Thursday, May 31, 2012

Reuters: Bankruptcy News: NY Mets owners' Madoff settlement OK'd by US judge

Reuters: Bankruptcy News
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NY Mets owners' Madoff settlement OK'd by US judge
May 31st 2012, 23:32

By Basil Katz

NEW YORK | Thu May 31, 2012 7:32pm EDT

NEW YORK May 31 (Reuters) - A $162 million settlement between the owners of the New York Mets and the trustee seeking money for the victims of Bernard Madoff's fraud was approved by a U.S. judge on Thursday.

The pact was announced on March 19 in U.S. District Court in Manhattan on the beginning day of what would have been the first trial in the quest to recoup cash for Madoff's defrauded customers.

It was a victory for brothers-in-law Fred Wilpon and Saul Katz and their family-run Sterling Equities real estate, baseball and hedge-fund empire.

"This appears to the court to be a reasonable and adequate, fair settlement in the interests of the estate," Manhattan federal judge Jed Rakoff said. "The court hereby does approve the settlement."

Wilpon and Katz will not have to pay out any cash immediately and the trustee, Irving Picard, dropped his allegation that they turned a blind eye to Madoff's fraud. For the trustee, the settlement could provide a template for other cases pending against hundreds of individuals, funds and banks.

The court settlement calls for payments over a five-year period. Wilpon and Katz will not have to pay any cash until the fourth year. The $162 million could end up being mostly paid with money due to Sterling Equities as a victim of the fraud.

Wilpon and Katz were accused of acting in bad faith in their dealings with Madoff over 25 years until December 2008. Their case would have been the first involving the imprisoned financier to go to trial.

The Mets, who live in the shadow of the much more successful, world-famous New York Yankees, have struggled in recent years. Mets general manager Sandy Alderson has said the team lost $70 million last year. Forbes magazine said in 2011 that the team was worth $747 million.

The case is Picard v. Katz et al, U.S. District Court, Southern District of New York, No. 11-03605.

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Reuters: Bankruptcy News: Bondholders fear worst at Petroplus

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Bondholders fear worst at Petroplus
May 31st 2012, 14:38

By Christopher Spink

Thu May 31, 2012 10:38am EDT

LONDON, May 31 (IFR) - Investors holding notes with a nominal value of USD1.75bn against the UK subsidiary of Petroplus look increasingly unlikely to recover more than a small part of their principal after the administrator of the UK oil refinery business said it had not been able to sell the site after four months of trying.

"We have worked tirelessly to explore all feasible options for the refinery. We have had contact with over 100 possible investors and purchasers. We have been unable to reach a deal to date," said Steven Pearson, joint administrator and partner at PwC.

The firm was appointed in late January and soon after secured an undisclosed three-month facility from a consortium made up of Petroplus co-founder Marcel van Poecke's AtlasInvest vehicle, a fund managed by US private equity KKR, and Morgan Stanley's commodities arm.

This allowed the Coryton refinery in Essex to keep being supplied with crude oil and functioning whilst a buyer was sought for the 560-acre site as a going concern. Pearson added that this task was complicated because of weak trading conditions.

"We have been losing money. Refining margins are currently low and the operation is loss making. We had to make a decision. We could have decided to give the refinery away but we have a statutory duty to maximise recoveries for creditors," he said.

In addition, PwC had to decide whether to press ahead with a USD150m capital expenditure programme or embark on winding down operations and making the site safe, which will also prove costly.

Pearson said he would still entertain offers during the three months it would take to close down Coryton but he warned that prospects of a sale were "slim". PwC had tried to cut a deal with the AtlasInvest consortium as well as bondholder groups and other parties but financing proved hard.

The firm estimated that USD1bn would have been needed to put the refinery back on a sustainable footing. Pearson suggested that the AtlasInvest group had been willing to enter an agreement but only by taking the refinery off the administrators for a nominal GBP1 sum.

It is understood that the Government was also unwilling to provide any financial guarantees as it did not regard the plant's closure with the loss of 500 jobs as a significant threat to the country's fuel supplies.

Pearson said he was also investigating alternative uses for the site, such as a place to store petrol and other refined products from overseas ahead of distribution in the UK, pointing to the jetty landing that Coryton boasts.

The four bonds with guarantees against Petroplus Refining and Marketing Ltd, the UK subsidiary owning Coryton, were trading at 40 cents on the dollar when PwC was appointed in February but last week were changing hands at just 15 cents.

One source close to the bondholders said: "It should never have gone into administration. We had wanted to do a deal but I don't think there's much chance. I understand only the group who came in post administration will come out whole as they claimed super senior status."

