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Stockton Bankruptcy Judge Says Citys Collateral Not Worthless

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The judge in Stockton, Calif.’s bankruptcy ruled yesterday that the city has collateral worth $4 million with which it could pay holdout creditor Franklin Templeton, dismissing the city's contention its collateral was worthless, Reuters reported yesterday. At the same time, Bankruptcy Judge Christopher Klein made no ruling on Tuesday on whether the California Public Employees' Retirement System (CalPERS) should be made to accept less than the entire amount it is owed while bondholders take losses in the case. Judge Klein's ruling on the collateral in the case of Stockton, which filed for bankruptcy in June 2012, followed a trial that concluded last month and centered around Franklin's objection to the city proposing to repay it less than a penny on the dollar for a debt of about $36 million. The city's collateral against bonds held by Franklin includes two golf courses, a community center and a park, which the city had estimated had no value. Franklin had pegged their value at $6.12 million to $17.34 million.

Franklin CalPERS Clash on Stockton Pension Issue

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A mutual fund heavyweight and the largest public pension fund in the U.S. are clashing over whether public pensions should be protected in municipal bankruptcy, a major test that has implications for workers, investors and distressed cities across the country, the Wall Street Journal reported today. Payments into pension funds are usually considered sacrosanct, but fights are breaking out around the U.S. over who gets priority when a municipality seeks protection from creditors. The latest battle involves the bankruptcy of Stockton, Calif., and pits Franklin Templeton Investments against California Public Employees' Retirement System (CalPERS). The firms disagree on whether Stockton's retirement contributions should be reduced to free up money for a loan repayment. U.S. Bankruptcy Court Judge Christopher Klein could rule on the dispute as early as Tuesday.

Analysis Mayor Mike Duggans Pledges Echo in Detroits North End

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Detroit Mayor Mike Duggan, who took office in January, promised immediate improvements after the city hit a low point last year, becoming America’s largest to file for bankruptcy, the New York Times reported today. The city has targeted Detroit’s North End as among the first neighborhoods for renewal. Situated just above the city’s vibrant Midtown and Downtown corridor, the North End is ripe for commercial and residential development. The city is offering financial incentives for employees of Wayne State University and two nearby hospitals to rent or purchase homes in parts of the North End. It already has some stable housing stock and deeply rooted families in which mothers and brothers, cousins and uncles all live around the block from one another, occupying homes that have been in their families for three or four generations. New people and also organizations are moving in, like the Michigan Urban Farming Initiative, started by two University of Michigan graduates in their 20s. The city has already started tearing down blighted homes all over, including in the North End, where nearly 70 houses have been demolished so far this year and about 240 more are under contract to be razed.

Creditors Win Bid to Challenge Detroit Bankruptcy

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A legal challenge in Detroit's municipal bankruptcy case must be heard before a trial on the city's debt-cutting plan, a federal appeals court ruled yesterday, the Wall Street Journal reported today. The Sixth Circuit Court of Appeals said that a lower district court judge improperly held up an appeal by municipal bond insurer Syncora questioning the city of Detroit's use of casino tax revenue during the case. "In a bankruptcy case of such scope and complexity, that is not the proper way to adjudicate appeals that implicate legal questions of fundamental importance to the bankruptcy proceedings," the Sixth Circuit Court of Appeals said in its ruling. By ordering the lower court to act, a federal appeals court may have thrown a potential wrench in the timetable to exit the city of Detroit from municipal bankruptcy by this fall. The appeals court ordered a federal-district court judge to rule by July 14 on a request by Syncora Guarantee Inc. and its associated Syncora Capital Assurance Inc. to stop the city from using its casino tax revenue rather than preserve the funds potentially to pay back creditors including Syncora. The city generates about $170 million a year from taxes levied on its three casinos.

Prichard Ala. Cleared to Leave Bankruptcy After Five Years

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A judge cleared the 23,000-resident city of Prichard, Ala., to end its five-year-old bankruptcy by moving forward on a plan that cuts pension payments for its workers and retirees and ends its pension system altogether, Dow Jones Daily Bankruptcy Review reported today. Bankruptcy Judge William Shulman confirmed the city's plan during a hearing on Tuesday. Elected leaders put the city into chapter 9 bankruptcy protection in October 2009, saying that it could not afford pension payments even after they had been reduced in an earlier bankruptcy case. Under the new plan, the city's roughly 150 retirees will be paid about 35 percent of their pension payment amount.

