Friday, August 31, 2012

Reuters: Bankruptcy News: Poland's Polimex seeks share issue to keep afloat

Reuters: Bankruptcy News
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Poland's Polimex seeks share issue to keep afloat
Aug 31st 2012, 18:40

WARSAW | Fri Aug 31, 2012 2:40pm EDT

WARSAW Aug 31 (Reuters) - Troubled Polish builder Polimex plans to issue shares worth some 500 million zlotys ($150.68 million) to cover its current funding needs, the company's chief executive, Robert Oppenheim, said on Friday.

Polimex is the largest among Polish builders that ran into trouble after bidding wars to tap into motorway-building programme ahead of the Euro 2012 left them heavily indebted and with loss-making contracts.

The company posted a 370 million zlotys ($111.50 million) net loss in the first half of 2012 against a net profit of 26 million zlotys a year ago.

Apart from the issue, the company also seeks a loan from the state-owned industry development agency ARP but also is considering selling part of its assets.

"Selling assets worth 330 million zlotys, a 160 million zlotys loan from ARP, share issue, prepayments for contracts and we have a new life," Oppenheim said, adding that the company does not need an investor to come out of a crisis.

Earlier this week, Oppenheim told Reuters the group was in talks with possible new investors and plans job cuts as well as unit spin-offs, striving to keep afloat.

Media reports have mentioned Russia's VIS Construction and local rival NDI as likely interested in buying into the company.

The group wants to sell units Energomontaz Polnoc and Sefako for at least 200 million zlotys and book 183 million in savings this year. The sellout will also include railway builder Torpol, as Polimex wants to focus on energy projects.

Oppenheim said the company already has five offers for Sefako and several for Energomontaz Polnoc.

The sector's solvency problems, which already made rival PBG seek bankruptcy protection, took 70 percent off Polimex's value and cost the previous chief executive his job. ($1 = 3.3183 Polish zlotys) (Reporting by Pawel Bernat, Writing by Dagmara Leszkowicz)

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Reuters: Bankruptcy News: Brazil may intervene in indebted group Rede Energia-sources

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Brazil may intervene in indebted group Rede Energia-sources
Aug 31st 2012, 15:36

Fri Aug 31, 2012 11:36am EDT

SAO PAULO/BRASILIA Aug 31 (Reuters) - The Brazilian government may intervene in the heavily indebted holding company Grupo Rede Energia SA, which controls several distressed assets in the power distribution market, three sources with knowledge of the action said on Friday.

Celpa, a unit of Rede Energia serving the northern state of Pará, is the most prominent business to file for bankruptcy protection in Brazil this year. In its February filing, it cited "a worsening financial and economic situation."

In May, the company presented a court in Pará with a restructuring plan that analysts said could force creditors to accept losses and give Celpa more time to pay its debt. Meetings between creditors and the company have been suspended several times.

Brazil's energy regulator Aneel has asked the judge overseeing the Celpa proceedings to allow the government to intervene in the company, one of the sources said.

Rede Energia holds other assets in northern Brazil that are facing heavy debts and falling revenues. The government is concerned that the bankruptcy of Celpa could jeopardize other companies in the group. (Writing by Reese Ewing; Editing by Leslie Gevirtz)

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Reuters: Bankruptcy News: SEB joins pipeline as Tier 2 market hots up, at last

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SEB joins pipeline as Tier 2 market hots up, at last
Aug 31st 2012, 13:01

By Helene Durand

Fri Aug 31, 2012 9:01am EDT

LONDON, Aug 31 (IFR) - The pipeline of European banks looking to raise subordinated debt in the coming days grew further on Thursday after Skandinaviska Enskilda Banken announced it had mandated four banks for a potential Tier 2 issue.

The Swedish bank appointed Bank of America Merrill Lynch, Goldman Sachs, Morgan Stanley and SEB, and joined Dutch lender ABN AMRO, which mandated Bank of America, Citigroup, HSBC and UBS on Wednesday for a potential US dollar Asian-targeted Tier 2 issue slated to come next week.

"We are expecting quite a bit of Tier 2 supply over the coming weeks, providing that market conditions stay stable," said a DCM banker. "Trades are getting lined up and there are discussions on who is going when."

A syndicate banker echoed this view, saying that many issuers had been focusing on structuring deals over the summer and were now ready to pull the trigger.

According to another banker, there are at least four mandates up for grabs on top of the ABN and SEB deals, with Rabobank touted as one of the potential candidate. This a drastic improvement over volumes seen in recent months and a relief for many syndicate and DCM bankers.

Issuance of subordinated debt by European banks has been at best sporadic, and at worst nonexistent due to lack of regulatory clarity and reluctance to give sign-off on deals, and reduced risk appetite from investors.

Meanwhile, Markit's European Subordinated Financials index, while trading at a better level than the 607bp high hit at the end of November last year, is still off the 312bp 2012 tight from the end of March, quoted at 421.5bp on Friday.