AtlasInvest declined to comment. The investor has teamed up with oil trader Vitol to buy Petroplus' Swiss refinery Cressier. Russian oil trader Gunvor has bought the Belgian refinery at Antwerp and a German one at Ingoldstadt. A sales process for Petit Couronne in France continues. (Reporting By Christopher Spink, Editing by Julian Baker)

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Reuters: Bankruptcy News: UPDATE 1-RG Steel files for Chapter 11 bankruptcy

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UPDATE 1-RG Steel files for Chapter 11 bankruptcy
May 31st 2012, 13:34

Thu May 31, 2012 9:34am EDT

* Has more than $1 bln in assets, liabilities

* Idled three steel plants last week

May 31 (Reuters) - RG Steel LLC filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection on Thursday, one week after the company said it was running short of liquidity and set plans to idle three steelmaking plants.

Privately held RG Steel said a week ago it was suffering a liquidity crisis, looking for a buyer and would idle all three of its steel mills starting in June.

Workers were told in letters the company would stop operations at its Sparrows Point mill outside Baltimore and its plants in Warren, Ohio, and Wheeling, West Virginia.

RG spokeswoman Bette Kovach had no immediate comment on the Chapter 11 filing on Thursday.

The company and several affiliates filed for protection from creditors in the U.S. bankruptcy court in Wilmington, Delaware. RG Steel said it has more than $1 billion in both assets and liabilities.

U.S. steelmakers have struggled with weak demand, rising costs and narrowing margins. Production capacity has yet to fully recover from the most recent recession.

RG Steel bought the three plants from Russia's Severstal' OAO in 2011 for about $1.2 billion, becoming the fourth largest U.S. flat-rolled steel producer.

Renco Group Inc and Cerberus RG Investor LLC hold ownership stakes in some of the debtors, according to court filings.

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Reuters: Bankruptcy News: RG Steel files for Chapter 11 bankruptcy

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RG Steel files for Chapter 11 bankruptcy
May 31st 2012, 13:20

Thu May 31, 2012 9:20am EDT

May 31 (Reuters) - RG Steel LLC on Thursday filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection, one week after the company said it was running short of liquidity and set plans to idle three steelmaking plants.

The privately held company and several affiliates filed for protection from creditors with the U.S. bankruptcy court in Wilmington, Delaware. RG Steel said it has more than $1 billion of both assets and liabilities.

U.S. steelmakers have struggled with weak demand, rising costs and narrowing margins. Production capacity has yet to fully recover from the most recent recession.

RG Steel bought the three plants from Russia's Severstal' OAO in 2011 for about $1.2 billion, becoming the fourth-largest U.S. flat-rolled steel producer.

The Renco Group Inc and Cerberus RG Investor LLC hold ownership stakes in some of the debtors, court filings show.

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Wednesday, May 30, 2012

Reuters: Bankruptcy News: Madoff victims trade on trustee's gains and losses

Reuters: Bankruptcy News
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Madoff victims trade on trustee's gains and losses
May 30th 2012, 20:09

Wed May 30, 2012 4:09pm EDT

* Traders court Madoff customers for right to recoveries

* Some Madoff victims sell claims for immediate cash

* Prices bounce around amid thin trading

* Traders watch court rulings for impact on claims prices

By Caroline Humer and Sue Zeidler

May 30 (Reuters) - After Bernard Madoff's fraud unraveled in late 2008, Yale Fishman was courted by Wall Street traders seeking to buy his claim to assets that could be recovered from the mess. After three years of ignoring their calls, he finally said yes.

Fishman, an estate planner in Woodmere, New York, and a former Madoff investor, cut a deal with a trading firm to sell part of his bankruptcy claim in the long-running case. He said he sold his $1.1 million claim for $800,000, or about 73 cents on the dollar, in late December.

"I held it for a while, but they keep calling you up and soliciting you," he said. "And I figured I should sell it because I was planning for my kids," said Fishman, whose sale could not be independently verified.

As in many bankruptcies, the collapse of Madoff's financial empire spawned a mini-market of trading in the rights to any potential recoveries. Bankruptcy claims trading in the Madoff case has moved in fits and starts since Madoff was arrested, with claims currently trading in the range of 60 cents on the dollar, according to levels quoted by traders.

Recent setbacks by the court-appointed trustee trying to recoup assets on Madoff victims' behalf - combined with frustration over the trustee's legal and other fees, which to date total more than $550 million and counting - are encouraging some former Madoff customers to unload their claims. Most original Madoff claims sellers are ordinary investors, not the lenders, debt holders or vendors who are the typical sellers in other claims-trading situations.

A bankruptcy claim is essentially an IOU that gives the holder the right to a portion of any assets later recovered. The seller gets cash upfront rather than potentially waiting years for a payback, while the buyer - typically a hedge fund or bank - pays a discount to the face value of the claim in hopes of ultimately recouping more.

