Wednesday, July 31, 2013

Reuters: Bankruptcy News: PRESS DIGEST - Wall Street Journal - Aug 1

Reuters: Bankruptcy News
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PRESS DIGEST - Wall Street Journal - Aug 1
Aug 1st 2013, 05:29

Thu Aug 1, 2013 1:29am EDT

Aug 1 (Reuters) - The following are the top stories in the Wall Street Journal. Reuters has not verified these stories and does not vouch for their accuracy.

* The U.S. economy registered subpar growth and low inflation in the first half of the year, factors that led the Federal Reserve on Wednesday to keep its easy-money policies in place. The Commerce Department reported that the economy grew at a 1.7 percent annual rate in the second quarter, enough to ease fears of a full-on summertime economic stall, but still a sluggish pace by historic standards. ()

* A federal judge invalidated a rule on fees charged for debit-card transactions, agreeing with retailers' arguments that the Federal Reserve was too lenient on banks when it capped the fees. The decision will likely force the Federal Reserve to slash those fees, further crimping a once-lucrative business for banks and card companies like Visa and MasterCard. ()

* The Obama administration declassified and released documents Wednesday that described past violations of a secret court order by National Security Agency programs set up to amass records on phone calls and Internet transactions. ()

* Economic gains in the United States and upgrades to the nation's energy-transport infrastructure are helping oil shrug off the downturn in other industrial commodities. Crude prices are up 14 percent this year on the New York Mercantile Exchange, despite slowing growth in China and surging production in the United States. ()

* Ambulance company Rural/Metro Corp is preparing for the possibility of a bankruptcy filing within the next couple of weeks, said people familiar with the plans, as it is negotiating with creditors. ()

* United States is pumping more oil and natural gas than it has in decades, but the boom hasn't been enough to prop up the sagging output of America's two biggest energy producers, Exxon Mobil Corp and Chevron Corp. ()

* Facebook Inc's stock briefly touched its IPO price of $38 on Wednesday, hitting a marker that felt out of reach in autumn of last year, when the stock was in free fall. While shares eventually drifted lower to settle at $36.80, Facebook is still within striking distance of $38, a fact not lost on Facebook's investors, many of whom were burned in the company's botched IPO. ()

* Activist investor William Ackman's brash move to buy a 9.8 percent stake in Air Products and Chemicals Inc is drawing attention to a large but little understood company that has been struggling with sliding profits as natural gas becomes more expensive. ()

* The U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission is probing the way International Business Machines Corp reports sales in its cloud-computing business, the company said in a securities filing on Wednesday. The filing offered no details of what practices in particular the SEC might be questioning. IBM defended its standards, saying its reporting is the result of a rigorous and disciplined process. ()

* Asia-Pacific law firm King & Wood Mallesons is merging with British law firm SJ Berwin LLP, creating a firm with more than 2,700 lawyers in over 30 offices around the world. The combination is a significant move into the British and European legal markets for the company, whose formation in 2012 was the largest law firm merger not to involve a U.S. or U.K. partner.

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Reuters: Bankruptcy News: Metro AG Q2 sales fall 3.6 pct on Europe weakness

Reuters: Bankruptcy News
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Metro AG Q2 sales fall 3.6 pct on Europe weakness
Aug 1st 2013, 05:35

FRANKFURT | Thu Aug 1, 2013 1:35am EDT

FRANKFURT Aug 1 (Reuters) - Germany's Metro AG said second-quarter sales fell 3.6 percent as it grappled with tough European markets and a strike at its Real supermarket stores.

The group, which runs cash and carries, consumer electronic stores, supermarkets and department stores, reported sales of 15.3 billion euros ($20.3 billion) and earnings before interest, tax and special items (EBIT) down 12 percent to 276 million.

Analysts had expected sales of 15.26 billion euros and EBIT before special items of 269 million, according to a Reuters poll.

Metro also said income from the closing of a sale in Russia had been enough to offset provisions made in connection with the insolvency of its former subsidiary Praktiker. Metro is the landlord to 40 Praktiker stores in Germany.

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Reuters: Bankruptcy News: UPDATE 1-Metro AG Q2 sales fall 3.6 pct on Europe weakness

Reuters: Bankruptcy News
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UPDATE 1-Metro AG Q2 sales fall 3.6 pct on Europe weakness
Aug 1st 2013, 06:12

Thu Aug 1, 2013 2:12am EDT

* Q2 sales 15.3 bln eur vs Rtrs poll avg 15.3 bln

* Q2 adj EBIT 276 mln eur vs poll avg 269 mln

* Confirms targets for short business year

* Shares indicated 1.7 pct higher (Adds detail on cash & carry, net profit, details on Praktiker)

FRANKFURT, Aug 1 (Reuters) - Germany's Metro AG said second-quarter sales fell 3.6 percent as it grappled with tough European markets, ongoing weakness at its cash & carry unit and a strike at its Real supermarket stores.

