Friday, November 8, 2013

Reuters: Bankruptcy News: UPDATE 1-Bankruptcy was unavoidable, Detroit lawyer tells court

Reuters: Bankruptcy News
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UPDATE 1-Bankruptcy was unavoidable, Detroit lawyer tells court
Nov 9th 2013, 02:40

Fri Nov 8, 2013 9:40pm EST

By Joseph Lichterman

DETROIT Nov 8 (Reuters) - Detroit on Friday wrapped up its effort to prove that it is eligible for the largest municipal bankruptcy in U.S. history, clashing with unions, retirees and pension funds over whether good faith negotiations were feasible before the city filed for court protection on July 18.

During closing arguments of the nine-day eligibility trial, U.S. Bankruptcy Judge Steven Rhodes pressed city attorneys to show Detroit gave a good-faith effort to reach an out-of-court settlement with creditors. Rhodes also pushed lawyers for those opposing Detroit's bankruptcy to show they presented a viable alternative to bankruptcy.

Detroit's unions, government retirees and two pension funds are trying to keep the city out of bankruptcy and Detroit must prove to Rhodes that it meets the criteria for eligibility.

To declare Detroit eligible, Rhodes will need to decide that the city proved it is insolvent, and that it acted in good faith when it decided negotiations with creditors were impractical.

Rhodes asked attorneys on both sides to file papers by Wednesday regarding the definition of good-faith negotiations. He will rule sometime after receiving those briefs.

The closing arguments capped a trial that has stretched across three weeks and included rare testimony from a sitting governor, Michigan's Rick Snyder. Detroit Emergency Manager Kevyn Orr and a parade of other city and state officials, consultants, retirees and union leaders also testified.

City attorney Bruce Bennett argued on Friday that Detroit did negotiate in good faith even as it recognized that it was unlikely to reach an out-of-court agreement with creditors.

"I think what the city did was they said: 'This is extremely difficult to achieve, but we're going to try anyway,'" Bennett said in his closing argument.

"You absolutely can believe in your head that this is never going to work, but try anyway. And I think that is the situation in this case."

His remarks about Detroit's decision to forego further negotiations came in response to a question from Rhodes, who questioned whether the city's arguments were logically consistent.

"It strikes me as factually impossible for it to be impracticable for that party to negotiate with other parties in any circumstance, and to negotiate with them in good faith," Rhodes said.

Rhodes also pressed Bennett on whether Orr misled retirees during a June 10 public meeting by making statements that pensions were "sacrosanct" and that there was only a "50-50 chance" that the city would file for bankruptcy.

"Assuming both were misleading, what impact should that have on the court's analysis of good faith here?" Rhodes asked.

Bennett replied that Orr made a "mistake" and his comments should not impact the case, because the record was clarified only days later when the city released a report on June 14 that said pensions may be cut.

'THERE SIMPLY WAS NOT TIME'

Jennifer Green, who represents the city's two pension funds, said discussions about Detroit's possibly filing for bankruptcy dated as far back as March 2012. The city failed to make use of the time it had to offer alternatives to bankruptcy, she said.

"The city could have been negotiating since 2012, when it knew there was a financial crisis," Green said. "To argue it was impracticable when all along they had this time, was not good faith."

Detroit has $18.5 billion in debt and liabilities, about half of which come from retirement benefits, including $5.7 billion for healthcare and other obligations, and $3.5 billion involving pensions, the city says.

The city outlined its financial liabilities in the June 14 report, which offered unsecured creditors, including retirees, only pennies on the dollar to settle their claims.

Robert Gordon, another lawyer representing pension funds, said the city did not indicate that it wanted to cut pensions until June 14. "There simply was not time for good faith negotiations," he said.

In his argument, Bennett invoked testimony from earlier in the trial, when one of the city's top financial advisers testified that Detroit was operating on a "razor's edge" prior to the bankruptcy filing and ran the risk of running out of cash.

Detroit had little time for additional negotiations, and in any event creditors were not putting forward proposals that the city considered as viable alternatives to bankruptcy, he said.

"What would more time have led to? There was no evidence or any other indication that the city could have looked at and said there was a path to a deal," Bennett said.

Gordon said there were alternatives aside from slashing pensions, which are protected by Michigan's constitution.

But Rhodes interjected and asked what those other options were. "You did not submit any evidence that there was a viable alternative plan," he said.

Gordon responded that the city did not provide enough information on which the pension funds could have based a proposal.