ABN AMRO was the last bank to tap the European subordinated market in July this year, when it raised a EUR1bn 10-year bullet Tier 2 at 525bp over mid-swaps, where it was still trading on Friday. But before that, there had not been a deal since DNB Bank's EUR750m 10-year non-call five issue priced at the end of February.

LENGTHY ABSENCE

As for SEB, the Swedish issuer has been absent from the Tier 2 space for at least five years, which should ensure plenty of pent-up demand for the name. It did though issue Tier 1 debt in 2007 and then again in 2009.

SEB will meet investors in London on Monday and will also hold update calls with accounts in other jurisdictions with a view to executing a deal soon after.

Just like a Nordea EUR750m Tier 2 done in January and the DNB Bank trade, SEB is expected to opt for an old-style Tier 2. However, there is talk that - unlike the Nordea and DNB issues, which included substitution variation language allowing the issuer to change some of the deal terms in order to make them compliant with future regulatory changes - SEB will not include such language. The issuer's MTN programme currently does not have it, although it could file a document in order to add it.

This would be popular with European institutional investors, who are wary of what changes issuers would be able to introduce further down the road.

It is not yet known what structure SEB will adopt and whether it will opt for a bullet or a callable deal. Bullet structures have been popular with investors in recent years, as they remove the risk of the issuer not calling a trade at the first opportunity. However, for issuers, they are not as attractive, as a Tier 2 deal begins to lose regulatory capital treatment after five years.

"There's a bit of debate on whether they should do bullet or callable," said a banker not on the mandate. "Personally, I don't think it makes sense for them to do a bullet. It's the French insurance companies who make a fuss about callable and if you look at the Nordea callable sold this year, you can do a deal without that investor base given that the UK investors are prepared to support this structure."

Expectations are that the trade will be an easy sale. "I don't think they're looking for size and this will fly," the banker said.

Meanwhile, expectations are that the ABN AMRO Tier 2, which is also due to be marketed early next week in Asia, will get a strong take-up from investors.

"The name is super-clean and as plain vanilla as you can get and it had decent name recognition prior to the RBS debacle," said a banker not on the mandate.

Another banker said that should the deal be successful, it would mark a further and interesting step in the evolution of the Asian market.

"It was only a question of time before an issuer went out and tried to sell not just Tier 1 but also Tier 2 in that market," he said.

"It will be good if the deal shows that Asia is not just for highly structured products. The ABN deal should still carry an attractive coupon for that investor base, which is also generally less sensitive to terms and conditions in subordinated deals." (Reporting by Helene Durand, Editing by Philip Wright, Julian Baker)

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Thursday, August 30, 2012

Reuters: Bankruptcy News: Battle over pension debt looms in San Bernardino bankruptcy

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Battle over pension debt looms in San Bernardino bankruptcy
Aug 30th 2012, 22:45

Thu Aug 30, 2012 6:45pm EDT

* San Bernardino, Calpers at odds over money owed

* City's bankruptcy filing sets up Wall Street fight with Calpers

* Wildly different pension estimates will likely lead to litigation

By Tim Reid

Aug 30 (Reuters) - A high-stakes showdown pitting California's public employee pension fund against Wall Street bond firms in bankrupt San Bernardino, California, could be further complicated by wildly disparate estimates of how much the city owes for its retirees.

San Bernardino, a city of about 210,000 near Los Angeles that filed for bankruptcy on Aug. 1, has listed the California Public Employees' Retirement System (Calpers) as its largest creditor, with unfunded pension obligations totaling $143.3 million. But Calpers, in response to an inquiry from Reuters, pegged the debt at $319.5 million.

Experts say the dramatically different calculations of San Bernardino's debt to Calpers will likely lead to litigation between the two entities, unless the city quickly agrees to the retirement system's figure.

Calpers is the largest pension system in the U.S. and serves many California cities and counties, including the city of Stockton, which is also in bankruptcy. It has long argued that pension contributions cannot be touched even in a bankruptcy.

But firms that insure municipal bonds have strenuously objected to the idea that pension payments should come ahead of bond payments. They have already gone to court on the issue in Stockton and are expected to do the same in San Bernardino.

The outcome of how Calpers and bondholders are treated as creditors in the two cities' bankruptcies - and whether Calpers receives preferential treatment - will have broad implications for local governments around the country that are struggling to balance their budgets amid soaring employee retirement costs.

The day after San Bernardino's filing the city's mayor, Patrick Morris, told Reuters the city was bankrupt because it was buried under pension debt.

San Bernardino's unfunded obligation to Calpers is the amount the city would have to pay to the organization to cover all current and future pension obligations if the city had to settle those overnight.

At the request of Reuters, Calpers analyzed its database and said that San Bernardino's unfunded obligations to the agency were more that double the city's assessment - $319.5 million.

Calpers's figure was split between $187.1 million for the pension costs of San Bernardino's safety workers - essentially its police and firefighters - and $132.4 million for the city's non-safety workforce.

A Calpers official said it appears that San Bernardino had used an "actuarial" value in determining its unfunded pension obligation, while the pension fund said it uses the current market value to make its calculation.

