Skip to main content

%1

Banks Urge Clients to Take Cash Elsewhere

Submitted by webadmin on

Banks are urging some of their largest customers in the U.S. to take their cash elsewhere or be slapped with fees, citing new regulations that make it onerous for them to hold certain deposits, The Wall Street Journal reported yesterday. The banks, including J.P. Morgan Chase & Co., Citigroup Inc., HSBC Holdings PLC, Deutsche Bank AG and Bank of America Corp., have spoken privately with clients in recent months to tell them that the new regulations are making some deposits less profitable. In some cases, the banks have told clients, which range from large companies to hedge funds, insurers and smaller banks, that they will begin charging fees on accounts that have been free for big customers. Bank officials are also working with these firms to find alternatives for some of their deposits. The change upends one of the cornerstones of banking, in which deposits have been seen as one of the industry’s most attractive forms of funding. The new rule driving the action is part of a broader effort by U.S. regulators and policymakers to make the financial system safer. But the move could inconvenience corporations that now have to pay new fees or look for alternatives to their current bank.

Commentary Hedge Fund Kept U.S. Inquiry Quiet

Submitted by webadmin on

In the volatile world of high finance, hedge funds come and hedge funds go, so there was little fanfare last week, apart from a few upset investors, when Vertical Capital, with $1.4 billion under management, suddenly announced that it was unwinding its $400 million hedge fund operation, according to commentary in The New York Times on Saturday. In a letter to investors sent on Dec. 2, Vertical said that it was negotiating with the Securities and Exchange Commission to settle a civil securities fraud case against its founder, Brett Graham, and its related brokerage firm, VCAP Securities. The commission concluded that VCAP, overseen by Graham, violated securities laws when it liquidated five collateralized debt obligations in 2012. The broker made improper bids during the liquidations because it was “in the possession of confidential information” that gave it “an unfair advantage over other bidders,” the letter said.

Bankruptcy Judge Approves Sale of Maine Paper Mill

Submitted by webadmin on

A bankruptcy court judge on Friday approved the $10.5 million sale of a shuttered paper mill to a Wisconsin company that wants to reopen it and bring back about 200 workers by year’s end, The Associated Press reported on Friday. Expera Specialty Solutions of Kaukauna said that it plans to reopen the Old Town Fuel & Fiber mill once it closes on the deal. The current owners cited high operating costs and foreign competition when the mill furloughed about 200 workers and suspended operations in August. Hon. Louis Kornreich approved the transaction, which calls for Expera to purchase the company for $7.3 million in cash now and $3.2 million later. The judge’s order said that the deal was “in the best interests of the debtor’s estate, its creditors, and other parties.”

Regulators to Give More Guidance on Leveraged Loans

Submitted by webadmin on



ABI Bankruptcy Brief | October 23, 2014



 
  

October 23, 2014

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

REGULATORS TO GIVE MORE GUIDANCE ON LEVERAGED LOANS

U.S. regulators are preparing to offer more public guidance for banks that provide loans for private-equity deals, as officials and financiers have tussled for months over acceptable practices, the Wall Street Journal reported today. The Federal Reserve, the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency and the Federal Deposit Insurance Corp. reportedly plan to publish a list of frequently asked questions about their guidance governing so-called leveraged loans. The document, which could be made public as soon as next week, is the latest by regulators to cajole banks into compliance with March 2013 guidance that urged them to avoid providing companies with what the agencies deem as too much debt. The guidance targeted a type of financing tapped by private-equity firms to take over corporations, among other uses. The regulators also told banks to limit borrowing agreements that stretch out payment timelines or don't contain ample lender protections, known as covenants. Some banks have resisted regulators' push — sometimes based on interpretations of what they called unclear guidance, other times concluding that certain deals can move forward as exceptions. About half of U.S. private-equity deals this year have breached a rough limit set by regulators of debt that exceeded six times a company's earnings before interest, taxes, depreciation and amortization, or EBITDA, according to data provider S&P Capital IQ LCD. At 52 percent, that is the same rate as 2007, the peak of the leveraged buyout boom. Read more (subscription required).