"It is not clear that there needs to be an impairment or diminishment of the accrued pension benefits in order to restructure here," Gordon said. "We can't go farther than that because we don't have all the information here."

Matthew Schneider, who represents the state of Michigan in the case, argued during a closing statement on Friday morning that a "tremendous storm" was headed toward the city, and a bankruptcy was necessary to preserve order.

"The evidence shows the health, safety and welfare of the people of Detroit are at risk," he said.

Michigan Governor Snyder, who authorized Orr, the emergency manager, to file for bankruptcy, said in an interview with Reuters on Friday, that he expects the city to emerge from bankruptcy by September 2014, when Orr's term is scheduled to end.

"We are on a path to get it done within that time frame," Snyder said.

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Reuters: Bankruptcy News: UPDATE 2-Batista's shipbuilder OSX Brasil to file for bankruptcy

Reuters: Bankruptcy News
Reuters.com is your source for breaking news, business, financial and investing news, including personal finance and stocks. Reuters is the leading global provider of news, financial information and technology solutions to the world's media, financial institutions, businesses and individuals. // via fulltextrssfeed.com 
UPDATE 2-Batista's shipbuilder OSX Brasil to file for bankruptcy
Nov 8th 2013, 23:17

Fri Nov 8, 2013 6:17pm EST

By Sabrina Lorenzi

RIO DE JANEIRO Nov 8 (Reuters) - Brazilian shipbuilder OSX Brasil SA said on Friday it will file for bankruptcy protection, another step in the decline of former billionaire Eike Batista's empire.

The company said in a securities filing its shareholders approved the bankruptcy filing, which is expected to take place next week in a Rio de Janeiro court. The company also announced the ouster of Chief Executive Marcelo Gomes.

OSX has 5.34 billion reais ($2.29 billion) in debt and could seek to restructure part or all of that, becoming the second company of Batista's to file for bankruptcy. Batista's oil producer company, OGX Petróleo e Gas Participações SA , sought protection from creditors on Oct. 30.

The OGX petition, citing 11.2 billion reais in debt, was the largest corporate bankruptcy filing in Latin America.

The OSX bankruptcy decision follows more than a year during which Batista's EBX Group - a sprawling empire of energy, minerals and logistics companies, including OGX and OSX - collapsed under a mountain of debt after missing production targets.

EBX was once valued at more than $60 billion, and Batista was a swaggering symbol of Brazil's rise as an emerging-market powerhouse over the past decade.

Yet, as problems mounted, they fulfilled predictions made by skeptics of Batista's breakneck expansion in recent years. Critics warned that interdependence between EBX companies would make them vulnerable to each other's problems, the opposite of Batista's contention that the links would generate business helping the companies flourish.

Once OGX filed for court protection, an OSX filing became more likely and thus did not come as a surprise. The shipbuilder depends on its sister company, to which it leases oil production vessels, for all its revenue.

OSX depends on OGX, to which it leases oil production ships, for all its revenue. OSX is 10 percent owned by South Korea's Hyundai Heavy Industry.

Parent company OSX and two subsidiaries OSX Construção Naval S.A. and OSX Serviços Operacionais Ltda. will jointly file for protection from creditors, the filing said.

The company did not mention a third unit, OSX Leasing, which owns three platforms that are leased for oil exploration purposes. OSX's $500 million in secured dollar-denominated bonds have rallied in recent days on speculation that OSX Brasil would keep OSX Leasing off the filing so that the company can freely decide what to do with the leasing company's assets.

If the court approves the bankruptcy request OSX plans to file, the company will have 60 days to present a restructuring plan. OSX creditors will then have 30 days to endorse or reject the plan, though legal experts warn the proceedings could drag on for much longer than that.

Brazilian Development Bank BNDES said in a statement that it granted OSX a $228 million bridge loan, but added that the loan is backed by bank guarantees and presents no risk to the BNDES.

UNFINISHED SHIPYARD

OSX, whose assets include an unfinished shipyard on the northern coast of Rio de Janeiro state, is also one of OGX's biggest creditors. OGX owes OSX at least 2.45 billion reais, according to documents filed with the bankruptcy court.

Before the OGX and OSX filings, Batista had already agreed to sell stakes and assets of the other four publicly traded companies in the ailing EBX conglomerate.

Like other Batista companies, OSX's troubles stem from the failure of OGX to meet any of its ambitious oil production targets. After starting output at its first field in early 2012, OGX repeatedly missed goals despite reassuring investors that copious amounts of oil would soon flow.