The cash & carry division, Metro's biggest at around 45 percent of group sales, saw sales fall 5.1 percent in Germany in the quarter, extending a 4 percent drop seen in the first quarter.

Metro, whose Chief Executive Olaf Koch has promised an improvement at the stores this year, said on Thursday that non-food sales were not satisfactory and it would refresh the product range at more cash and carry stores.

The group, which also runs consumer electronics stores, supermarkets and department stores, reported total sales of 15.3 billion euros ($20.3 billion), in line with expectations.

"The disposable income and purchasing power of our customers in nearly all European countries were still burdened by austerity measures," Koch said in a statement.

Earnings before interest, tax and special items (EBIT) were down 12 percent to 276 million euros, but slightly better than the forecast for 269 million in a Reuters poll. Net profit improved more than expected to 33 million euros from a year-ago loss of 18 million.

Metro also said income from the closing of a sale in Russia had been enough to offset provisions made in connection with the insolvency of its former subsidiary Praktiker, which was spun out of Metro in 2005. Metro is the landlord to 40 Praktiker stores in Germany.

Analysts at JP Morgan Cazenove have estimated the rental income at risk from the Praktiker insolvency at 35 million euros. Metro declined to comment on the exact level of risk provisions it has made.

($1 = 0.7531 euros) (Reporting by Victoria Bryan; Editing by Maria Sheahan)

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Reuters: Bankruptcy News: As solar panels pile up, China takes axe to polysilicon producers

Reuters: Bankruptcy News
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As solar panels pile up, China takes axe to polysilicon producers
Jul 31st 2013, 20:57

By Charlie Zhu

HONG KONG | Wed Jul 31, 2013 4:57pm EDT

HONG KONG Aug 1 (Reuters) - Three quarters of China's solar-grade polysilicon producers face closure as Beijing looks to overhaul a bloated and inefficient industry, resulting in fewer but better companies to compete against Germany's Wacker Chemie AG and South Korea's OCI Co Ltd.

The polysilicon sector, which has around 40 companies employing 30,000 people and has received investment of 100 billion yuan ($16 billion), suffers from low quality and chronic over-capacity as local governments poured in money to feed a fast-growing solar panel industry, for which polysilicon is a key feedstock.

Demand for solar panels has eased since the global financial crisis, forcing governments worldwide to slash solar power subsidies, and leaving China sitting on idle capacity and mounting losses. To help prop up the solar industry, Beijing plans to more than quadruple solar power generating capacity to 35 gigawatts (GW) by 2015 to use up some of the huge domestic panel glut. It has also said it will accelerate technological upgrades in polysilicon to weed out inefficient producers and "nurture a batch of internationally competitive producers."

People in the polysilicon industry say the moves will halve China's production capacity to 100,000 tonnes a year, leaving around 10 relatively strong firms with better technology and cost efficiency.

"Most producers will be eliminated rather than acquired. This may sound cruel, but is the reality as they are technologically uncompetitive," Lu Jinbiao, a senior official at China's top polysilicon producer GCL-Poly Energy, told Reuters.

The challenges mirror those faced by much of China's manufacturing sector, from cement and steel to shipbuilding - local governments chasing jobs and economic growth over-invested in often high-cost, low-tech capacity in the mid-2000s when demand for solar panels was booming. That boom is now over.

"Large amounts of ineffective, high-cost production capacity will exit the market," said Ma Haitian, deputy secretary general of the Silicon Industry of China Nonferrous Metals Industry Association, a Beijing-based industry lobby.

PRICE SLUMP

As smaller polysilicon producers, with average annual capacity of a few thousand tonnes, are pushed out, the likely winners will be larger producers such as GCL Poly, TBEA Co Ltd , China Silicon Corp and Daqo New Energy Corp. The shake-out is already underway as polysilicon prices have plunged to below $20 per kg from a 2008 peak of almost $400, forcing some producers in the northwestern province of Ningxia and eastern China's Zhejiang province to file for bankruptcy.

Their plight is made worse by cheaper, and better quality, imports from producers such as MEMC Pasadena Inc and Michigan-based Hemlock Semiconductor Group - a venture of Dow Corning, Shin-Etsu Handotai and Mitsubishi Materials Corp - and Norway's Renewable Energy.