Claims trading has long been a Wall Street niche. Past examples of significant claims-tradings markets include those stemming from the collapse of Enron Corp. and Lehman Brothers Holdings Inc. More recently, buyers have been snatching up MF Global Holdings Ltd customer claims.

While claims trading is always a bet on the value of the bankrupt estate, trading in Madoff claims has become almost a pure bet on what the trustee, lawyer Irving Picard, can recover through his myriad court battles.

So far, Picard has won settlements of $9.1 billion through lawsuits against groups and individuals he has accused of turning a blind eye to Madoff's crimes and profiting from his scheme. Much of that money is tied up in litigation over payout calculations, however, and cannot be distributed. So far, Madoff investors have only received payments of $330 million.

Picard's office has said Madoff customers ultimately could get a full recovery of the more than $17 billion in approved claims. Picard spokeswoman Amanda Remus declined to comment on claims-trading activity or prices.

Remus said the trustee and his legal team have gotten "an extraordinary result" through their work "in reconstructing from nothing the facts and scope of the Madoff fraud and achieving record recoveries." She also said the trustee's fees are paid through funds from the Securities Investor Protection Corp., a nonprofit group that charges fees to broker-dealers, not from recoveries intended for Madoff victims.

It's unclear how many Madoff investors have sold their claims, or at what prices. Because Madoff's firm, Bernard L. Madoff Investment Securities LLC, was unwound under the auspices of SIPC instead of through a Chapter 11 bankruptcy, there is no legal requirement for claims trades to be made public.

Bankruptcy claims trade in an over-the-counter market made up of small brokers who specialize in finding claims and traders from broker-dealers such as the Seaport Group, CRT Special Investments LLC and Macquarie Group. They call and send emails to potential buyers about the price and size of claims being bought and sold, meaning there are no official price quotes.

Buyers of Madoff claims have included Deutsche Bank and hedge funds Fortress Group, Monarch Capital and Silver Point Capital, according to traders involved in the transactions. Fortress did not respond for comment, while Deutsche, Monarch and Silver Point declined to comment.

PICARD'S EFFORTS

Picard's efforts to recover funds have included lawsuits against an array of banks, wealthy individuals and Madoff family members.

The defendants, who include Madoff's brother, Peter, and son Andrew, have countered that they, too, were betrayed by Madoff and that the trustee waited too long to bring some of his claims. Picard expanded his lawsuit, filed in U.S. Bankruptcy Court in Manhattan, against the family members earlier this month to $255 million, from $226 million.

In one of his earliest and biggest successes, Picard won approval in January 2011 of a $7.2 billion settlement with Madoff investor Jeffry Picower. Optimism among traders grew that the payback for claims holders would be large, and Madoff claims at that point traded above 70 cents on the dollar, according to traders who have tracked the prices.

"People thought he was going to roll through this," Joseph Sarachek, managing director at CRT, said of Picard.

Then, in September 2011, the trustee sustained some big setbacks, triggering a drop in claims prices to the mid-50-cents-on-the-dollar range, according to traders. U.S. District Court Judge Jed Rakoff in New York ruled that Picard could only reach back to the last two years of the fraud in pursuing his "clawback" lawsuits against Madoff customers who withdrew more money from their accounts than they had deposited.

The judge was considering whether Picard could seek funds from New York Mets owners Fred Wilpon and Saul Katz, who were investors with Madoff, and the ruling limited the trustee's potential recoveries. The Mets owners later settled litigation brought by the trustee.

In November, another federal judge in Manhattan threw out most of the trustee's nearly $20 billion lawsuit against JPMorgan Chase & Co and a $2 billion case against UBS AG .

Trading in Madoff claims can be thin, and prices have bounced around sharply, according to market participants. Fishman, the Madoff victim who sold a claim in December, said he executed his trade when prices climbed from earlier levels. Since then, prices have settled to around 60 cents on the dollar, said Robert Gallivan, a senior managing director at Macquarie.

But none of these price movements or legal developments matter much anymore to Madoff investors who have shed their claims. Selling the claims has given some victims, who had entrusted their life savings to the man they thought was a financial genius, a measure of closure.

"I think people understand as time goes on that this is not a fast process," said Burt Ross, a Madoff victim in Malibu, California, who said he sold his claims some time ago.

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Reuters: Bankruptcy News: UPDATE 1-Harrisburg mayor: will fight for bankruptcy right

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UPDATE 1-Harrisburg mayor: will fight for bankruptcy right
May 30th 2012, 20:08

Wed May 30, 2012 4:08pm EDT

May 30 (Reuters) - The mayor of Pennsylvania's debt-laden capital city said on Wednesday she will fight for the city's ability to declare bankruptcy after June 30.