An actuarial value is a long-term, projected calculation that factors in predicted value of assets, potential future returns on investments and other economic data in determining what a city's pension obligation will be.

Officials at Calpers insist that the correct method to use for the purposes of the bankruptcy filing is the much higher "market value" calculation.

Karol Denniston, a San Francisco lawyer who helped draft California's bankruptcy process law, said whatever method San Bernardino and Calpers used to calculate pension obligations, the fact they are so wildly different spelled trouble.

When it comes to negotiating pension costs during the bankruptcy, Denniston said, "if Calpers views the number that differently, that is going to be an impediment to any sort of settlement. That claim amount will get litigated."

Morris, San Bernardino's mayor, agreed. "There will be trouble if you can't agree on the basic facts," he said.

Morris referred Reuters to the city's finance office for an explanation of how it reached its pension cost figure. Repeated calls there, and to the city manager's office, were not returned. Calls to the bankruptcy attorney representing the city also went unanswered.

The two California bankruptcy cases are being closely watched by investors and markets. They will be major test cases of whether cities in financial trouble can be allowed to renege on their bond debt and pension obligations - and in what order.

Richard Larkin, senior vice president and director of credit analysis at bond underwriting firm HJ Sims, said he expects bondholders to take on Calpers in the case of San Bernardino, which could lead to large scale litigation.

"As a bondholder, I'm going to want to keep other creditors' numbers as low as possible," Larkin said. "The other creditors are going to try and overturn Calpers's claim. I would say Calpers's calculations are wrong."

Litigation between Calpers and San Bernardino's other creditors, especially bondholders, was likely, Larkin said, because the case will have huge implications and set precedent for any future city bankruptcies.

Already in Stockton, two bond insurers are arguing that the city's failure to ask for concessions from Calpers showed the city had not negotiated in good faith with other creditors and its bankruptcy request should not be granted because it does not touch pensions.

In a statement, Calpers argued that California law dictates that it be given "priority" over bond creditors and that municipalities must meet their obligations to the pension system in full.

"Simply put, Calpers is an arm of the State of California and different laws apply to the relationship between Calpers and a municipality," Calpers said.

"Although bondholders and bond insurers have argued that they are 'similarly situated' with Calpers and its members, this is not true."

John Moorlach, chairman of the Orange County Board of Supervisors and one of the officials who oversaw that California county's bankruptcy in 1994 - at the time the largest U.S. county to go bankrupt - said bondholders would be "nuts" not to take on Calpers now.

"The bondholders have got to take on Calpers," Moorlach said. "If they don't Calpers will just run them over."

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Reuters: Bankruptcy News: Alabama county eyes bankruptcy-exit plan this year

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Alabama county eyes bankruptcy-exit plan this year
Aug 30th 2012, 21:32

By Verna Gates

BIRMINGHAM, Ala. | Thu Aug 30, 2012 5:32pm EDT

BIRMINGHAM, Ala. Aug 30 (Reuters) - Alabama's bankrupt Jefferson County is continuing talks with creditors and aims to have a workout plan in place by the end of 2012, the county commission's president said on Thursday.

David Carrington, the county's top elected official, had forecast in the past that a plan of adjustment, or a roadmap for exiting Chapter 9 bankruptcy court protection, might not be ready until late 2013.

Analysts have predicted Jefferson County, which filed its landmark $4.23 billion bankruptcy last November, might need years to hammer out a plan to exit the biggest-ever U.S. municipal bankruptcy.

"It is our goal to have a plan by the end of the year," Carrington said in an interview on Thursday. "I am not going to say dogmatically it will happen."

Some of the county's creditors argue that Carrington and other officials are moving too slowly on fixing the county's finances, such as pushing ahead with rate increases for customers of Jefferson County sewer system, which is at the center of its bankruptcy.

The bankruptcy was also driven by a 2011 court ruling that killed a local payroll tax worth about $60 million a year to Jefferson County, which has laid off hundreds of workers and reduced medical and other government services.

Bond-insurer Assured Guaranty Municipal Corp, which has $709 million of exposure to defaulted Jefferson County sewer-system warrants and other debt, has asked the federal judge overseeing the case to set a deadline for the county to submit an adjustment plan. He has so far not done so.

Talks between the cash-strapped county government and creditors, including large Wall Street companies such as JPMorgan Chase, were continuing, Carrington said.

"Some negotiations are going better than others. I don't know any group of creditors we are not in talks with," Carrington said. "We are trying to establish the lowest common denominator and start from there. We are trying to find common ground."

Jefferson County's workout plan, which must be judged fair to creditors and reasonable in light of its finances and obligations, must be approved by U.S. Bankruptcy Judge Thomas Bennett and can include reductions in bonds and other debt.

Jefferson County -- whose seat of government is the city of Birmingham -- on Nov. 9 filed for bankruptcy after a tentative agreement with creditors fell apart. That deal might have delivered a $1 billion reduction in the county's debts and possibly eased hundreds of government job cuts and reductions in public services.

