrupt mining company, said sharp declines in demand for coal could cause it to default on loans this year if it can’t change its current loan agreement, Bloomberg News reported yesterday. Over the past year, falling prices for metallurgical coal have cut into the company’s earnings forecasts, Patriot said in court papers filed on July 30. The St. Louis-based company filed for bankruptcy in July 2012, citing a drop in demand and $1.6 billion in lifetime health care obligations for its retirees. Patriot is seeking court approval of a proposed amendment to a $375 million loan, which lenders have already consented to. Under the previous loan agreement, Patriot was required to have a minimum of consolidated earnings of $205 million by Dec. 31. The proposed amendment would drop the threshold to $101.3 million.

Leveraged Loans Pass 2012 Level With Record Ahead

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The riskiest U.S. companies are stepping up their borrowing in the market for leveraged loans, with the amount of financings completed this year already exceeding what they raised in all of 2012, Bloomberg News reported yesterday. Borrowers from HJ Heinz Co. to Valeant Pharmaceuticals International Inc. (VRX) have tapped non-bank lenders for $298.4 billion in 2013, more than the $295.3 billion obtained last year, according to Standard & Poor’s Capital IQ Leveraged Commentary and Data. At the current pace, the record of $386.6 billion in 2007 will be eclipsed before year-end. Rather than leveraging up, more than half of the loans made this year have been used to reduce interest costs or extend maturities as companies take advantage of investor demand to strengthen their balance sheets. Investors added a record $2.1 billion last week into funds that buy loans, bringing the total for the year to more than $40 billion, according to Bank of America Corp.