A state law that bars small Pennsylvania cities from filing for municipal bankruptcy is to expire at the end of June.

That law led a bankruptcy judge in November to reject a filing by Harrisburg, the capital city.

Municipal officials are following a state receiver's fiscal recovery plan in an effort to deal with at least $320 million of debt stemming from repairs to its trash incinerator. But Harrisburg Mayor Linda Thompson said she will oppose any attempt to extend or reintroduce the bankruptcy ban.

"We should reserve the right to petition for bankruptcy protection," Thompson said in a statement.

While she continues to favor the recovery plan, bankruptcy "has to be there, in my view, as an unwelcome last resort," she said.

But Thompson didn't back the first bankruptcy filing, prompting some to take her to task for her statement on Wednesday.

"She's a little late in coming to this epiphany," said Mark Schwartz, who filed the bankruptcy on behalf of the city council and has been at odds with Thompson. (Reporting by Hilary Russ; Editing by Dan Grebler and James Dalgleish)

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Reuters: Bankruptcy News: Harrisburg mayor says she'll fight for bankruptcy right

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Harrisburg mayor says she'll fight for bankruptcy right
May 30th 2012, 19:29

Wed May 30, 2012 3:32pm EDT

May 30 (Reuters) - The mayor of Pennsylvania's debt-laden capital city said o n W ednesday she will fight for the city's ability to declare bankruptcy after June 30.

A state law that bars small Pennsylvania cities from filing for municipal bankruptcy is to expire at the end of June.

That law led a bankruptcy judge in November to reject a filing by Harrisburg, the capital city.

Municipal officials are following a state receiver's fiscal recovery plan in an effort to deal with at least $320 million of debt stemming from repairs to its trash incinerator. But Harrisburg Mayor Linda Thompson said she will oppose any attempt to extend or reintroduce the bankruptcy ban.

"We should reserve the right to petition for bankruptcy protection," Thompson said in a statement.

While she continues to favor the recovery plan, bankruptcy "has to be there, in my view, as an unwelcome last resort," she said. (Reporting By Hilary Russ; Editing by Dan Grebler)

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Reuters: Bankruptcy News: UPDATE 1-Hedge fund boss found guilty in $600m fraud

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UPDATE 1-Hedge fund boss found guilty in $600m fraud
May 30th 2012, 15:19

Wed May 30, 2012 11:19am EDT

* Damages of $450 mln awarded against Peterson

* Case centred on $600 mln of interest rate swaps

* Peterson had "sense of invincibility", "gambler's mentality"-judge

By Tommy Wilkes

LONDON, May 30 (Reuters) - Magnus Peterson, the boss of collapsed hedge fund business Weavering, has been found guilty of defrauding investors and ordered to pay hundreds of millions of dollars in damages.

Judge Sonia Proudman ruled that Peterson, manager of the W eavering Macro Fixed Income fund, deceived clients and breached his duty of care to investors with a strategy that could not cope with the vagaries of markets at the height of the global credit crisis.

Damages of $450 million were awarded against Peterson, who was seated next to one of his fellow defendants when the judgment was handed down at London's High Court on Wednesday, and three other directors including his wife, Amanda.

The outcome comes a day after Britain's Financial Services Authority doled out a record fine to Italian academic-turned-fund manager Alberto Micalizzi, in a further sign authorities are clamping down on errant hedge fund bosses.

"I do not accept Mr Peterson's assertions that the investors understood his strategy very well. He cannot show any document in which he explained it," Proudman wrote in her judgment.

Proudman said that Peterson, who has represented himself throughout the case, may have committed the fraud "out of a sense of invincibility, self-belief, and a gambler's mentality."

Three other directors at the fund firm -- Edward Platt, Charanpreet Dabhia and Amanda Peterson -- were also found guilty of negligently permitting fraud to happen.

Liquidators of Weavering, which inflicted hundreds of millions of losses on investors, launched a civil case a gainst Peterson and other Weavering staff last year after Britain's Serious Fraud Office dropped its probe into the 2009 collapse.

Throughout the case Peterson denied lying to investors.

"SHAM"

The case centred on more than $600 million of interest rate swap agreements between the Macro fund and a British Virgin Islands company called Weavering Capital Fund (WCF), which was related to Weavering.

Robert Anderson QC, representing the liquidators, alleged Peterson misled investors by concealing the fund's investments in the swaps.

Proudman said the swaps were never intended to be enforceable instruments but were a "sham" used to manipulate net asset value (NAV) figures to give investors the impression the Macro fund was successful.

Jones Day partner Barnaby Stueck, who represented the liquidators, said in a statement after the judgment that Weavering's investors believed Peterson should not be allowed to escape with mere bankruptcy.

"They will be asking the Serious Fraud Office to reconsider its decision not to proceed with the criminal investigation given these very clear findings," he said.