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Reuters: Bankruptcy News: American Air pilots' union: no strike unless it is legal

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American Air pilots' union: no strike unless it is legal
Aug 30th 2012, 17:45

Thu Aug 30, 2012 1:45pm EDT

Aug 30 (Reuters) - Pilots at American Airlines will not go on strike unless it is legal to do so, the president of the pilots' union said on Thursday.

The Allied Pilots Association had said last week it was making preparations to call a strike vote should American implement harsh new work terms on pilots. The carrier has been operating under Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection since late last year.

Keith Wilson, who was named to head the pilots' union earlier this month after his predecessor resigned, said on Thursday that while the union is exploring legal options, it would be difficult to stage a walkout while American, a unit of AMR Corp, is in bankruptcy.

"We will not strike unless we are legally allowed to strike," Wilson told a media briefing at the union's Fort Worth, Texas, headquarters.

A hearing on a second American Airlines request to void the carrier's collective bargaining agreements with the pilots' union is scheduled for Sept 4.

The union is the only major work group at American that has not agreed on a contract offer with concessions since the carrier filed for bankruptcy. Pilots rejected a last and best offer from American on Aug. 8. Should a bankruptcy judge allow the carrier to scrap its current contracts with the pilots' union, American could implement new work terms that are harsher as it looks to save labor costs.

Wilson said his union hoped to reach a consensual agreement on a contract with the carrier.

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Reuters: Bankruptcy News: UPDATE 1-Brazil banks put the brakes on lending as defaults rise

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UPDATE 1-Brazil banks put the brakes on lending as defaults rise
Aug 30th 2012, 14:34

Thu Aug 30, 2012 10:34am EDT

* Growth in Brazil bank lending slows sharply in July

* Signals less favorable loan renegotiation dynamics

* Loan delinquencies climb, frustrating expectations

By Guillermo Parra-Bernal and Tiago Pariz

SAO PAULO/BRASILIA, Aug 30 (Reuters) - Brazil's banks abruptly slowed the pace of loan disbursements in July as caution took center stage among private sector lenders seeking to protect earnings amid a spike in delinquencies and declining borrowing costs.

Outstanding loans in the nation's banking system rose 0.7 percent to 2.183 trillion reais ($1.06 trillion) in July from June, the central bank said in a report on Thursday. In the 12 months ended in July, credit grew 17.7 percent, the slowest annual pace since April 2010.

Loan delinquencies at Brazilian banks reached a record high for the second month in three, a sign that an abrupt economic slowdown is still offsetting the benefits of the nation's strongest job market in decades and a series of aggressive cuts in interest rates.

Loans in arrears for 90 days or more, the most widely followed gauge of defaults, rose to the equivalent of 5.9 percent of outstanding loans in July, compared with 5.8 percent in June, the central bank said. The rise in the so-called default ratio came as more consumers fell behind on their loan installment payments.

The increase in defaults took place even as households stepped up efforts to refinance overdraft, auto and other expensive types of loans. Renegotiations of such loans rose 0.1 percent in July, bucking two straight months of drops, while borrowings of secured credit such as payroll loans went up for the sixth month in a row.

The data underscore Brazil's uneven economic expansion, in which still-strong retail sales and robust job growth contrast with a steep recession in manufacturing and rising defaults. Analysts are at odds in interpreting the behavior of overdue credit, which is inconsistent with burgeoning job and household income indicators.

Rising delinquencies came with a modest fall in borrowing costs, although Finance Minister Guido Mantega said on Thursday that such costs remain the highest among the world's 20 biggest economies. Government pressure on commercial banks to slash interest rates drove the fifth straight monthly decline in spreads. The average lending rate fell to the lowest level since at least December 2006.

Spreads measure the difference between the rate at which banks lend and the yield they pay depositors for their savings.

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Reuters: Bankruptcy News: Growth in Brazil lending slows; default ratio rises

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Growth in Brazil lending slows; default ratio rises
Aug 30th 2012, 13:35

SAO PAULO | Thu Aug 30, 2012 9:35am EDT

SAO PAULO Aug 30 (Reuters) - Outstanding loans in Brazil's banking system rose 0.7 percent in July from June, the central bank said on Tuesday.

Loans in arrears for 90 days or more rose to the equivalent of 5.9 percent of outstanding loans last month from 5.8 percent in June, according to a report.

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Reuters: Bankruptcy News: UPDATE 1-Struggling JJB Sports puts itself up for sale

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UPDATE 1-Struggling JJB Sports puts itself up for sale
Aug 30th 2012, 08:47

Thu Aug 30, 2012 4:47am EDT

* Directors say shares may be worthless

* Analysts say retailer could face administration

* Shares plunge 70 pct

* Could join other recent big retail casualties

By Sarah Young

LONDON, Aug 30 (Reuters) - Debt-mired JJB Sports put itself up for sale on Thursday and warned investors their shares may be worthless, placing the sports goods retailer at risk of becoming another big-name British retail casualty.

