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Deal Reached to Allow Pension Benet Cuts

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A bipartisan group of congressional leaders reached a deal yesterday that would for the first time allow the benefits of current retirees to be severely cut, part of an effort to save some of the nation’s most distressed pension plans, the Washington Post reported today. The measure, attached to a massive $1.01 trillion spending bill, would alter 40 years of federal law and could affect millions of workers, many of them part of a shrinking corps of middle-income employees in businesses such as trucking, construction and supermarkets. The idea is reluctantly supported by some unions and retirement fund managers who see it as the only way to salvage pensions in plans that are in imminent danger of running out of money. But it also has stirred strong opposition from retirees who could face deep pension cuts and from advocates eager to keep retiree pensions sacrosanct, even in cases when funds are in a deep financial hole. The advocates argue that allowing cuts to plans would open the door to trims for other retirees later. The deal reached would apply to multi-employer pensions, where a group of businesses in the same industry join forces with unions to provide pension coverage for employees. The plans cover some 10 million U.S. workers. Overall, there are about 1,400 multi-employer plans, many of which remain in good fiscal health and would be untouched by the deal. But several dozen have failed, and several other large ones, including Central States, are staggering toward insolvency.

Strategy Spurs Rethink on San Diego Pensions Oversight

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A large California pension fund is searching for a new investment chief amid concerns about an outside firm’s investment strategy, the latest clash between public retirement systems and external advisers, the Wall Street Journal reported today. The board of San Diego County Employees Retirement Association authorized the move in an 8-1 vote that requires the $10.5 billion fund to install an internal investment chief instead of relying on Houston-based Salient Partners LP for that role. Directors stopped short of ending a contract with Salient, which suggested an investing strategy that uses derivatives to boost performance. Salient is paid $8 million annually to act as the system’s chief investment officer and manage retirement assets for county employees. The strategy involves buying futures contracts tied to the performance of stocks, bonds and commodities. Salient recommended the approach, which would allow the pension fund potentially to receive bigger gains, and possibly suffer larger losses, than it would by owning the assets themselves.

Trump Taj Mahal Offers Health Care to Workers to Save Casino

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Trump Entertainment Resorts Inc., the bankrupt owner of the Trump Taj Mahal, offered to restore health insurance to its employees for at least two years in a last-ditch bid to keep the Atlantic City casino open, Bloomberg News reported on Saturday. In a letter dated on Friday, Trump Chief Executive Officer Robert F. Griffin asked union official Robert McDevitt to drop an appeal of a court ruling that allowed the casino to cancel its labor contract. In return, the company would restore health care and contribute 81 cents per hour worked by an employee to a pension. Last week, Bankruptcy Judge Kevin Gross ordered company officials to justify their continued control of the company or risk having a trustee appointed to liquidate Trump entertainment’s assets. The judge scheduled a hearing for Dec. 4. Trump Entertainment faces continuing losses and doesn’t have financing to support its reorganization efforts, so “there is no reasonable likelihood of rehabilitation,” Gross said in a Nov. 19 order. The Trump Taj Mahal is set to close on Dec. 12, becoming the fifth Atlantic City casino to shutter this year.

American Airlines Makes Joint Contract Proposal to Pilots

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Just two days after flight attendants at American Airlines Group Inc. narrowly rejected a proposed new contract, the company made a proposal to its pilots, promising the highest pay rates among the carrier’s big rivals, the Wall Street Journal reported today. The Allied Pilots Association, the bargaining agent for about 10,000 American pilots and 5,000 US Airways aviators, said its 22-member board of directors is scheduled to meet for three days this week to evaluate the offer. The union board could accept the offer, ask for more time to bargain, or put the deal out to a membership vote. A spokesman for the union said he couldn’t comment on what would occur if management’s offer is voted down, either at the board level or by the entire group. The airline’s combined 24,000 flight attendants shot down — by a scant 16 votes — a five-year contract that would have raised their pay to the top of the industry scale. By previous agreement, American and the Association of Professional Flight Attendants union will take part in arbitration, with a three-member panel working to apportion the value of contract improvements that are capped at $111 million a year over existing, separate labor agreements, bringing them to the average of what attendants at Delta Air Lines Inc. and the still-separate Continental and United subsidiaries of United Continental Holdings Inc. receive. The rejected deal would have provided $193 million more in annual value.