Bankruptcy Judge Allows Detroits Pension Debt Lawsuit to Continue

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Bankruptcy Judge Steven Rhodes will allow leaders of the bankrupt city of Detroit to continue their fight to make about $1.4 billion it borrowed from pension payments disappear from the city's debt, despite protests from two city-controlled entities that were created to borrow that money, the Wall Street Journal reported today. With his ruling on Monday, Judge Steven Rhodes rejected a request to dismiss the lawsuit that Detroit leaders filed in January, which argued that the borrowing deals extended by Wall Street were illegal and shouldn't be repaid. Specifically, city leaders said that the deals led Detroit to borrow more than the state's debt limit, resulting "in the creation of city debt that was not authorized" by state law, according to the lawsuit filed in U.S. Bankruptcy Court in Detroit. The city's lawsuit was filed against two city-created entities that borrowed the money and whose representatives argued for the lawsuit to be dismissed. In earlier court papers, representatives said that the city shouldn't be allowed to sue itself.

Detroit Needs Residents but Sends Some Packing

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July 1, 2014

 
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  NEWS AND ANALYSIS   

DETROIT NEEDS RESIDENTS, BUT SENDS SOME PACKING

While Detroit Mayor Mike Duggan pledges to stem the flood of departures that have crippled the bankrupt city and to begin increasing the city's population for the first time in decades, tens of thousands of residents are on the verge of losing their houses for failing to pay their property taxes, the New York Times reported on Friday. In a city that desperately needs to hold onto residents, there is a virtual pipeline out. At least 70,000 foreclosures have taken place since 2009 because of delinquent property taxes. And more than 43,000 properties -- more than one in 10 in this city -- were subject to foreclosure this year, some of them headed for a public auction where prices can start as low as $500.Tax foreclosures have grown so steeply that county officials have lately had to forgo pursuing tens of thousands of additional properties that have fallen far enough behind to risk foreclosure. Other cities wrestle with unpaid taxes, too, but the size of Detroit's problem is staggering. Contributing factors are soaring rates of poverty, high taxes despite painfully diminished city services and a long pattern of lackadaisical tax collection by the city. In some cases, homeowners have abandoned properties and simply quit paying taxes, and foreclosure may be the only way to get a house back into the hands of people who actually want to live there and pay their share. In other cases, those who lose or abandon their houses sometimes end up buying other houses at auction -- sometimes for as little as $500 -- and begin the cycle again, although new rules are in place to take back properties sooner if taxes are again not paid. Either way, the city fails to get all the tax revenue it is owed. Political leaders here acknowledge that the flood of tax foreclosures has become a problem, and say they are making efforts to improve the situation by lowering property assessments -- and thus tax bills -- and by trying to help people find steady incomes. Read more.

CORINTHIAN COLLEGE STUDENTS AWAIT THEIR FATE AS BREAKUP LOOMS

Corinthian Colleges Inc.'s 72,000 students will soon be swept into the biggest collapse the U.S. for-profit education industry has ever seen, Bloomberg News reported today. Corinthian, which also owns the Heald and WyoTech career schools, as well as an online university, is scheduled to present a plan to the Education Department today to sell most of its 107 campuses and close others. The wind-down comes after the U.S. Department of Education cut Corinthian's access to student aid following more than a decade of complaints. Lawsuits against Corinthian in two states allege that at some schools instructors don't teach, the isolated and the unemployed are badgered into enrolling and the ultimate mission is to lure in students to seize federal money. Corinthian, based in Santa Ana, Calif., has been accused of falsifying grades and job-placement data, luring students with non-existent programs and pushing them into high-interest, subprime loans they can't repay. Read more.