Of the 69,000 tonnes of solar-grade polysilicon China consumed in January-June, 41,000 tonnes were imported, according to industry data. China's solar panel makers prefer imported polysilicon, which has a higher purity that helps in energy conversion, company executives say.

Foreign polysilicon producers can break even at prices of around $20/kg, while break-even for Chinese firms with capacity of 10,000 tonnes or more is $20-$25, say industry specialists, who noted that most smaller Chinese producers had begun to lose money when prices slipped to $30-$40.

"Restructuring is a must. Most Chinese polysilicon enterprises will disappear and only about 10 will survive," said Glenn Gu, senior solar analyst at consultant IHS in Shanghai.

NEW DAWN?

In an apparent bid to protect its domestic industry, Beijing this month imposed preliminary anti-dumping duties on U.S. and South Korean polysilicon imports, but has yet to decide whether to do the same for European suppliers like Wacker Chemie. Analysts said that idea could be dropped after China and the European Union struck a solar panel trade deal last weekend.

"Such a settlement could mark the start of another global photovoltaics (solar technology) upturn," Wacker Chemie said in announcing better-than-expected quarterly earnings on Tuesday, adding polysilicon prices may have bottomed.

Many of China's leading solar cell and module manufacturers - such as LDK Solar Co Ltd, Yingli Green Energy Holding Co Ltd, Suntech Power Holdings Co Ltd and JA Solar Holdings Co Ltd - are sitting on long-term take-or-pay contracts with foreign polysilicon producers, under which they import set amounts at fixed prices of around $40-$50/kg, people in the industry said.

By some estimates, 30 percent of the $2.1 billion worth of polysilicon that China imported last year came from those contracts. Those deals looked good before the financial crisis, and some Chinese panel makers - who regularly mix imported polysilicon with local materials to control costs - also invested in their own polysilicon production.

Much of that investment has since been written off.

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Tuesday, July 30, 2013

Reuters: Bankruptcy News: S&P says U.S. public finance rating trends positive, despite Detroit

Reuters: Bankruptcy News
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S&P says U.S. public finance rating trends positive, despite Detroit
Jul 30th 2013, 20:20

WASHINGTON, July 30 | Tue Jul 30, 2013 4:20pm EDT

WASHINGTON, July 30 (Reuters) - Rating trends across the U.S. public finance sector were "decidedly positive" in the second quarter, despite the default by Detroit, Standard & Poor's Ratings Service said in a report showing that its upgrades of municipal debt outpaced downgrades.

The credit ratings agency said that it upgraded 194 ratings and only downgraded 94 during the second quarter - the third straight quarter in which municipal debt upgrades outpaced downgrades.

It added that Detroit, Michigan, which recently filed for the largest municipal bankruptcy in U.S. history, accounted for five of the seven defaults in the quarter. Fritch, Texas, and West Penn Allegheny Healthy System in Pennsylvania also defaulted on their debt.

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Reuters: Bankruptcy News: UPDATE 1-Despite Detroit, U.S. public finance ratings improve -S&P

Reuters: Bankruptcy News
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UPDATE 1-Despite Detroit, U.S. public finance ratings improve -S&P
Jul 30th 2013, 20:57

Tue Jul 30, 2013 4:57pm EDT

WASHINGTON, July 30 (Reuters) - Rating trends across the U.S. public finance sector were "decidedly positive" in the second quarter despite the default by Detroit, Standard & Poor's Ratings Service said on Tuesday, as it noted that its upgrades of municipal debt outpaced downgrades.

The credit ratings agency said in a report that it raised 194 ratings and only lowered 94 during the second quarter, the third straight quarter in which municipal debt upgrades outpaced downgrades.

"Since the economy has continued to expand, albeit at a slow pace by historical standards, credit quality has held up and, in fact, has strengthened as the year has progressed," the report said.

Detroit, which recently filed for the largest municipal bankruptcy in U.S. history, accounted for five of the seven defaults in the quarter. Fritch, Texas, and West Penn Allegheny Healthy System in Pennsylvania also defaulted on their debt. S&P said the defaults "were a higher number than normal."

Before Detroit filed for bankruptcy, it defaulted on a $39.7 million payment on taxable pension debt.

The positive trend during the quarter in S&P's ratings stands in sharp contrast to the high pace of downgrades that another major credit agency, Moody's Investors Service, followed. Last week, Moody's said it expects many more downgrades in the year, as well, as the economic recovery remains slow and many local and state governments continue to confront budget challenges.

For just state and local governments, the ratio of upgrades to downgrades was 2.15 to 1, S&P said. It was even higher for the utility sector, 2.67 to 1. Not-for-profit health saw upgrades outnumber downgrades by 1.5 to 1.