Detroit Looks to Reengineer How City Government Works

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ABI Bankruptcy Brief | November 11, 2014



 
  

November 11, 2014

 
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  NEWS AND ANALYSIS   

DETROIT LOOKS TO REENGINEER HOW CITY GOVERNMENT WORKS

The nation's largest municipal bankruptcy case revealed a startling level of dysfunction inside Detroit's government, including meter maids who were required to wear pants without pockets to prevent the theft of city funds and a jury-rigged firehouse alarm system that relied on a fax machine, the Wall Street Journal reported yesterday. "We found many practices that made no sense," said Chuck Moore, a consultant from restructuring firm Conway MacKenzie Inc. whose team has been embedded in the city's government for more than a year. As the city prepares to exit bankruptcy court, it will have to learn a new approach to providing basic services while staying within its means. Detroit plans to spend $1.7 billion over the next decade to improve services, earmarking about $400 million to tear down abandoned houses, $100 million toward a more reliable bus system, $260 million to make its streets safer and more than $150 million to upgrade outdated technology. "Detroit's inability to provide adequate municipal services runs deep and has for years," U.S. Bankruptcy Judge Steven Rhodes said in his ruling Friday approving the city's restructuring plan, which calls for cutting $7 billion in debt. "It is inhumane and intolerable, and it must be fixed." The process of re-engineering how Detroit works is expected to be bumpy. Financial experts who examined the city's operations say that Detroit remains burdened by out-of-date union rules, local laws and charter provisions. Consequently, Detroit is facing pressure to change the way it does business. Click here to read the full article (subscription required).

Click here to read the transcript of the Oral Opinion on the Record from the Detroit proceedings. To hear a reading of the transcript, click here.

OPPONENTS SAY DETROIT BANKRUPTCY ILLEGAL, PLAN APPEAL

Critics of Michigan's emergency manager law and Detroit's bankruptcy pledged yesterday to keep up their fight against what they called an illegal and immoral attack on a predominantly African-American city, the Detroit Free Press reported yesterday. The groups alleged that the city's bankruptcy exit plan unfairly benefits financial institutions on the backs of retirees of modest means and the poor. Members of Detroiters Resisting Emergency Management and other activist groups say that Detroit's bankruptcy amounted to wealthy banks and other investors getting off easily while impoverished Detroiters continue to face deep sacrifices, including losing homes and access to affordable water, and enduring cuts to pensions and health care. The group We the People of Detroit has also spoken out against bankruptcy deals that reduced pensions and health care for city workers and retirees while giving creditors valuable city real estate. Detroit Water and Sewerage Department retiree William Davis, a member of the Detroit Active and Retired City Employees Association, said that he and others in his group were formulating appeals of U.S. Bankruptcy Judge Steven Rhodes' ruling. Davis, an African-American, said that black Detroiters are bearing the brunt of the bankruptcy, and that few seem to care. "I personally think they all need to go to jail," Davis said of the leaders behind the bankruptcy. "We think this whole process is illegal and just wrong." Click here to read the full article.

ANALYSIS: CAN YOU REALLY END "TOO BIG TO FAIL"?

Taxpayer bailouts of banks will be a thing of the past once rules being hammered out in Switzerland are implemented, or so regulators would have us believe, according to an analysis in the Wall Street Journal yesterday. The world's 30 biggest and most systemically important banks will have to hold up to a fifth of their risk-weighted assets in equity or debt on which investors can take losses if total loss-absorbing capacity (TLAC) proposals unveiled Monday by the Financial Stability Board, a Basel-based international regulatory committee, are adopted. The plans, which would be set in place in 2019 at the earliest, are intended to avoid the chaos, confusion and public-sector rescues of private institutions that characterized the financial crisis triggered by the Lehman Brothers bankruptcy. Instead, if one of these institutions runs into problems because it's been badly run, shareholders and investors of its riskiest tranches of debt will have to suffer the losses. But if investors know they'll be rescued ahead of time, markets might tend to break down more often on the theory that people who are insured will take greater risks than they might have otherwise taken. Banks are critical to the efficient running of a market economy in ways other firms aren't, so when a financial crisis hits, the ramifications can be widespread and self-sustaining — and bank failures trigger further failures in a domino effect. Given the moral hazard risk, central banks are keen to ensure that banks have enough capital to bear the costs of their own bad judgment rather than shifting them onto the general population — hence, a 16 to 20 percent buffer, although even that understates the true scale of the buffer, according to banking specialists. Firms forced into liquidation typically sell assets at a discount to the going rate. Factoring those losses in, the actual buffer will be as much as a quarter of risk capital. But will it work? Click here to read the full analysis.