The SFO dropped its two-and-a-half-year probe last year, saying there was not "a reasonable prospect of conviction".

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Reuters: Bankruptcy News: Publisher Boston Hannah files for bankruptcy liquidation

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Publisher Boston Hannah files for bankruptcy liquidation
May 30th 2012, 13:40

Wed May 30, 2012 9:40am EDT

May 30 (Reuters) - Publisher Boston Hannah International LLC filed for bankruptcy liquidation and listed liabilities of up to $1 billion.

The company, which produces magazines, websites and digital publications, has offices in Chicago and London, according to its website.

Boston Hannah listed assets at less than $50,000 in its Chapter 7 petition in a U.S. bankruptcy court in Delaware on Tuesday.

No further information about the company's plans was immediately available. A call to the lawyer listed in the company's bankruptcy petition was not returned.

The case is In re: Boston Hannah International LLC, U.S. Bankruptcy Court, District of Delaware, No:12-11645.

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Reuters: Bankruptcy News: Hedge fund boss found guilty of $600m fraud

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Hedge fund boss found guilty of $600m fraud
May 30th 2012, 12:51

LONDON | Wed May 30, 2012 8:51am EDT

LONDON May 30 (Reuters) - Magnus Peterson, the boss of collapsed hedge fund business Weavering, has been found guilty of fraud and breach of duty of care towards investors in a civil case at London's High Court.

Mrs Justice Proudman ruled Peterson, manager of the W eavering Macro Fixed Income fund, deceived clients with a strategy that could not cope with the vagaries of markets at the height of the global credit crisis.

Three other directors at the fund firm -- Edward Platt, Charanpreet Dabhia and Peterson's wife Amanda -- were found guilty of negligently permitting fraud to happen. The three, together with Peterson, were found jointly and severally liable.

"I do not accept Mr Peterson's assertions that the investors understood his strategy very well. He cannot show any document in which he explained it," the judge wrote in her judgment.

The liquidators of the collapsed hedge fund business, who launched the case, intend to claim damages of at least $450 million, according to the judgment.

The outcome of the long-standing case comes a day after the FSA doled out a record fine to Italian academic-turned-fund manager Alberto Micalizzi, in a sign authorities are clamping down on hedge fund bosses.

Liquidators of Weavering, which inflicted hundreds of millions of losses on investors, launched a civil case a gainst Peterson and other Weavering staff last year after Britain's Serious Fraud Office dropped its probe into the 2009 collapse.

The case centred on more than $600 million of interest rate swap agreements between the Macro fund and a British Virgin Islands company called Weavering Capital Fund (WCF), which was related to Weavering.

Robert Anderson QC, representing the liquidators, alleged Peterson misled investors by concealing the fund's investments in the swaps. Throughout the case, Peterson denied lying to investors.

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Tuesday, May 29, 2012

Reuters: Bankruptcy News: UPDATE 1-Dewey close to deal with ex-partners-attorney

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UPDATE 1-Dewey close to deal with ex-partners-attorney
May 29th 2012, 23:09

Tue May 29, 2012 7:09pm EDT

*

By Nick Brown

May 29 (Reuters) - An attorney for bankrupt law firm Dewey & LeBoeuf on Tuesday said the firm was "close" to a deal that would allow it to recover money from some of its former partners.

Attorney Albert Togut, speaking at the first bankruptcy hearing since Dewey filing for Chapter 11 on Monday, gave no details on the scope of a potential deal, other than to say it would cost ex-partners a "significant" amount of money.

Togut said the firm would like to achieve a quick and orderly settlement of potential claims against ex-partners who left the firm this year en masse, possibly costing Dewey money that it was owed.

Dewey, troubled by a large debt load and a high-cost compensation structure, filed for bankruptcy after losing the lion's share of its roughly 300 partners to mass defections. It may have legal claims against the partners who left and took clients with them, as well as against the firms where those lawyers ended up.

"Our goal is to get to a negotiated settlement, and bring in money without the staggering fees that you see in case after case in these law firm bankruptcies," Togut said.

It was unclear how far along talks were. Mark Zauderer, a lawyer representing more than 50 former Dewey partners, said after the hearing that talks with his group were only preliminary. During the hearing, Zauderer told the court his clients had "not heard the basis" for any claims against them from Dewey, and pointed out that former partners might have offsetting claims against the firm.

Another lawyer representing ex-partners said Togut's announcement at the hearing was the first he'd heard about a potential deal.

Togut after the hearing declined to expound on the status of negotiations.

CASH COLLATERAL

The hearing grew contentious when U.S. bankruptcy Judge Martin Glenn refused to grant Dewey's lenders a lien on the proceeds of certain future litigation in exchange for the lenders' allowing Dewey to fund its bankruptcy using their cash collateral.