ANALYSIS: YEARS AFTER THE MARKET COLLAPSE, SIDELINED BORROWERS RETURN

Four years since foreclosures and short sales peaked during the Great Recession, millions of former borrowers have spent the required amount of time on the sidelines, which means that they have cleared at least one of the major hurdles required to qualify for another government-backed mortgage, the New York Times reported today. "We certainly have heard from a number of lenders that boomerang buyers are coming back," said Michael Fratantoni, chief economist at the Mortgage Bankers Association. He added that the situation varies across the country because the foreclosure process takes longer in certain states. Bank of America, one of the nation's largest lenders, said that of all its approved loans and loan applications from January through September, only about 1 percent came from consumers with short sales or foreclosures. But some mortgage brokers report that more people are calling. In August, Fannie Mae tweaked its rules for borrowers who went through short sales and those who voluntarily signed a home over to a lender (through what is known as a deed in lieu). Fannie said that it would continue to permit loans as soon as two years after those events hit borrowers' credit reports, as long as they could document that something like a job loss or a divorce pushed them over the financial edge. They would also need a down payment of at least 5 percent. Read more.



COMMENTARY: IS THE CFPB COMMITTING REGULATORY OVERREACH?

The Consumer Financial Protection Bureau (CFPB) is touted as one of the crowning achievements of the Dodd-Frank Act, but a new CFPB report on student loans is highly flawed, raising doubts about its regulatory reach over the private student loan market, according to a commentary in The Hill yesterday. The CFPB was created to bring all consumer financial products under one regulatory umbrella. It oversees everything in the financial sector that affects consumers — from credit cards to mortgages to auto and student loans. Last week, the CFPB issued its third annual report on student loan complaints. The agency first created a platform for student loan complaints in 2012 and embarked on a massive solicitation for general comment on private student loans in 2013. Shortly after, CFPB brought private non-bank loan servicers under its oversight authority. Complaints regarding loans and loan servicers are up 38 percent year over year, with many complaints indicating that private lenders and servicers "provided no options [to modify repayment plans], leading the borrower to default." Complaints against student loan giant Navient (formerly Sallie Mae) were up a staggering 48 percent, with the entire rise dubiously occurring in the month of December. But a closer look reveals that the report is fundamentally flawed, according to the commentary. First, the report makes the private student loan market seem entirely to blame for the growing student debt crisis. Second, it offers no analytical evidence that private student lenders are unwilling to work with struggling borrowers. Read the full commentary.

SENATOR WARREN DEMANDS AN INVESTIGATION OF MORTGAGE COMPANIES

Sen. Elizabeth Warren (D-Mass.) on Monday called on the Government Accountability Office to investigate non-bank companies that service Americans' mortgages, noting in a letter co-signed by Rep. Elijah Cummings (D-Md.) that an increasing number of lawsuits have been filed in recent years against these firms — which are not regulated as strictly as banks, MotherJones.com reported yesterday. Mortgage servicers, whether they are owned by banks or not, handle mortgages after they've been sold to a customer. That means that they take care of administrative business that includes collecting mortgage payments and dealing with delinquent borrowers. What Warren and Cummings say they are worried about is that the share of non-banks servicing mortgages has grown astronomically — 300 percent between 2011 and 2013 — and it appears that the increased workload has led to shoddier service. The rise of the industry, which typically services lower-income borrowers, "has been accompanied by consumer complaints, lawsuits, and other regulatory actions as the servicers' workload outstrips their processing capacity," according to a recent report by the Federal Housing Finance Agency. Last December, for instance, the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau — the agency Warren helped create — entered a $2 billion settlement with the nation's largest non-bank servicer over mortgage mismanagement. Financial industry watchdogs and consumer advocates have charged that non-bank home loan servicing companies are often unwilling to work with troubled borrowers to modify mortgages and prevent foreclosures.
Read more.