DINGED CREDIT? CARD ISSUERS ARE HAPPY TO LEND

Consumers with dinged credit are back in a borrowing mood, and lenders are more than happy to give them new credit cards, CNBC reported yesterday. Since the Great Recession ended five years ago, consumers have been gradually taking on more debt and lenders have been accommodating them, easing up on tighter standards. Much of the growth has been in so-called non-revolving credit, especially car loans, thanks to record-low interest rates. But revolving credit — mainly in the form of credit cards — is picking up. And the biggest growth in new credit cards is coming from subprime borrowers whose credit scores are less than 660, according to the latest Equifax data. Through July of this year, banks handed out cards to 9.8 million subprime consumers, a six-year high and an increase of 43 percent from the same period last year. Lenders are also giving subprime borrowers higher credit limits. Part of the growth is the result of an easing of the tighter standards that followed the 2008 credit bust after the boom of the early-2000s. Now that banks have repaired the damage from billions of dollars in bad debts, they're better able to take on more risk. As they hand out more accounts and higher limits to consumers with lower credit scores, though, lenders face a higher risk that they won't get paid back. As a result, some card issuers are bracing for a fresh round of bad debts by setting aside more in reserve to cover the cost of charging off unpaid card balances. But card companies are largely banking on profits from issuing new credit cards more than offsetting those higher loan losses. Click here to read the full article.

ANALYSIS: WHAT IF THE MUCH-EXPECTED ECONOMIC GROWTH BURST IS ACTUALLY A BUST?

After last Friday's good news of continued job growth and falling unemployment, economists are starting to wonder aloud how soon unemployment will reach its "natural" or "long-term" rate, according to a Wall Street Journal analysis today. If 5 percent unemployment is achieved in 2015, as some predict, how much room will be left for economic recovery? We've been thinking of the U.S. economy as being below its potential for so many years that it comes as a shock when the data suggest that we might be approaching a new normal, according to the analysis. A working paper by Northwestern University economist Robert Gordon in August lays out the case for pessimism. He runs through several scenarios to try to justify optimistic growth forecasts like that of the Congressional Budget Office. During economic recoveries, growth and employment usually rise hand-in-hand. If the unemployment rate is an accurate indicator, Gordon argues, there is little room left for recovery in growth, and there is little room for improvement in the utilization of industrial capacity, which is only slightly below the levels attained during recent expansions. The last hope for a sudden return of growth is an unexpected boost in productivity. That would be welcome, but there is no reason to expect a sudden change. With the distinct possibility that the long-predicted growth burst will never arrive, policymakers should take seriously warnings about unfunded U.S. obligations and should welcome even small tweaks to policy that could improve efficiency by easing regulations on economic activity. Click here to read the full analysis.

Click here to read Robert Gordon's report, "A New Method of Estimating Potential Real GDP Growth: Implications for the Labor Market and the Debt/GDP Ratio."

USTP NOTICE OF PROPOSED RULEMAKING ON CHAPTER 11 MONTHLY OPERATING REPORTS

Section 602 of the Bankruptcy Abuse Prevention and Consumer Protection Act of 2005 (BAPCPA) authorizes the U.S. Trustee Program (USTP) to issue rules requiring uniform periodic reports by debtors in possession or trustees in non-small business cases under chapter 11. The USTP just published in the Federal Register a notice of proposed rulemaking seeking public comment on the proposed rule and periodic report forms. The proposed rule is published in the Federal Register at 79 FR 66659 (Nov. 10, 2014) (to be codified at 28 C.F.R. pt. 58). The proposed rule, along with the proposed periodic report forms and instructions, may be viewed on the USTP's website. The proposed rule may also be accessed at www.regulations.gov. All public comments must be submitted on or before January 9, 2015, via www.regulations.gov. Please note that the proposed rule and forms only apply in chapter 11 cases filed by debtors that are not small businesses. Small business debtors are already required to use Official Form 25C, "Small Business Monthly Operating Report."