Cash collateral is money that belongs to a bankruptcy debtor but has been pledged as collateral to lenders.

Dewey owes about $75 million in loan debt to a lender group led by JPMorgan Chase & Co.

The lenders had said they would allow Dewey to use its cash collateral to fund it while in bankruptcy, but in exchange demanded a lien on so-called avoidance actions, or litigation undertaken by a bankruptcy debtor to claw back payments it may have made when already insolvent.

The demand underscores an aggressive approach taken by lenders as Dewey's debt has been bought and sold on the secondary market. A person close to Dewey earlier this month told Reuters the firm's debt is mainly in the hands of investors who acquired it at a discount and are hoping to make a profit through the bankruptcy process.

Glenn said the demand for the lien was unreasonable, and ordered the parties to try to negotiate new terms.

The case is In re Dewey & LeBoeuf LLP, U.S. Bankruptcy Court, Southern District of New York, No. 12-12321.

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Reuters: Bankruptcy News: Dewey close to deal with ex-partners -attorney

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Dewey close to deal with ex-partners -attorney
May 29th 2012, 21:42

Tue May 29, 2012 5:42pm EDT

May 29 (Reuters) - An attorney for bankrupt law firm Dewey & LeBoeuf on Tuesday said the firm was "close" to a deal that would allow it to recover money from some ex-partners.

Attorney Albert Togut, speaking during the firm's first hearing since filing for bankruptcy late on Monday, gave no details on the scope of a potential deal, other than to say it would cost ex-partners a "significant" amount of money.

Togut said the firm would like to achieve a quick and orderly settlement of potential claims against ex-partners who left the firm this year en masse, costing Dewey potential accounts receivable.

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Reuters: Bankruptcy News: Equatorial mulls bid for Brazil's Celpa-sources

Reuters: Bankruptcy News
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Equatorial mulls bid for Brazil's Celpa-sources
May 29th 2012, 21:02

Tue May 29, 2012 5:02pm EDT

* Equatorial's parent Vinci may place bid, sources say

* Utility Celpa filed for bankruptcy protection in February

* Buyout firm Laep also interested in debt-laden Celpa

By Guillermo Parra-Bernal and Leila Coimbra

SAO PAULO/RIO DE JANEIRO, May 29 (Reuters) - A leading Brazilian private-equity fund that controls local electricity utility Equatorial Energia is considering bidding for debt-laden power distributor Celpa, two sources with knowledge of the situation said on Tuesday.

Celpa, a unit of power holding company Rede Energia serving the northern state of Pará, filed for bankruptcy protection in February, citing a deterioration in its finances. The company presented this month a debt restructuring plan to a court in that state to win Celpa more time to pay its debt.

Equatorial is gauging its options on Celpa, said one of the sources, who declined to be quoted because of the sensitivity of the issue. The other source said Vinci Partners, the buyout firm led by financier Gilberto Sayão and which controls Equatorial, is spearheading the negotiations.

Celpa has long been considered a takeover target as the government and private companies boost their market share in power distribution, a segment in which bigger scale offsets the outlook for lower revenue in coming years. Consolidation is key for the companies, known as DisCos, to gain financial and operating muscle.

Vinci's interest in Celpa comes weeks after another private-equity firm, Laep Investments, said it might bid for Celpa to facilitate an accord between creditors and Jorge Queiroz Jr., Rede Energia's controlling shareholder. Laep invests mainly in distressed companies.

Private equity firms have been seen by many investors as the most likely buyers of Celpa because of their perceived ability to turn around companies on the brink of bankruptcy.

The lack of firm bids has prevented Queiroz, who is also Rede Energia's chairman, from selling part or all of his 54 percent stake. The government opposes bailing out Celpa.

The media office of Celpa declined to comment. Equatorial's press representatives did not have an immediate comment on the matter. Calls made to a Vinci spokesman in Rio de Janeiro were not immediately answered.

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Reuters: Bankruptcy News: UPDATE 1-EU proposes cross-border bank rescues -draft

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-EU proposes cross-border bank rescues -draft
May 29th 2012, 17:42

Tue May 29, 2012 1:42pm EDT

* European Commission to announce draft rules next week

* EU draft law proposes network of national funds for wind-downs

* Draft law would oblige funds to back each other up

* Bail-in powers widened to impose losses on all liabilities

By John O'Donnell and Huw Jones

BRUSSELS/LONDON, May 29 (Reuters) - European Union countries could be obliged to bail out one another's struggling banks, according to a draft EU law that marks a big step towards greater EU financial integration likely to upset some members, particularly Germany.

Spain's banking troubles and the risk that a bank run in a country such as Greece could spread have given new impetus to delayed EU proposals for a law to deal with failing banks.