The company has been rocked by funding issues, falling sales and stiff competition as UK store chains battle weak consumer spending, muted wage growth and government austerity measures. .

A string of household retail names including Woolworths and MFI have gone out of business in recent years, undermined by price-cutting from supermarkets and the Internet.

Directors at JJB, a familiar sight on Britain's high streets with around 4,000 staff and 180 stores, said they did not believe the company would be able to raise new funds to stage a turnaround.

Analysts said the sale process was not a surprise given the funding shortfall issues flagged by the company in July and its failed attempts to raise fresh cash from strategic partners.

JJB said that a formal sale process would start but warned that there could be no certainty that an offer could be forthcoming.

"Given the level of current debt within the company, there can be no assurance that any proposal or offer that may be made would attribute value to the ordinary shares of the company," the company said in a statement on Thursday.

Shares in the company crashed 71 percent to 0.68 pence at 0840 GMT, giving it a market value of around 3 million pounds. It was worth 500 million pounds in August 2010.

"We suspect that JJB will now follow a similar process as Blacks Leisure i.e. a likely administration process followed by the possible sale of parts of its business," said analysts at Charles Stanley.

Blacks Leisure, which like JJB was loss-making and debt-saddled, went into administration in January before the bulk of the business was sold immediately to JJB's rival JD Sports Fashion.

When retailers are bought out of administration, the buyer usually cherry-picks certain operations, which can lead to store closures and job losses.

U.S. retailer Dick's Sporting Goods threw JJB a 20 million pounds ($31 million) lifeline in April, but took an impairment charge that effectively wrote off the investment earlier this month.

JJB, which issued a profit warning in July on the back of poor sales of Euro 2012 football shirts and reported an 8.7 percent slump in first half underlying sales, said organic sales in the six weeks to Aug. 26 slipped 3.3 percent.

"It's a business that's been shrinking for the last couple of years," Seymour Pierce analyst Kate Calvert said.

"They haven't been able to find their niche in the market place and be able to take on the likes of Sports Direct and online and supermarkets."

Larger rival Sports Direct - Britain's biggest sporting goods retailer - owned by Newcastle United football club owner Mike Ashley, has consistently undercut JJB on pricing and aggressively discounted Euro 2012 kit.

JJB Sports was founded in 1971 by ex-Blackburn Rovers footballer Dave Whelan with a single store in Wigan, where the company is still headquartered.

It floated in 1994, and four years later acquired the business of Sports Division, making it Britain's biggest sports retailer at the time.

JJB owes around 36 million pounds ($57 million) in total, around half in bank debt and the other half in convertible loan notes, giving it a debt to equity ratio of 0.51, far higher than rival JD Sports which is on 0.01.

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Reuters: Bankruptcy News: Ampal files for Chapter 11 as Egypt natgas halt weighs

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Ampal files for Chapter 11 as Egypt natgas halt weighs
Aug 30th 2012, 08:07

JERUSALEM | Thu Aug 30, 2012 4:07am EDT

JERUSALEM Aug 30 (Reuters) - Ampal-American Israel Corp filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection as it faces deepening financial troubles in the wake of a halt to natural gas supplies to Israel from Egypt.

Ampal holds 12.5 percent of East Mediterranean Gas Co, the sole supplier of gas from Egypt to Israel until the Egyptian government cancelled its 20-year agreement signed in the Mubarak-era earlier this year.

It filed a voluntary petition for Chapter 11 reorganisation in the U.S. Bankruptcy Court for the Southern District of New York.

Ampal has sought to renegotiate agreements with its bondholders on three series of bonds for eight months and has proposed postponing paying the principle on its bonds by two years while offering bondholders shares in the company.

Its bond prices were down 4-6 percent on Thursday.

"At this time, the company has determined that the best forum to continue negotiations and to seek approval of a restructure plan is through the Chapter 11 process," Ampal said in a statement.

"The company expects to work closely with its Debenture holders, creditors and other stakeholders to implement a restructuring plan through the Chapter 11 case, and to emerge as a financially stronger company."

EMG is also 12.5 percent owned by Israel's Merhav. Other stakeholders include Egyptian businessman Hussain Salem, the Egypt Natural Gas Co, Thailand's PTT and U.S. businessman Sam Zell. (Reporting by Steven Scheer)

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Wednesday, August 29, 2012

Reuters: Bankruptcy News: UPDATE 2-Early deadline extended for Brazil's Cruzeiro buyback

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UPDATE 2-Early deadline extended for Brazil's Cruzeiro buyback
Aug 30th 2012, 02:43

Wed Aug 29, 2012 10:43pm EDT

* Early deadline pushed back to Sept. 5

* FGC, Cruzeiro 'confident' holders to pass plan

* Cruzeiro holders seen abiding by buyback terms

SAO PAULO, Aug 29 (Reuters) - Brazil deposit guarantee fund FGC and Banco Cruzeiro do Sul, which was seized by the central bank in June, have extended the early deadline for a $1.59 billion bond repurchase plan that failed to garner the necessary support.

