Detroit's motion stated that Syncora Guarantee Inc and Financial Guaranty Insurance Company, which insured the swaps and $1.45 billion of pension debt related to the swaps, as well as the swap counterparties UBS AG and Merrill Lynch Capital Services agreed with the move to stop the hearing.
Syncora, FGIC, other bond insurers, Detroit retirees and pension funds and other creditors filed objections to the deal because they claim it favors the swap counterparties over other creditors. They also argue that the deal would eliminate the $180 million in annual casino revenue as a potential source for paying Detroit's other obligations.
Syncora and FGIC also argued that they insured the pension debt and the swaps on the basis that they were one integrated transaction. Pension debt will remain outstanding for another 22 years even if the swaps, which were used to hedge interest-rate risk, were terminated, leaving the two exposed to potential liability in the future.
This is the second delay for a hearing on the swaps deal, which first was set for a hearing earlier this month. Kevyn Orr, Detroit's state-appointed emergency manager who took the city to bankruptcy court on July 18, has been pushing for a quick process that would end the city's bankruptcy by the fall of 2014.
Rhodes initially set what many thought was an expedited schedule for the case, which would be the biggest municipal bankruptcy in U.S. history.
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