The European Commission, the EU's executive, will propose the rules on June 6, to grant local regulators what one official described as "aggressive intervention powers" to take control of stricken banks, break them up and impose losses on their bondholders.

If accepted by EU member countries, it would be a first step towards a pan-EU system of supervising and paying for the winding up of banks in difficulty, a vital element of the "banking union" the European Central Bank has called for.

The 156-page draft -- aimed at stopping banks from being "too big to fail" or their collapse wreaking widespread market havoc -- also maps out new powers for supervisors to "bail in" or impose losses on bondholders to shore up a lender's capital so that taxpayers are kept off the hook.

The law, which could come into effect as early as 2014, would introduce what some officials describe as an insolvency regime for banks in the EU.

It would also instruct countries to prepare for the collapse of a bank, by collecting the equivalent of 1 percent of bank deposits from an annual levy on banks.

That money would be held in reserve and used in an emergency to prop up a troubled bank with loans or guarantees.

The draft has been finalised shortly after European leaders, meeting in Brussels last week, agreed to examine ways to deepen integration in the European Union and euro zone, which could include closer cooperation on banking.

CLOSER TIES

The draft does not suggest the immediate introduction of a single European Union fund to wind up or rehabilitate troubled banks, an approach favoured by the European Central Bank.

But the plan does break new ground on earlier drafts by proposing closer ties between national funds, a move towards the creation of a common EU scheme. That could oblige a scheme in Britain, for example, to lend to a fund in France, if a bank with operations in both countries were to face collapse.

Strict rules to pool national funds would likely encounter stiff opposition from countries such as Britain, which has argued that London - not Brussels - should have sole authority in deciding when to provide money to support banks.

The push towards a single resolution fund will also make Germany uncomfortable. It has opposed any attempt to use its financial muscle to prop up lenders in weak countries such as Spain.

Once the law has been approved, the Commission will in 2014 look at the next step and assess how a "more integrated framework" for winding down banks might be best achieved, the document said.

In the document, Commission officials wrote: "An effective resolution regime should avoid that the costs ... of a failing institution are borne by ...(the) taxpayer ... (and) should also ensure that large and systemic institutions can be resolved without jeopardising financial stability.

"Member states shall ensure that financing arrangements under their jurisdiction are obliged to lend to other financing arrangements within the union."

One EU official familiar with the text said: "It leaves some wiggle room, but there must be an arrangement to cooperate between countries."

Such proposals, which require the blessing of the EU's 27 states as well as the European Parliament, would stand little chance of success without the backing of Germany and Britain.

The latest draft also widens the scope to impose losses on creditors when a bank needs shoring up. During the crisis it was shareholders who took a hit and taxpayers also had to step in to keep lenders afloat.

An earlier version proposed that losses would only be imposed on a special category of bail-in bonds but the latest draft says losses should be imposed on "all liabilities" if writing down an ailing bank's shares and capital is insufficient to plug the financial hole.

About 10 percent of a bank's debt should be "bail-inable" and a supervisor's ability to impose losses should apply to existing and new bank debt from January 2018.

Speaking in Paris recently, Michel Barnier, the European Commissioner in charge of regulation, said the proposals included several steps.

"When supervisors identify a risk, there would be an early warning that could trigger a number of decisions including a ban on some banking activities, a ban on dividends being paid out and a change of management," he said.

"If the crisis becomes very serious and there is a need for an orderly bankruptcy, there would be a mechanism that could manage that. The bank would be able to manage it, with a resolution fund, creditors and shareholders."

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Reuters: Bankruptcy News: EU proposes cross-border bank rescues -draft

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
EU proposes cross-border bank rescues -draft
May 29th 2012, 15:40

Tue May 29, 2012 11:40am EDT

* European Commission to announce draft rules next week

* EU draft law proposes network of national funds for wind-downs

* Draft law would oblige funds to back each other up

By John O'Donnell and Huw Jones

BRUSSELS/LONDON, May 29 (Reuters) - European Union countries could be obliged to bail out one another's struggling banks, according to a draft EU law that marks a big step towards greater EU financial integration likely to upset some members, particularly Germany.

Spain's banking troubles and the risk that a bank run in a country such as Greece could spread have given new impetus to delayed EU proposals for a law to deal with failing banks.

The European Commission, the EU's executive, will propose the rules on June 6, to grant local regulators what one official described as "aggressive intervention powers" to take control of stricken banks, break them up and impose losses on their bondholders.

If accepted by EU member countries, it would be a first step towards a pan-EU system of supervising and paying for the winding up of banks in difficulty, a vital element of the "banking union" the European Central Bank has called for.

The law, which could come into effect as early as 2014, would introduce what some officials describe as an insolvency regime for banks in the EU.