NOW AVAILABLE FOR PRE-ORDER: BEST OF ABI 2014 BOOK BUNDLE

Now available for pre-order in the ABI Bookstore is the Best of ABI 2014 book bundle containing The Year in Business Bankruptcy and The Year in Consumer Bankruptcy. These must-have references contain the best ABI Journal articles and papers from ABI's top-rated educational seminars, with Spring 2014 ABI Resident Scholar Prof. Charles Tabb selecting the most important developments in business bankruptcy and Fall 2014 ABI Resident Scholar Prof. Lois Lupica choosing important consumer bankruptcy developments. Make sure to log in to the site to get your discounted ABI member pricing. The ABI member price for each book is $50, but take advantage of this bundle offer and save even more! The books will ship in early December. Click here to order.

NEXT FREE COMMITTEE TELECONFERENCE WILL BE TOMORROW'S ASSET SALES COMMITTEE CALL ON CHAPTER 11 COMMISSION PROPOSAL!

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

- Asset Sales Committee: Wednesday, Nov. 12; 4 p.m. ET

Topic: "Chapter 11 Reform Commission's Consideration of a Proposal to Surcharge Secured Lenders for 363 Asset Sales"

Speakers: Kathryn A. Coleman of Hughes Hubbard & Reed LLP and Gregory A. Bray. Moderator: Risa Wolf-Smith of Holland & Hart LLP.

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

NEXT ABI LIVE WEBINAR ON NOV. 20 FOCUSES ON PROFESSIONAL FEE CASE BEFORE THE SUPREME COURT

The next abiLIVE webinar will be held on Nov. 20 and will feature a discussion on a case before the Supreme Court that could have a major impact on professional fees for bankruptcy practitioners. In this 75-minute webinar, Thomas J. Salerno of Gordon Silver (Phoenix) and J. Maxwell Tucker of Squire Patton Boggs LLP (Dallas), along with moderator Judge Gregg W. Zive (D. Nev.; Reno, Nevada), will discuss the professional fee issues presented in Baker Botts LLP v. ASARCO LLC, No. 14-103, which was granted certiorari by the Supreme Court on Oct. 2. Click here to register for this important webinar!

ABI MEMBERS IN SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA: DON'T MISS TOMORROW'S SPECIAL TMA EVENT TO BENEFIT THE WOUNDED WARRIOR PROJECT

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

ABI MEMBERS WELCOME TO ATTEND TRIBUTE DINNER ON DEC. 11 TO HONOR BANKRUPTCY JUDGE STEVEN W. RHODES

ABI members are invited to attend a tribute dinner honoring the 29 years of service of Bankruptcy Judge Steven W. Rhodes of the United States Bankruptcy Court for the Eastern District of Michigan for his commitment to the bench, bar and community. The Tribute Dinner will be held at the Roostertail on the Detroit River and is being hosted by the Bankruptcy Community to honor and celebrate Judge Rhodes' service and career. Please contact David Lerner at (248) 901-4010 for more information. To attend, please go to http://www.cbadetroit.com/events/Judge-Rhodes-USBC-Invite-and-Form.pdf

NEW CASE SUMMARY ON VOLO: SUSQUEHANNA BANK V. USA/IRS (IN RE RESTIVO AUTO BODY; 4TH CIR.)

Summarized by Ann Brogan of Crowley, Liberatore, Ryan & Brogan, P.C.

The Fourth Circuit affirmed the judgment of the U.S. District Court for the District of Baltimore affirming an appeal from the bankruptcy court but reversed the lower court, finding that Maryland's relation back statute applied. Instead, the Fourth Circuit upheld the alternative holding of the district court that the Maryland doctrine of equitable conversion gave the bank deed-of-trust priority over the IRS lien.

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: CRAMDOWN HURDLES, AND HOW TO PLAY THE CLASSIFICATION GAME (OR NOT)

A recent blog post takes a look at what happens when an amended reorganization plan creates separate classes of unsecured creditors, and whether it is always reasonable to do so.

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 single set of mandatory, uniform federal bankruptcy exemptions should be adopted.