PUERTO RICO SWAP COST AT RECORD HIGH BEFORE BOND PAYMENTS

Investor confidence in Puerto Rico's ability to repay debt is sinking as the cost to protect commonwealth bonds against default has more than doubled since June 12 to the highest ever, Bloomberg News reported today. Puerto Rico Electric Power Authority bondholders are awaiting payment today on maturing debt after legislators last week enacted a law meant to allow some government entities to restructure outside bankruptcy. A revision of Prepa's $8.6 billion in debt would be the largest ever in the $3.7 trillion municipal-bond market. Prices on some Prepa bonds increased today, data compiled by Bloomberg show. Prepa's trustee, U.S. Bancorp, has the money for today's payment on $204 million in bonds, said David Millar, a New York-based spokesman for the Government Development Bank, the commonwealth's financial agent. Even with the money, the trustee can withhold funds if it believes Prepa needs them for legal fees or other expenses, said Lyle Fitterer, who helps manage $33 billion of municipal bonds at Wells Capital in Menomonee Falls, Wis., among them some of the bonds due today. The market reflects the uncertainty. It costs about $1.5 million annually, the most ever, to protect $10 million of commonwealth debt for 10 years through credit-default swaps, according to data provider CMA, which is owned by McGraw Hill Financial Inc. The crisis reflects a broader malaise in the island commonwealth, whose tax-free debt is held in 66 percent of U.S. muni mutual funds. Puerto Rico's economy has struggled to grow since 2006 and its unemployment rate of 13.8 percent is more than double the U.S. average. About 45 percent of its residents are in poverty, according to U.S. Census data. The commonwealth for years has borrowed to keep its government functioning, and investors hungry for the rewards of risky debt kept lending. Read more.

REGULATORS ISSUE HELOC RESET GUIDANCE

Four federal regulatory agencies and the Conference of State Bank Supervisors today issued guidance to financial institutions regarding home equity lines of credit (HELOC) nearing their "end-of-draw" periods, CreditUnionTimes.com reported today. The guidance encouraged financial institutions to effectively communicate with borrowers about the pending reset, and provides broad principles for managing HELOC risks. The regulators said that they recognize that financial institutions and borrowers may face challenges as HELOCs near their end-of-draw periods. Many borrowers will continue to meet their contractual obligation when their loan resets to an amortizing payment or reaches a balloon maturity. However, some may find it difficult to make higher payments or to refinance their existing loans due to changes in their financial circumstances or declines in property values, and could need loan modification. The guidance described how financial institutions can effectively manage their potential exposures under these circumstances, including specific examiner expectations regarding risk mitigation strategies and documentation. Additionally, the appropriate accounting and reporting procedures for HELOCs nearing their end-of-draw periods were also included. Read more.

Click here to read the guidance letter.

CHIEF BANKRUPTCY JUDGES REACT TO BELLINGHAM DECISION

On June 16, 2014, ABI presented a panel of chief bankruptcy judges who discussed the new U.S. Supreme Court decision in Bellingham as well as other hot topics. Bankruptcy Judges Dennis R. Dow (W.D. Mo.), C. Ray Mullins (N.D. Ga.), Brendan Linehan Shannon (D. Del.), Cecelia G. Morris (S.D.N.Y), and Barbara J. Houser (N.D. Tex.) reviewed the Bellingham decision and provided commentary on what effect it will have on the bankruptcy courts. You can still hear what these judges had to say by purchasing the program by clicking here.

ARGENTINIAN DEBT CRISIS AND ITS IMPLICATIONS FOR SOVEREIGN DEBT RESTRUCTURING? WATCH JAMES MILLSTEIN'S PRESENTATION AT THE CROSS-BORDER SYMPOSIUM

Not able to catch James Millstein's presentation on Argentina and the future of sovereign debt restructuring on June 20 at ABI's Cross-Border Symposium? Watch the full presentation in ABI's Newsroom.

NEW CASE SUMMARY ON VOLO: NATIONAL HERITAGE FOUNDATION INC. V. HIGHBOURNE FOUNDATION (4TH CIR.)

Summarized by Cara Murray of Whiteford Taylor & Preston LLP

The Fourth Circuit affirmed the bankruptcy court's ruling that the non-debtor release provision in the debtor's chapter 11 reorganization plan was unenforceable.

There are more than 1,300 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: WHILE FILINGS MAY BE DOWN, BANKRUPTCY CASES BECOMING MORE COMPLEX

A blogger recently examined the composition of their cases over the past two years and found that, while the number of filings may have decreased, the cases require just as much time due to the complexity of the cases and the requirements of the Code.

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 special Bankruptcy Code chapter 14 should be created for "TBTF" (too-big-to-fail) financial institutions.

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

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  CALENDAR OF EVENTS
 

2014

July
- abiLIVE Webinar: Proposed Chapter 14 and the Future of Large Financial Institution Resolution
    July 15, 2014 |
- Northeast Bankruptcy Conference
    July 17-20, 2014 | Stowe, Vt.
- Southeast Bankruptcy Workshop
    July 24-27, 2014 | Amelia Island, Fla.
- Mid-Atlantic Bankruptcy Workshop
    July 31-August 2, 2014 | Cambridge, Md.