Having once said OGX would produce 1.4 million barrels of oil and natural gas equivalent a day by 2018, or more than half Brazil's current output, the company never produced more than 1 percent of that.

According to Batista's plan, the oil was supposed to have provided tens of billions of dollars to build several dozen oil platforms and other vessels at the OSX shipyard. The facility was modeled on shipyards operated by Hyundai Heavy Industry and was designed to be the largest shipyard in the Southern Hemisphere.

Bankruptcy protection could help OSX salvage its shipyard unit, part of which is almost ready to begin operations at the port of Açu complex on the Rio de Janeiro coast.

The port's operator LLX Logística SA, another company founded by Batista, has agreed to renegotiate its contracts with OSX for the use of the port, reducing OSX's investment obligations, Friday's filing said.

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Reuters: Bankruptcy News: OSX Brasil shipbuilder ousts CEO, plans bankruptcy filing

Reuters: Bankruptcy News
Reuters.com is your source for breaking news, business, financial and investing news, including personal finance and stocks. Reuters is the leading global provider of news, financial information and technology solutions to the world's media, financial institutions, businesses and individuals. // via fulltextrssfeed.com 
OSX Brasil shipbuilder ousts CEO, plans bankruptcy filing
Nov 8th 2013, 21:33

Fri Nov 8, 2013 4:33pm EST

OSX Brasil SA, the Brazilian shipbuilder controlled by former billionaire Eike Batista, ousted its chief executive Marcelo Gomes on Friday and called a shareholders meeting to approve a bankruptcy protection filing, the company said in a securities filing.

The company plans to file for bankruptcy protection while studying ways to keep one of its units out of the insolvency procedure, sources told Reuters this week. The filing is expected to take place next week. (Reporting by Sabrina Lorenzi; Editing by Gary Hill)

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Reuters: Bankruptcy News: Michigan governor hopeful Detroit bankruptcy can be resolved quickly

Reuters: Bankruptcy News
Reuters.com is your source for breaking news, business, financial and investing news, including personal finance and stocks. Reuters is the leading global provider of news, financial information and technology solutions to the world's media, financial institutions, businesses and individuals. // via fulltextrssfeed.com 
Michigan governor hopeful Detroit bankruptcy can be resolved quickly
Nov 8th 2013, 19:31

By Dan Burns

NEW YORK Fri Nov 8, 2013 2:31pm EST

NEW YORK Nov 8 (Reuters) - Michigan Governor Rick Snyder is optimistic that Detroit's bankruptcy case can be wrapped up during the remaining tenure of the emergency manager he installed to run the cash-strapped city, he said Friday.

Snyder, a first-term Republican, appointed bankruptcy attorney Kevyn Orr to an 18-month posting as the city's de facto chief executive in March, a role that effectively shoved aside the city's elected mayor and city council.

Then in July, with Snyder's approval, Orr filed the largest municipal bankruptcy in U.S. history, citing a mountain of debt and liabilities in excess of $18 billion.

Orr has said he expects to depart by September, 2014 at which point he also expects Detroit to emerge from bankruptcy. The federal judge presiding over Detroit's bankruptcy also has indicated he is seeking to move the case speedily through bankruptcy court.

Municipal bankruptcies are rarities, and a handful of recent cases have taken years to resolve. That raises the prospect that Orr's tenure may expire before the case he orchestrated is resolved.

Snyder, in an interview with Reuters during an economic development tour to New York, said that while he expects the city to opt to terminate Orr's role at the end of 18 months, he is hopeful that the case is proceeding quickly enough to allow it to conclude before that deadline.

"We are on a path to get it done within that time frame," Snyder said.

U.S. Bankruptcy Judge Steven Rhodes, who is overseeing the case, "actually moved the schedule up in terms of being more aggressive, so we are on a path to getting it done," the governor said.

Should Orr still be in place when the initial 18-month appointment expires, Detroit's City Council could ask the governor to remove the emergency manager from office.

Snyder's comments on Friday came just as Rhodes was hearing closing arguments over whether Detroit is in fact eligible to seek Chapter 9 bankruptcy protection, a crucial phase in the contentious case. A number of the city's creditors, including current and retired employees and their large pension funds that account for a large portion of the city's liabilities, have objected to the bankruptcy filing.

No matter where the city is in the bankruptcy process at the time of Orr's departure, Snyder said it is important that the transfer of power back to the city is well executed. Orr was installed under emergency powers granted to the governor under a state law enacted in late 2012.

"I think there is a good question to ask what happens after he leaves, even assuming the bankruptcy gets wrapped up," Snyder said. "One of the important things is we need to work out the appropriate transition period."