FGC pushed the early deadline back to Sept. 5 "due to the considerable number of offers from investors that could not comply with the original timeline," it said in a Wednesday securities filing.

The number of Cruzeiro do Sul's global debtholders that tendered their holdings ahead of an early deadline of 5 p.m. EDT (2100 GMT) Tuesday came in "within expectations," FGC said in an earlier filing on Wednesday. The filing said both institutions expect to attain the 90 percent approval rate stipulated in the buyback proposal by the final expiration on Sept. 12.

The FGC is still looking for potential buyers of the São Paulo-based bank, the filing added. Cruzeiro do Sul was put under the administration of the privately owned FGC until the end of the year, after the central bank found accounting flaws that led to a $1.3 billion shortfall.

Private bondholders represent about 57 percent of Cruzeiro do Sul creditors, Thomson Reuters data showed. Some of them told Reuters last week that the average 49.3 percent discount they are being forced to assume fails to include the benefits of a potential sale of the bank, such as tax credits.

Despite the large discount proposed, bondholders might agree to the repurchase or else risk seeing the bank forced into liquidation - a decision that would wipe out any remaining value for their bonds. With the tender, the FGC is also seeking to rule out a government- or banking sector-led bailout of Cruzeiro do Sul.

Under the terms of the early deadline, bondholders who tendered their bonds before Tuesday evening would be paid an average 55 percent value of their holdings.

A higher-than-expected tender turnout for the senior bonds due in 2015 and 2016, and the subordinated debt maturing in 2020, allowed Cruzeiro do Sul to waive certain terms in the bonds that would have triggered immediate repayment.

Both the FGC and Cruzeiro do Sul hired the investment-banking units of Bank of America Corp and HSBC Holdings Plc to oversee the transaction.

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Reuters: Bankruptcy News: California's San Bernardino seeks job, service cuts while in bankruptcy

Reuters: Bankruptcy News
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California's San Bernardino seeks job, service cuts while in bankruptcy
Aug 30th 2012, 01:57

Wed Aug 29, 2012 9:57pm EDT

* Pre-bankruptcy budget looks to cut costs by 30 percent

* Across-the-board cuts from mayor's office to IT department

* Plan will likely face union opposition

By Tim Reid

Aug 29 (Reuters) - Officials in the California city of San Bernardino, which filed for bankruptcy this month, presented a plan on Wednesday to slash its budget by 30 percent and eliminate more than 100 jobs and cut services.

The 71-page plan, presented to the city mayor and council in a special closed session - and unexpectedly released publicly on Wednesday evening - asks for the elimination of over 100 full-time city jobs, from the mayor's office, through city departments and in the fire and police services.

Many other vacant jobs will not be filled and some part-time jobs will be eliminated. The plan also looks at cutting funding for the public library, and evaluations of whether to close the city cemetery and various community and senior centers.

San Bernardino is the third Californian city to file for bankruptcy protection since June, following Stockton and Mammoth Lakes. Analysts believe more cities will likely follow given the severity of California's budget crisis.

When San Bernardino, a city of about 210,000 people 65 miles (105 km) east of Los Angeles, filed for Chapter 9 bankruptcy protection on Aug. 1, it cited a $45.8 million budget deficit and a general fund - used to pay its employees and fund other essential services - essentially depleted.

The city has been without an official operating budget for this fiscal year. It approved a short-term emergency plan last month that expires in four weeks.

The budget presented on Wednesday by the city manager's office will serve the basis for a "pendency" plan that will serve as San Bernardino's operating budget through the bankruptcy proceedings, which could take many months.

Although the plan's authors acknowledged the severity of the proposed cuts, they also conceded they will still not solve the city's fiscal crisis.

They said the job cuts, together with other savings like the consolidations of departments, will lead to savings of over $22 million, but "do not close the $45.8 million gap for this fiscal year."

Further, they wrote, the cuts do nothing to address last year's $18 million cash deficit or begin to fund the more than $300 million in unfunded liabilities.

By far the biggest unfunded liability facing the city is its pension obligations for its public employees, especially its police and firefighters. Successive councils since the 1990s have awarded those workers ever more generous retirement benefits.

According to the city's bankruptcy filing, its unfunded pension costs to California's public retirement system are $143.3 million.

The three California bankruptcies are being closely watched by markets as they will be test cases for how far cities can reduce or eliminate their obligations to bondholders and pension funds.

The plan will likely face opposition from employee unions, particularly those representing the police and firefighters.

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Reuters: Bankruptcy News: Bain-owned company files for bankruptcy protection

Reuters: Bankruptcy News
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Bain-owned company files for bankruptcy protection
Aug 29th 2012, 23:51

NEW YORK | Wed Aug 29, 2012 7:51pm EDT

NEW YORK Aug 29 (Reuters) - Contec Holdings Ltd, a cable-box repair company owned by private equity firm Bain Capital LLC, filed for bankruptcy Wednesday.

The Schenectady, New York-based company filed for Chapter 11 protection in Delaware bankruptcy court, listing $100 million to $500 million in debt and $50 million to $100 million in assets.

