However, two sources familiar with the restructuring talks said a separate hedge fund was the main opponent to the plan but declined to name the fund.
While most restructurings in the Gulf region, such as Dubai World's $25 billion debt deal, have been bank-only affairs and have seen long extensions to maturity dates, hedge funds have fewer concerns about maintaining relationships and were expected to force a shift from the usual conciliatory attitude.
The other four members of the creditor committee are Barclays, CIMB, Standard Bank and Royal Bank of Scotland, sources familiar with the matter told Reuters last week.
Arcapita's legal advisors are Gibson Dunn & Crutcher and Linklaters, while its financial advisor is Rothschild, the statement said.
PricewaterhouseCoopers and Clifford Chance are working with the creditor committee, sources told Reuters last week.
Like most investment firms in the region, Arcapita was hit by the financial crisis as it struggled to exit its investments due to global investor woes and its fee income from raising fresh funds in the Gulf Arab region collapsed.
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