Earlier this week, Detroit voters elected Mike Duggan to be the next mayor, a role with little authority during the remainder of Orr's term but one with enormous responsibilities after Orr leaves.

Snyder said he and Duggan had spoken since Tuesday's election, as have Duggan and Orr. Duggan, formerly the head of a Detroit hospital who will be the city's first white mayor since 1974, has "a strong background," Snyder said. He would not comment on the substance of their conversation.

The city has seen its population shrink to about 700,000 now from 1.8 million in the 1950s, when Detroit's three automakers dominated the industry. In recent years, the city has made international headlines with its urban blight, roaming packs of feral dogs and outdated and sometimes inoperable police and fire equipment.

Snyder said the city has made recent progress fixing some of the symbols of its blight, including a recent effort to repair many of its thousands of broken street lights.

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Reuters: Bankruptcy News: Bankruptcy was unavoidable, Detroit lawyer tells court

Reuters: Bankruptcy News
Reuters.com is your source for breaking news, business, financial and investing news, including personal finance and stocks. Reuters is the leading global provider of news, financial information and technology solutions to the world's media, financial institutions, businesses and individuals. // via fulltextrssfeed.com 
Bankruptcy was unavoidable, Detroit lawyer tells court
Nov 8th 2013, 18:21

By Joseph Lichterman

DETROIT Fri Nov 8, 2013 1:21pm EST

DETROIT Nov 8 (Reuters) - Detroit tried in good faith to negotiate an out-of-court settlement with creditors before declaring bankruptcy on July 18, even though it suspected that default was unavoidable, a lawyer for the city told a court on Friday.

"I think what the city did was they said: 'This is extremely difficult to achieve, but we're going to try anyway,'" city attorney Bruce Bennett, of Jones Day, said at a trial to determine if the city is eligible for bankruptcy.

"You absolutely can believe in your head that this is never going to work, but try anyway. And I think that is the situation in this case."

The start of closing arguments marked the ninth day of the trial that has stretched across three weeks and included rare testimony from a sitting governor, Michigan Governor Rick Snyder; Detroit Emergency Manager Kevyn Orr; and a parade of other city and state officials, consultants, retirees and union leaders.

Lawyers for the city and the state of Michigan gave closing arguments in the morning in favor of Detroit's eligibility for bankruptcy. The unions, retirees and pension funds objecting to Detroit's bankruptcy were expected to present their closing arguments on Friday afternoon.

Bennett's remarks about Detroit's decision to forego further negotiations came in response to a question from U.S. Bankruptcy Judge Steven Rhodes, who questioned whether the city's arguments were internally inconsistent.

"It strikes me as factually impossible for it to be impracticable for that party to negotiate with other parties in any circumstance, and to negotiate with them in good faith," Rhodes said.

Detroit's unions, retirees and two pension funds are trying to keep the city out of bankruptcy and the city must prove to Rhodes that it meets the criteria for eligibility.

To declare Detroit eligible, Rhodes will need to decide that the city proved it is insolvent, and that it acted in good faith when it decided negotiations with creditors were impractical.

Detroit has $18.5 billion in debt and liabilities, about half of which come from retirement benefits, including $5.7 billion for healthcare and other obligations, and $3.5 billion involving pensions, the city says.

The city presented its financial liabilities on June 14 in a report that offered unsecured creditors, including retirees, only pennies on the dollar to settle their claims. But Bennett said it would be harder to get a deal done out of court as the city's financial situation deteriorated.

In his argument, Bennett invoked testimony from earlier in the trial, when one of the city's top financial advisers testified Detroit was operating on a "razor's edge" and at risk of running out of cash prior to the bankruptcy filing. He stated that it did not have enough time for additional negotiations, especially when creditors were not putting forward what the city considered sufficient counter proposals.

"What would more time have led to? There was no evidence or any other indication that the city could have looked at and said there was a path to a deal," Bennett said.

Matthew Schneider, who represents the State of Michigan in the case, made his closing statement on Friday morning, arguing that a "tremendous storm" was headed toward the city.

"The evidence shows the health, safety and welfare of the people of Detroit are at risk," Schneider said.

He noted there are some 78,000 abandoned buildings in the city, about 40 percent of the street lights do not work and the average police response time is 58 minutes.

Rhodes could make a decision on whether Detroit invoke bankruptcy protection as early as this month. The city has indicated that, if it is found eligible, it would like to submit a plan of adjustment to the court by the end of the year.