It would also instruct countries to prepare for the collapse of a bank, by collecting the equivalent of 1 percent of bank deposits from an annual levy on banks.

That money would be held in reserve and used in an emergency to prop up a troubled bank with loans or guarantees.

The draft has been finalised shortly after European leaders, meeting in Brussels last week, agreed to examine ways to deepen integration in the European Union and euro zone, which could include closer cooperation on banking.

CLOSER TIES

The draft does not suggest the immediate introduction of a single European Union fund to wind up or rehabilitate troubled banks, an approach favoured by the European Central Bank.

But the plan does propose closer ties between national funds, a move towards the creation of a common EU scheme. That could oblige a scheme in Britain, for example, to lend to a fund in France, if a bank with operations in both countries were to face collapse.

Strict rules to pool national funds would likely encounter stiff opposition from countries such as Britain, which has argued that London - not Brussels - should have sole authority in deciding when to provide money to support banks.

The push towards a single resolution fund will also make Germany uncomfortable. It has opposed any attempt to use its financial muscle to prop up lenders in weak countries such as Spain.

Once the law has been approved, the Commission will in 2014 look at the next step and assess how a "more integrated framework" for winding down banks might be best achieved, the document said.

In the document, Commission officials wrote: "An effective resolution regime should avoid that the costs ... of a failing institution are borne by ...(the) taxpayer ... (and) should also ensure that large and systemic institutions can be resolved without jeopardising financial stability.

"Member states shall ensure that financing arrangements under their jurisdiction are obliged to lend to other financing arrangements within the union."

One EU official familiar with the text said: "It leaves some wiggle room, but there must be an arrangement to cooperate between countries."

Such proposals, which require the blessing of the EU's 27 states as well as the European Parliament, would stand little chance of success without the backing of Germany and Britain.

Speaking in Paris recently, Michel Barnier, the European Commissioner in charge of regulation, said the proposals included several steps.

"When supervisors identify a risk, there would be an early warning that could trigger a number of decisions including a ban on some banking activities, a ban on dividends being paid out and a change of management," he said.

"If the crisis becomes very serious and there is a need for an orderly bankruptcy, there would be a mechanism that could manage that. The bank would be able to manage it, with a resolution fund, creditors and shareholders."

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Reuters: Bankruptcy News: U.S. high court rules in credit bid bankruptcy case

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
U.S. high court rules in credit bid bankruptcy case
May 29th 2012, 15:22

Tue May 29, 2012 11:22am EDT

* Case involved debtor that owned Los Angeles airport hotel

* U.S. government supported lender bank on credit bid

* At issue sale of assets under Chapter 11 reorganization plan

By James Vicini

WASHINGTON, May 29 (Reuters) - The U.S. Supreme Court ruled on Tuesday that a secured creditor cannot be denied the right to make what has been known as a "credit bid" involving the sale of property or other assets as part of a bankruptcy reorganization plan.

The justices unanimously decided the issue after some lower courts in recent years have confirmed several Chapter 11 bankruptcy plans that provided for the sale of assets while denying the secured creditor the right to credit bid.

Under a credit bid, the creditor can purchase its collateral at auction by crediting the purchase price against the secured debt rather than paying cash.

Debtors argued that a such a credit bid discourages third parties from participating in the auction. Creditors argued that denial of their right to credit bid could force them to take less than the full value of the assets.

The case involved a debtor, RadLAX Gateway Hotel, which owns the Radisson Hotel and a neighboring parking structure at Los Angeles International Airport.

During the bankruptcy case, it sought to block lender Amalgamated Bank from credit bidding -- swapping its debt for the hotel in a bankruptcy-court-overseen auction rather than paying cash.

The 7th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals upheld Amalgamated's right to credit bid, but other appeals courts have ruled differently on the issue.

The Supreme Court in an opinion by Justice Antonin Scalia affirmed the ruling by the Chicago-based appeals court in the case.

Scalia said a debtor may not obtain confirmation of such a Chapter 11 bankruptcy plan that provides for the sale of collateral free and clear of the bank's lien, but does not permit the bank to credit bid at the sale.

In reading the opinion from the bench, Scalia said the law's text was clear. "Although the jargon in this case is complicated, the statutory interpretation question is an easy one," he said.

Lawyers for Amalgamated said Congress had examined the precise problem at issue in the case and decided the best way to protect the secured creditor against the risk of undervaluation of the asset was to allow it to bid at auction.

U.S. government attorneys supported the bank. They said the right to credit bid was an essential protection for secured creditors, especially for lenders such as the U.S. government and federal agencies that often are unable to bid cash.

The Supreme Court case is RadLAX Gateway Hotel v. Amalgamated Bank, No. 11-166.

(Reporting By James Vicini; Editing by Maureen Bavdek)

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