ANALYSIS: COLLEGES WHERE STUDENT LOAN DEFAULTS ARE SKYROCKETING

While data from the U.S. Department of Education showed that overall default rates fell to 13.7 percent from 14.7 percent two years ago, some schools moved in the opposite direction as default rates rose between two years ago and last year, and again between last year and this year, according to an analysis in QZ.com. Many of the schools on the list that are associated higher default levels are located deep in the heart of the U.S. industrial region known as the Rust Belt, which was particularly hard hit by the recession. "When the latest recession began in 2008, we, like other institutions, saw a significant influx of new students, a number of which were then not able to find jobs commensurate with their additional education, and others utilizing college as a source of loans they could not otherwise get to finance their living circumstances," said Rob Denson, president of Des Moines Area Community College, which saw default rates surge in recent years. "These are the loans we believe are most likely now in default." Denson added that he expects default rates to drop back down to pre-2008 levels in coming years. To see the full list of schools where default rates surged, please click here.

USTP UPDATES MEDIAN FAMILY INCOME DATA FOR CASES FILED ON OR AFTER NOV. 1

The U.S. Trustee Program (USTP) has updated the Census Bureau's Median Family Income Data and will apply the updated data to cases filed on or after Nov. 1. For the latest data required for completing Form 22A and Form 22C, please click here.

NEXT FREE COMMITTEE TELECONFERENCE WILL BE NOV. 4 ON THE BANK SECRECY ACT!

Members are encouraged to dial-in and listen to or participate in upcoming ABI Committee conference calls. While committee membership is encouraged, it is not required to join the free teleconferences. Upcoming Committee teleconferences include:

- Unsecured Trade Creditors Committee: Tuesday, Nov. 4; 3 pm ET

Topic: "Bank Secrecy Act and Anti-Money Laundering"

Speakers: Mark Gittelman of PNC Bank and Brent Weisenberg

All committee teleconferences are free to ABI members and registration is not required. Simply utilize the following dial-in information:



Call in: (712) 432-1500

Participant code: 692933

 

ABI MEMBERS IN SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA- DON'T MISS THE SPECIAL TMA EVENT TO BENEFIT THE WOUNDED WARRIOR PROJECT ON NOV. 12

ABI members are invited to attend TMA Southern California's special fundraiser to support the Wounded Warrior Project and SoCal veteran support groups on Nov. 12 at the Beverly Hilton. Funds raised will benefit the Wounded Warrior Project, Veterans Legal Institute and the Public Law Center. For more information or to attend, please click here.

ABI MEMBERS INVITED TO ATTEND RETIREMENT DINNER FOR BANKRUPTCY JUDGE PETER J. WALSH ON NOV. 19

ABI members are invited to a special retirement dinner on Nov. 19 honoring the Hon. Peter J. Walsh's 50 years of dedicated service to the bench and bar. The event will be held at the Chase Center on the Riverfront in Wilmington, Del., and is being hosted by the Bankruptcy Section of the Delaware State Bar Association and the Delaware Chapter of the Federal Bar Association. Questions should be directed to Karen B. Owens at 302-654-1888. To attend, please go to https://sites-pepperhamilton.vuturevx.com/107/772/uploads/judge-walsh-retirement-dinner-form.pdf

VOLO ECLIPSES 1,500 CIRCUIT COURT SUMMARIES! NEW CASE SUMMARY ON VOLO: DERBABIAN V. BANK OF AMERICA, N.A. (6TH CIR.)