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
 

2014

November
- abiLIVE Webinar
    Nov. 20, 2014

December
- Winter Leadership Conference
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Nortel Bondholders Fight Canadian Retirees for 1 Billion

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Nortel Networks Corp., the defunct telecommunications company, opened a court fight with its U.S. unit over as much as $1 billion that bondholders claim as interest and Canadian retirees say may belong to them, Bloomberg News reported yesterday. Nortel contends that the unit, which has operated independently of the Mississauga, Ontario-based parent since filing for bankruptcy in 2009, is overpaying bondholders by about $900 million. The unit has asked a federal judge to approve a deal to pay $1 billion in interest to bondholders including U.S. hedge funds, on top of about $4 billion they are set to collect. The dispute is part of a larger battle over how to divide about $7 billion the unit raised in a court-supervised sale of assets including a trove of patents auctioned in 2011 to a group that included Microsoft Corp., Apple Inc. and Sony Corp.

San Bernardino Police Want Deadline for Filing Reorganization Plan

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San Bernardino had negotiated a tentative agreement with the union representing police officers in its chapter 9 debt-adjustment proceeding, but the police union said in a filing last week that the city revoked the agreement, having been “emboldened” by two developments, Bloomberg News reported on Friday. In the San Bernardino bankruptcy, the court in September authorized the city to terminate the union contract with the bankrupt city’s firefighters. Of potentially more significance, the bankruptcy judge in the municipal bankruptcy of Stockton, Calif., said this month that the city’s liability on underfunded pensions is an unsecured claim with no higher rank than other unsecured creditors. The police union wants the San Bernardino judge at a hearing on Nov. 6 to establish a deadline for the city to file a plan.
http://www.bloomberg.com/news/print/2014-10-17/san-bernardino-police-wa…

In related news, San Bernardino leaders want to improve the city’s image after being stung by negative national and local media reports of violent crime, Bloomberg News reported on Saturday. Violent crime in the city is more than double the U.S. average, highlighted by recent incidents when gunmen critically injured a police officer and opened fire on children. The city of 210,000 asked public relations firms to submit proposals by today showing how they’d restore the inland suburb’s civic luster. The winning firm will get $125,000 a year to help San Bernardino “change how it is perceived by itself, its citizens and all those who come across the city of San Bernardino,” according to a request for proposals issued last month.
http://www.bloomberg.com/news/print/2014-10-20/bankrupt-san-bernardino-…

Trump Atlantic City Casino Gets Court Approval to Break Labor Deal

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The bankrupt Trump Taj Mahal casino received court approval on Friday to break its labor agreement, a key condition for a rescue deal with billionaire Carl Icahn, and the union promptly announced a plan to picket the Atlantic City, N.J., hotel, Reuters reported yesterday. Parent company Trump Entertainment Resorts Inc. has said that trimming $14.6 million from its annual union pension and health care costs is key to saving the casino from becoming the fifth to close this year in the seaside resort. Bankruptcy Judge Kevin Gross said during a hearing that he would approve the request and would explain his reasoning in a written opinion this week. The Unite Here Local 54 union will appeal the ruling, the union's lawyer, Kathy Krieger of the law firm James & Hoffman, told the court.

Court to Rule Friday on Atlantic Citys Taj Mahal Union Pact

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A bankruptcy judge said that he will rule on Friday whether to allow the owner of the Trump Taj Mahal casino in Atlantic City, New Jersey to shed its labor pact in order to clinch a $100 million rescue deal with billionaire Carl Icahn, Reuters reported yesterday. Parent company Trump Entertainment Resorts Inc. has said that trimming $14.6 million from its annual union pension and health care costs is key to save the casino from becoming the fifth to close this year in the seaside resort. Bankruptcy Judge Kevin Gross said that he would read his ruling during a teleconference at 3 p.m. EDT on Friday. Atlantic City has lost thousands of jobs this year and Trump Entertainment has warned it could be forced to begin winding down the Taj Mahal operations as soon as next week.

Union Protests Trump Entertainments Bid to Cut Worker Benefits

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The union for more than 1,100 workers at Atlantic City, N.J.’s Trump Taj Mahal casino who are rallying to save their health-care and pension benefits are now fighting in two places: in the courtroom and on the streets, the Wall Street Journal reported today. Several hundred protesters plan to block a major traffic intersection near the Atlantic City Expressway yesterday to draw attention to pressure that workers who are unionized through Unite Here Local 54 face, said union spokesman Ben Begleiter. Billionaire Carl Icahn promised to take over the struggling casino, whose owner filed for bankruptcy last month and put $100 million into its operations. But that offer stands only if casino officials can deliver about $15 million worth of cuts from workers and property tax relief from Atlantic City. Casino officials want to stop contributing money to worker pensions and to end their health care coverage.