August
- ABI Endowment Baseball Event
    Aug. 13, 2014 | Baltimore, Md.
- Fourth Hawai'i Bankruptcy Workshop
    Aug. 13-16, 2014 | Maui, Hawai'i

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- Southwest Bankruptcy Conference
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    Sept. 11-13, 2014 | Dallas, Texas
 

  

 

- ABI Workshop: Lending to Distressed Companies
    Sept. 15, 2014 | Alexandria, Va.
- Lawrence P. King and Charles Seligson Workshop on Bankruptcy & Business Reorganization
    Sept. 16-17, 2014 | New York, N.Y.

October
- abiWorkshop: Government Contracting and Bankruptcy
    Oct. 6, 2014 | Alexandria, Va.
- Midwestern Bankruptcy Institute
    Oct. 16-17, 2014 | Kansas City, Mo.
- Views from the Bench
    Oct. 24, 2014 | Washington, D.C.
- Claims-Trading Program
    Oct. 30, 2014 | New York, N.Y.

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

 

 
 
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Article Tags

Mediation Session on Pension Debt Ordered in Detroit Bankruptcy

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Detroit and a group of hold-out creditors will meet today over one of the last unresolved major issues in the city's historic bankruptcy case, Reuters reported on Friday. U.S. Judge Gerald Rosen, who is heading mediation in the case, on Thursday ordered bond insurance companies and European banks into mediation with Detroit on $1.4 billion of certificates of participation (COPs) the city sold in 2005 and 2006 to boost funding for its two retirement systems. The city proposed minimal recoveries for the COPs in its plan to adjust $18 billion of debt and exit the biggest municipal bankruptcy in U.S. history. Detroit, which stopped paying on the COPs in June 2013, has also asked the federal court to void the debt all together. That treatment has rattled bond insurer Syncora Guarantee Inc, which has emerged as the city's chief nemesis in the case as it fights for a bigger recovery for its nearly $400 million exposure, mainly from insuring some of the COPs.

Detroit Bankruptcy Judge Agrees to Tour of City

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The federal judge overseeing Detroit's historic bankruptcy case on Thursday indicated he is willing to join a bus tour proposed by the city, while rejecting demands by a major creditor in the case for an explanation of how a legal opinion was reached, Reuters reported yesterday. Bankruptcy Judge Steven Rhodes, who is no stranger to Detroit having served there as a bankruptcy judge since 1985, said in court he was open to the idea of a tour as long as its timing and locations are not publicly disclosed. Detroit had argued that a site visit would provide important evidence for Judge Rhodes as he determines whether Detroit's plan to adjust $18 billion of debt and exit the biggest municipal bankruptcy in U.S. history is fair and feasible. But some city creditors, including bond insurance companies and European banks that own Detroit debt, objected to the tour, calling it improper and unnecessary. Meanwhile, Syncora Guarantee Inc, one of the few remaining hold-out major creditors in the case, dropped its demand for personal financial information for some 20,000 retired city workers. Detroit had vehemently protested the move, but agreed yesterday not to use the financial hardships of retirees as an argument for their treatment in the debt adjustment plan.

Analysis Bond Insurer Syncora Emerges as Nemesis to Detroit in Bankruptcy Proceedings

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Bond insurer Syncora Guarantee Inc. has emerged as Detroit's chief nemesis in the city's historic bankruptcy case and is fighting as if its financial life depends on a decent recovery on its $400 million exposure to the city, Reuters reported today. Since Detroit filed the biggest municipal bankruptcy in U.S. history last July, Syncora has objected to the city's moves nearly every step of the way — from an early agreement with investment banks over interest rate swaps to the more recent "grand bargain" designed to save the Detroit Institute of Arts. The company's latest pleading, set for argument today in a federal courtroom, demands information on the current assets and income of all Detroit's retired workers — some 20,000 of them. Syncora has issued past warnings to investors that it might go out of business, and it cautioned in a recent financial report that investment in Syncora Holdings common shares is "likely to result in a loss of substantially all of their investment." In the financial statement, Syncora warned of a "liquidity mismatch" in which claims might exceed recoveries from the claims, and noted that reserves for losses "are modest" when compared with estimated future claims.