Summarized by Ryan Heilman of Wolfson Bolton PLLC

The Sixth Circuit affirmed the district's court's dismissal of the plaintiffs' eight-count complaint relating to the foreclosure-by-advertisement of their home. Specifically, the plaintiffs (1) failed to plead fraud with specificity, (2) failed to state a claim for breach of contract because agreements relating to loans from a financial institution must be in writing to be enforceable, (3) were barred by the statute of limitations from asserting Truth in Lending Act claims, and the recoupment and set-off exceptions do not apply to non-judicial foreclosures, (4) failed to adequately plead fraud, irregularity or prejudice with respect to the foreclosure process, (5) could not maintain an action to quiet title because they made no showing of superior title to the property, and (6) could not maintain an action for slander of title because they failed to plausibly identify any false statements.

There are more than 1,500 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: CREDIT RISK RETENTION RULES AND QUALIFIED RESIDENTIAL MORTGAGES

A recent blog post examines the government's long-awaited credit risk retention rules for securitization.

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 §547(c)(2) ordinary course preference defense should be repealed.

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.

Have a Twitter, Facebook or LinkedIn Account?

Join our networks to expand yours.

  

 

FRIDAY

GT14
Register Today!


COMING UP

CT14
Register Today!

IIS14
Register Today!

CFRP14
Register Today!

CRC14
Register Today!

CHICAGO14
Register Today!

DETROIT14
Register Today!

PDP14
Register Today!

WLC14
Register Today!

MT14
Register Today!

MT14
Register Today!

MT14
Register Today!

MT14
Register Today!

MT14
Register Today!

 

   
  CALENDAR OF EVENTS
 

2014

October
- Views from the Bench
    Oct. 24, 2014 | Washington, D.C.

- Claims-Trading Program
    Oct. 30, 2014 | New York

- International Insolvency & Restructuring Symposium
    Oct. 30-31, 2014 | London

November
- Complex Financial Restructuring Program
    Nov. 6, 2014 | Philadelphia

- Corporate Restructuring Competition
    Nov. 6-7, 2014 | Philadelphia

- Chicago Consumer Bankruptcy Conference
    Nov. 11, 2014 | Chicago

- Detroit Consumer Bankruptcy Conference
    Nov. 11, 2014 | Troy, Mich.

- Mid-Level Professional Development Program
    Nov. 12, 2014 | Chicago


  

 



December
- Winter Leadership Conference
    Dec. 4-6, 2014 | Palm Springs, Calif.

- 40-Hour Mediation Training Program
   Dec. 7-11, 2014 | New York

January
- New Orleans Consumer Bankruptcy Conference
    Jan. 19, 2015 | New Orleans

- Rocky Mountain Bankruptcy Conference
    Jan. 22-23, 2015 | Denver

February
- Caribbean Insolvency Symposium
    Feb. 5-7, 2015 | Grand Cayman, Cayman Islands

- VALCON 2015
    Feb. 25-27, 2015 | Las Vegas

 

 

 
 
ABI BookstoreABI Endowment Fund ABI Endowment Fund
 


Lehman Brothers to Sell 2.5 Billion in Bankruptcy Claims

Submitted by webadmin on

Lehman Brothers Holdings Inc. said yesterday that it has agreed to sell $2.5 billion in bankruptcy claims that the failed investment bank holds against its U.S. brokerage arm, the Wall Street Journal reported yesterday. The claims will be sold for $619 million, or about 24.8 percent of face value. The Lehman parent company had said in late August that it intended to "explore monetization opportunities" related to the unsecured claims. Lehman's holding company, which officially exited bankruptcy in 2012, owns a $6.9 billion unsecured creditor claim against its U.S. brokerage arm. Most of the brokerage business was sold to Barclays PLC following Lehman's September 2008 collapse. The proposed sale of the claims would raise funds to pay off the billions the holding company owes its customers and other creditors. All told, more than 2,600 unsecured claims totaling about $20 billion have been allowed against the brokerage, and another $6.8 billion in claims are still unresolved.