Bain Capital acquired Contec in 2008, nine years after Bain co-founder and Republican presidential nominee Mitt Romney has said he left the firm to manage the 2000 Salt Lake City Winter Olympics.

Contec said in a statement it had reached an agreement with the majority of its senior lenders that should allow it to emerge from Chapter 11 within 60 days.

"No jobs are expected to be impacted by this reorganization process, and we believe Contec will emerge from this process in an even stronger position to grow our business," Wes Hoffman, Contec's chief operating officer, said.

The company repairs more than 2 million cable boxes annually, according to the statement.

A Bain spokesman could not immediately be reached for comment.

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Reuters: Bankruptcy News: Corzine says MF trustee encroaching on his defense

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Corzine says MF trustee encroaching on his defense
Aug 29th 2012, 22:22

Wed Aug 29, 2012 6:22pm EDT

* Questions plan by trustee to join with plaintiffs

* Plan also criticized by trustee Freeh, MF bondholders

By Nick Brown

NEW YORK, Aug 29 (Reuters) - Former MF Global Chief Executive Jon Corzine is fighting efforts by a bankruptcy trustee to join forces with customers suing him over the commodities brokerage's demise.

Corzine, along with other current and former MF executives, filed an objection in court on Wednesday arguing that their ability to defend themselves would be hurt if trustee James Giddens is allowed to assign his legal claims to plaintiffs in existing cases.

The executives are defendants in multiple lawsuits accusing them of mismanaging the firm and playing a role in its October 2011 collapse.

"Nothing in the Bankruptcy Code  authorizes such limitations on the objectors' rights and defenses or an enlargement of the trustee's rights," lawyers for Corzine and the other executives wrote in documents filed in U.S. Bankruptcy Court in Manhattan.

If allowed to join the customer cases, Giddens would have the right to limit the information and documents available to the executives through discovery, as well as dictate which documents the executives would turn over to plaintiffs, lawyers for Corzine and the other executives wrote.

Lawyers for Corzine and former Chief Financial Officer Henri Steenkamp did not return calls seeking comment.

MF Global went bankrupt in October after its exposure to European sovereign debt spooked investors. Corzine, a former chief of Goldman Sachs Group Inc and a former senator and governor of New Jersey, stepped down days later.

Commodity trader customers of the firm's broker-dealer unit are facing an estimated $1.6 billion shortfall in their accounts, which Giddens has said is due to the firm's misuse of customer money in a frantic attempt to keep it afloat. Giddens is charged with recovering as much money as possible for those customers, including through litigation.

Some of the customers have sued Corzine, Steenkamp, Chief Operating Officer Bradley Abelow, General Counsel Laurie Ferber and others. Giddens, too, said he saw valid claims against the executives for negligence and breach of fiduciary duty, but earlier this month he said he would forgo bringing those claims himself in favor of assigning them to and cooperating with the class-action plaintiffs.

Under Giddens' plan, any proceeds from the litigation would be sent to the broker-dealer's estate and distributed by Giddens to customers.

The plan also faces pushback from Louis Freeh, Giddens' counterpart trustee who is liquidating MF Global's parent entity.

The two trustees, which represent the interests of different sets of creditors, have long battled over entitlement to various pots of money. Freeh is trying to pay back creditors of MF Global's parent, like lender JPMorgan Chase & Co.

FREEH'S OBJECTIONS

In court papers on Wednesday, Freeh said some of Giddens' claims against the defendants would benefit MF Global's general estate, not its customers, and should therefore be filed by Freeh.

In addition to reinforcing the trustees' power struggle, Freeh's objection is a sign that he might bring claims against Corzine and other executives, a notion his lawyer, Brett Miller, did not dispel in a phone interview.

"All viable causes of action are on the table, and will be pursued if appropriate," Miller said.

But a Giddens spokesman questioned whether Freeh could sue MF Global's own employees.

"He has some inherent conflicts in opposing this motion because individuals currently employed by MF Global Holdings are defendants in the litigation," spokesman Kent Jarrell said in a statement.

Bankruptcy Judge Martin Glenn will consider Giddens' plan, and the objections to it, at a Sept. 5 hearing.

Freeh in court filings called for cooperation between the two trustees, saying they have more important things to worry about than claims against Corzine -- namely a lawsuit in the U.K. over Giddens' attempt to recover $700 million from the coffers of MF Global's U.K. affiliate for the benefit of U.S. customers.

"The estates need to focus their efforts on a global resolution of all inter-estate claims and potential causes of action rather than creating inter-estate litigation," Freeh said. Freeh's objection was supported by MF Global's unsecured creditors' committee.

Separately, a group of MF Global bondholders also objected, arguing that customers would lack incentive to pursue claims against the executives that could benefit other creditors.

The bankruptcy is In re MF Global Holdings Ltd, U.S. Bankruptcy Court, Southern District of New York, No. 11-15059.