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Reuters: Bankruptcy News: UPDATE 1-Bond insurers sue Detroit over Oct. 1 bond default

Reuters: Bankruptcy News
Reuters.com is your source for breaking news, business, financial and investing news, including personal finance and stocks. Reuters is the leading global provider of news, financial information and technology solutions to the world's media, financial institutions, businesses and individuals. // via fulltextrssfeed.com 
UPDATE 1-Bond insurers sue Detroit over Oct. 1 bond default
Nov 8th 2013, 16:13

Fri Nov 8, 2013 11:13am EST

Nov 8 (Reuters) - Two insurance companies that guaranteed payments on Detroit's voter-approved general obligation bonds sued the city in U.S. Bankruptcy Court on Friday over its Oct. 1 default on payments due bondholders.

National Public Finance Guarantee Corporation, the public finance subsidiary of MBIA Inc, and Assured Guaranty Municipal Corp claimed that the city's use of property taxes levied exclusively to pay off the bonds for operating expenses violated Michigan law.

The insurers asked U.S. Bankruptcy Judge Steven Rhodes, who is currently determining whether Detroit is eligible for the municipal bankruptcy it filed in July, to force the city to set aside the tax money for bond payments. They also want to make sure that tax money that had been earmarked for payment of the bonds would not be tapped for Detroit's proposed $350 million debtor-in-possession financing with Barclays PLC.

Sinking under more than $18 billion of debt and other liabilities, Detroit filed the biggest Chapter 9 municipal bankruptcy in U.S. history on July 18.

Prior to the filing, Detroit's state-appointed emergency manager Kevyn Orr included more than $400 million of the city's voter-approved unlimited tax GO bonds in a nearly $12 billion pile of debt he labeled as unsecured. Orr said the city would cease payments on unsecured bonds and that unsecured creditors, including bondholders, would eventually be paid just pennies on the dollar.

Orr's treatment of bonds backed by specific Detroit property tax levies and the city's full-faith and credit pledge roiled the $3.7 trillion U.S. municipal market. General obligation bonds traditionally are considered as secured debt, making them one of the safest bets for investors.

Detroit's Oct. 1 default on the bonds forced the insurers to make a $9.37 million interest payment to bondholders. Their lawsuit claims Detroit publicly has stated it intends to continue to levy the property taxes backing the bonds, while not segregating the revenue from other city funds.

"The city also has indicated that post-petition it is using and intends to continue to use the restricted funds for payment of its general operations. This conduct violates Michigan law," the lawsuit stated, adding that Detroit rejected "numerous efforts" by the insurers to resolve the dispute consensually.

The lawsuit also raises concerns over a financing deal Detroit reached with Barclays last month. The deal, which is subject to bankruptcy court approval, would enable the city to get out of costly interest-rate swap agreements at a discount while providing funds to improve city services.

Under the deal, Detroit would pledge its income tax and casino tax revenue to secure the loan. If those funds prove insufficient, net cash proceeds from any potential monetization of city assets exceeding $10 million would serve as collateral for the debtor-in-possession loan.

The bond insurers' lawsuit asks the court to prohibit Detroit from giving any creditors a "super-priority status" allowing them to tap into the property tax money earmarked for the bonds.

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Reuters: Bankruptcy News: Bond insurers sue Detroit over Oct. 1 bond default

Reuters: Bankruptcy News
Reuters.com is your source for breaking news, business, financial and investing news, including personal finance and stocks. Reuters is the leading global provider of news, financial information and technology solutions to the world's media, financial institutions, businesses and individuals. // via fulltextrssfeed.com 
Bond insurers sue Detroit over Oct. 1 bond default
Nov 8th 2013, 15:44

Fri Nov 8, 2013 10:44am EST

Nov 8 (Reuters) - Two insurance companies that guaranteed payments on Detroit's voter-approved general obligation bonds sued the city in U.S. Bankruptcy Court on Friday over its Oct. 1 default on payments due bondholders.

National Public Finance Guarantee Corporation, the public finance subsidiary of MBIA Inc, and Assured Guaranty Municipal Corp claimed that the city's use of property taxes levied exclusively to pay off the bonds for operating expenses violated Michigan law.

The insurers asked U.S. Bankruptcy Judge Steven Rhodes, who is currently determining whether Detroit is eligible for the municipal bankruptcy it filed in July, to force the city to set aside the tax money for bond payments. They also want to make sure that tax money that had been earmarked for payment of the bonds would not be tapped for Detroit's proposed $350 million debtor-in-possession financing with Barclays PLC.

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