But one sector, housing , had more downgrades than upgrades. S&P said that during the quarter it issued 24 downgrades and 12 upgrades in housing, largely because it downgraded Berkshire Hathaway, which supported much of the debt with guaranteed investment contracts.

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Reuters: Bankruptcy News: UPDATE 1-October trial proposed for Detroit bankruptcy eligibility

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UPDATE 1-October trial proposed for Detroit bankruptcy eligibility
Jul 30th 2013, 17:37

Tue Jul 30, 2013 1:37pm EDT

July 30 (Reuters) - U.S. Bankruptcy Judge Steven Rhodes on Tuesday proposed speedy deadlines for Detroit's municipal bankruptcy filing, including an October trial to determine if the city can pursue bankruptcy and a March 1, 2014 date for it to file a reorganization plan.

The judge proposed Oct. 23 for the start of a trial on potential objections to Detroit's eligibility to file what would be the biggest Chapter 9 municipal bankruptcy in U.S. history.

The proposed dates and deadlines will be the subject of a hearing in federal bankruptcy court in Detroit on Friday.

Rhodes' schedule is more ambitious in some areas than the one proposed by Kevyn Orr, Detroit's state-appointed emergency manager, after he filed the city's bankruptcy petition on July 18. In the filing, Orr set a goal of concluding the city's bankruptcy case no later than September 2014.

Doug Bernstein, a Detroit-based bankruptcy lawyer at Plunkett Cooney, said the schedule indicates the judge wants to move the case along quickly. But doing so in a politically sensitive case like Detroit's may prove challenging.

"He's got to do a balancing act," Bernstein said. "The longer a case languishes, the more it costs everybody, so he's very aware of that. But he's got to balance that with affording all the parties due process."

The schedules put forward by Orr and Rhodes would have Detroit moving through bankruptcy court more quickly than Stockton, California, which took nearly a year to pass through the eligibility phase alone. With more than $18 billion in liabilities at the time it filed for bankruptcy, Detroit's debt load dwarfs that of Stockton, which listed liabilities of around $1 billion when it filed in June 2012.

Judge Rhodes proposed an Aug. 19 deadline for creditors to file objections to Detroit's case to proceed through bankruptcy court. Orr, a former corporate bankruptcy attorney, had proposed the same deadline, while requesting a hearing on eligibility objections "as soon as the court's schedule will permit."

Rhodes last week suspended lawsuits pending in Michigan courts by city workers, retirees and pension funds seeking to derail Detroit's bankruptcy petition, putting his court in full control of the case.

The next step will determine if the city is eligible for bankruptcy. Detroit must prove that it is insolvent and that it made a good-faith effort to negotiate with creditors owed more than $18 billion or that there are too many creditors to make negotiating feasible.

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Reuters: Bankruptcy News: COLUMN-Should you worry about Detroit's pension woes?

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COLUMN-Should you worry about Detroit's pension woes?
Jul 30th 2013, 18:26

Tue Jul 30, 2013 2:26pm EDT

By Mark Miller

CHICAGO, July 30 (Reuters) - The news from Detroit is enough to rattle anyone relying on a traditional pension: an unprecedented bankruptcy filing by a major U.S. city that opens the door to possible sharp cuts in benefits.

It's still far from clear that the courts will let Detroit slash pension benefits as part of its bankruptcy filing. But is the city's situation a harbinger of things to come for Americans relying on traditional defined benefit pensions?

The answers are important for millions of American workers and retirees. Although we hear constantly that pensions have gone the way of the dinosaur, in the public sector, 83 percent of workers still had access to a traditional pension plan in 2010, according to the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics.

And 35 percent of Fortune 1000 companies still sponsored active pension plans in 2011, though that figure is down sharply from 59 percent as recently as 2004, according to employee benefits consulting firm Towers Watson.

Most private-sector pensions are protected from plan failures by the Pension Benefit Guarantee Corporation (PBGC), the federally sponsored insurance backstop. If a plan is terminated due to bankruptcy, the PBGC has been known to take steps to stop companies from dumping their pension plans.

When PBGC does take over a plan, the majority of workers receive 100 percent of what they earned - but only up to the point of the plan's termination. PBGC payouts are capped by law, using a formula based on your age at the time the plan is terminated, and it is updated every calendar year.

For 2013, the maximum annual guaranteed benefit for a 65-year-old retiree is $57,500

PBGC protection isn't available for public sector pensions. It's rare to see governments attempt to use bankruptcy to restructure obligations. Although municipalities can use this maneuver in some instances, it is not an option for states, which are sovereign entities with taxing authority and constitutional requirements to balance budgets.