The liquidation of MF Global's broker-dealer unit is In re MF Global Inc, U.S. Bankruptcy Court, Southern District of New York, No. 11-2790.

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Reuters: Bankruptcy News: U.S. Trustee joins objections to Solyndra's bankruptcy plan

Reuters: Bankruptcy News
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U.S. Trustee joins objections to Solyndra's bankruptcy plan
Aug 29th 2012, 15:37

Wed Aug 29, 2012 11:37am EDT

Aug 29 (Reuters) - The U.S. Trustee became the latest government agency to criticize Solyndra LLC's plan to repay its debts, saying the bankrupt solar panel maker should disclose whether it is favoring venture capital investors over creditors.

The U.S. Trustee for Delaware, New Jersey and Pennsylvania, an agent of the Department of Justice, said in a court filing that Solyndra should provide more information about the repayment plan, which preserves potential tax benefits for the two investment funds that are sponsoring the bankruptcy plan.

Earlier this week, the Department of Energy and the Internal Revenue Service also demanded more details about the tax benefits. The two agencies said in a court filing that the Madrone Partners and Argonaut Ventures funds stood to gain more than $500 million in future tax breaks from the Solyndra bankruptcy.

At the same time, Solyndra has said in court filings that many creditors, including the U.S. government, would probably end up receiving little to nothing of what they are owed. The government loaned the company $528 million as part of a program to support clean energy startups.

Debra Grassgreen, a lawyer with Pachulski Stang Ziehl & Jones, which represents Solyndra, did not immediately respond to a request for comment. She said earlier this week that the company would reply to the objections with its own filing at the bankruptcy court.

The U.S. Trustee, Roberta DeAngelis, said in a filing with Delaware's bankruptcy court on Tuesday that Solyndra should explain how its plan complies with the bankruptcy requirement that creditors be paid in full before stockholders get any money.

DeAngelis also criticized the company for not providing more information about the reorganized entity that would exit bankruptcy, given that Solyndra is liquidating.

Solyndra filed for bankruptcy on Sept. 5 due to plunging prices for solar panels. The company failed to find a buyer to keep its operations going and has since sold everything from inventory to its office equipment to raise money for its creditors.

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Reuters: Bankruptcy News: ABN paves the way for Asian-focused Tier 2

Reuters: Bankruptcy News
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ABN paves the way for Asian-focused Tier 2
Aug 29th 2012, 14:42

By Aimee Donnellan and Helene Durand

Wed Aug 29, 2012 10:42am EDT

LONDON, Aug 29 (IFR) - Dutch lender ABN AMRO (A2/A+/A+) is set to test private Asian and Swiss retail investor appetite for European bank Tier 2 dollar debt in September, a strategy that is expected to be replicated by other European banks in the coming months.

A three-day Asian and European investor roadshow starting on September 3, via Bank of America Merrill Lynch, Citigroup, HSBC and UBS, is expected to be followed by a deal shortly thereafter.

The Asian and Swiss retail market has been a favourite for banks and insurance companies looking to raise hybrid Tier 1 debt as these investors favour the high yields offered by the instruments.

European banks have tended to stay closer to home when it comes to Tier 2 debt because they could print with attractive levels and structures. However, changes in the regulatory environment have meant that European debt investors are more wary of the asset class. Furthermore, investors have been reluctant to buy callable structures because a number of banks passed on call dates, leaving buyers holding bonds they thought would be retired at the first opportunity.

Asian buyers, on the other hand, have been a lot more receptive to callable structures. So while ABN might not be able to achieve a better pricing level versus euros, the fact that it has the option to retire the deal at the five-year point - when it begins losing its regulatory benefit - will be attractive for the issuer.

The transaction will be the second Tier 2 debt sale since the publication of the EC's draft Crisis Management Directive and comes hot on the heels of the issuer's own EUR1bn 10-year bullet issue sold in July.

Banks have been focusing on Tier 2 bank debt in recent months due to the ongoing uncertainty surrounding Additional Tier 1.

"Overall investors have a higher level of confidence in Tier 2 and issuers are comfortable they can sell decent sized deals," said a banker.

The market is currently waiting for more clarity from the European Banking Authority on the features that issuers will be able to include in Additional Tier 1. A decision is expected to be reached in November but market participants say the less than investor-friendly terms contained in the CRD IV draft could mean issuers pay a higher price.

Marcel Klopper, head of capital management at ABN, has stated in the past that he is keen to take advantage of any available window to issue Tier 2.

"Under the expected implementation of CRD IV, we will have a large amount of Tier 2 that will not be eligible as capital from January 1 2013 and we wanted to make use of windows of opportunity in the market, thus avoiding a situation where we might be forced to raise capital in a very stressed market," he said in July.

That deal attracted orders in excess of EUR2.5bn.

As was the case with the July offering, there will be no contractual loss-absorption or point of non-viability in the upcoming deal. However, a banker said there are still question marks over how the bond will be treated under the terms of the European Crisis Management Directive. (Reporting by Aimee Donnellan Helene Durand; Editing Alex Chambers & Julian Baker)

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