Momentive Make-Whole Ruling Rattles Bond Market

Submitted by webadmin on

A ruling Tuesday by U.S. Bankruptcy Court Judge Robert Drain in the case of Momentive Performance Materials Inc. has shaken up the distressed investing world, Dow Jones Daily Bankruptcy Review reported yesterday. Momentive’s bankruptcy pits its owner, private-equity firm Apollo Global Management LLC, against funds invested in $1.35 billion of the company’s first-lien bonds. First-lien creditors wanted Momentive to repay their bonds in full plus a premium, or make-whole, or to give them new bonds paying a market rate of interest. Apollo offered to pay the bondholders par value and accrued interest, but not the make-whole, threatening to swap them into new debt at a low interest rate if they didn’t agree. In a marathon four-hour ruling from the bench Tuesday, Judge Drain sided with Apollo and said that first-lien bond holders must accept the debt offered by Momentive, albeit at a slightly higher rate of interest than the company first proposed. The decision, which was based on the principle that first-lien lenders were not entitled to make a profit on new debt they would receive, flies in the face of prior case law.

SEC Shelves Plan for Private Asset-Backed Bond Disclosure

Submitted by webadmin on

The U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission, while expanding disclosure requirements for one set of asset-backed securities, has stepped back from a plan to shed more light on a major part of the market, Bloomberg reported today. The five SEC commissioners unanimously approved a rule yesterday to offer investors more details on bonds backed by assets such as mortgages and car financing, including specific data on individual loans, and new practices such as a cooling-off period to review documents before certain bond sales. Dropped from the rules: A requirement that issuers of private securities be ready to furnish to buyers the same type of information that’s available for publicly registered debt.

Bankrupt Detroit Sells 1.8 Billion in New Water-and-Sewer Bonds

Submitted by webadmin on

Detroit sold about $1.8 billion in bonds tied to its water-and-sewer system on Tuesday, marking a key part of the city's efforts to improve its finances since filing for bankruptcy last year, The Wall Street Journal reported yesterday. Proceeds will be used to buy back existing debt and make improvements to the water-and-sewer system, which also serves surrounding communities. The system is currently operated as a city department and the debt deal could save the city millions of dollars, in part, through lower interest rates. Bankers on Tuesday's debt deal, led by Citigroup Inc., received enough demand for the bonds to lower some yields slightly throughout the day. A 2023 bond offered a yield of 3.24 percent and a 2037 bond offered a yield of 4.52 percent. Many of the bonds, to be paid back from water and sewer revenues, carried insurance.

U.S. Bank Liquidity Rule Said to Exclude Municipal Bonds

Submitted by webadmin on

Municipal bonds will be excluded from the group of easily sellable assets that banks can use to show they’re able to survive a credit crunch, Bloomberg reported today. Regulators, including the Federal Reserve, are set to approve a final liquidity rule on Sept. 3. The most recent draft bars debt issued by states and municipalities from being listed as high-quality assets that could help sustain a bank through a 30-day squeeze. Hoping to head off the kind of vulnerability seen during the 2008 credit crisis, the Fed, Office of the Comptroller of the Currency and Federal Deposit Insurance Corp. based their rule on an accord reached by the 27-nation Basel Committee on Banking Supervision. An initial version proposed last year, which called for a 2017 implementation, was toughest on banks with more than $250 billion in assets or major global reach.

Hedge Funds Sue to Get Argentine Bond Payment in London

Submitted by webadmin on

A group of hedge funds are seeking a 226 million euro interest payment on Argentine bonds from Bank of New York Mellon that was blocked by a U.S. judge last month, The New York Times reported yesterday. In a lawsuit filed in London against Bank of New York, the hedge funds contend that the bank’s London unit must release money that was deposited by Argentina for its euro-denominated bondholders. The money was part of a $539 million interest payment that Hon. Thomas P. Griesa of the Federal District Court in Manhattan prevented the trustee from paying last month. The latest lawsuit poses a challenge to the scope of the ruling and will further complicate what has been a long and drawn out battle between the government of Argentina and a group of New York hedge funds. In a hearing on Friday, Judge Griesa ruled the move “illegal” but stopped short of holding Argentina in contempt of court.