Moreover, many public sector pension plans are backed by state laws that guarantee benefits. The constitutions of seven states contain benefit guarantees, according to an analysis by the Center for Retirement Research at Boston College (CRR). Another 34 states have laws, or rely on judicial decisions, that treat pension benefit promises as contractual guarantees.

Michigan is one of the states with a constitutional guarantee. So, even if a bankruptcy court does allow Detroit to cut pension benefits, the matter would be far from settled. "It would be appealed almost immediately to the U.S. Supreme Court," says Hank Kim, executive director of the National Conference on Public Employee Retirement Systems. "It would set up a Constitutional crisis, with the Court asked to decide which is superior - federal bankruptcy law or a state constitution?"

But even if the courts decide that state laws govern situations such as Michigan's, that doesn't mean pensions are fully protected. For example, the Michigan constitution only guarantees benefits that have been already earned, or accrued. That means current retirees and those close to retirement should receive their full benefits, but younger workers could face cuts.

"If you're retired or close to it, you'd probably be OK," says Diane Oakley, executive director of the National Institute on Retirement Security. "If you're in your 20s or 30s, you'd be more likely to face cuts. But if you're that young, you're probably more worried about whether you have a job or not."

And in some states, the legal protections only apply to core benefits, leaving room for adjustments to future earned benefits on features. Many states already have increased employee contribution rates, tightened age and tenure requirements for benefits or reduced cost-of-living adjustments.

GAUGING PLAN HEALTH

If you're worried about a pension, the key figure to watch is your plan's funded status - that is, the percentage of assets on hand to pay promised benefits. Actuaries generally use 80 percent as a floor for safe funding levels. But the figures depend heavily on the assumptions by fund managers on their expected rate of return on portfolios over time. And those assumptions have become very controversial.

Most state and municipal pension funds assume a long-term rate of return around 8 percent, reflecting a portfolio invested in equities, bonds and alternative assets such as hedge funds. That number reflects the approach preferred by actuaries, and most funds have made or beat that number over the past 25 years, according to data from Callan Associates, an investment consulting firm.

Economists prefer a more conservative figure - a so-called "riskless rate of return" figure tied to bond rates, which is closer to 4 or 5 percent.

These investment assumptions matter - big time. A CRR review of 126 public plans found that they were 73 percent funded using the more optimistic 8 percent return assumption - but just 50 percent using a more conservative 5 percent figure.

Beyond the pension plan itself, Oakley says it is important to consider the health of the sponsor. "Detroit's plans are mature - they have more retired than active workers, and government is shrinking there because the population is shrinking. But if you're in a plan in a place where the population is pretty stable, and the plan is fairly well funded, your plan probably has enough flexibility to make whatever adjustments it needs to make to get by."

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Reuters: Bankruptcy News: U.S. bankruptcy judge proposes deadlines in Detroit 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. bankruptcy judge proposes deadlines in Detroit bankruptcy case
Jul 30th 2013, 15:47

July 30 | Tue Jul 30, 2013 11:47am EDT

July 30 (Reuters) - U.S. Bankruptcy Judge Steven Rhodes on Tuesday proposed speedy deadlines for Detroit's municipal bankruptcy filing, including a March 1, 2014 date for the city to file a reorganization plan.

The judge also proposed Oct. 23 for the start of a trial on potential objections to Detroit's eligibility to file what would be the biggest Chapter 9 municipal bankruptcy in U.S. history.

The proposed dates and deadlines will be the subject of a hearing in federal bankruptcy court in Detroit on Friday.

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Reuters: Bankruptcy News: UPDATE 1-Germany's Praktiker appoints Macquarie in hunt for investor

Reuters: Bankruptcy News
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UPDATE 1-Germany's Praktiker appoints Macquarie in hunt for investor
Jul 30th 2013, 15:49

Tue Jul 30, 2013 11:49am EDT

* Administrators aim for bids by start of September

* Any investor may need to put in 100 mln eur

* Interest from private equity (Adds administrator comments from press conference)

HAMBURG/FRANKFURT, July 30 (Reuters) - The insolvency administrators of German DIY store chain Praktiker have stepped up the search for an investor by appointing Macquarie as advisor and asking for bids by September, they said on Tuesday.

The administrators hope that by finding an investor quickly they can secure as many jobs and stores as possible at the group, which has around 20,000 full and part-time employees.

The group filed for insolvency earlier this month for the Praktiker-branded units, before its more successful Max Bahr chain followed last week. Max Bahr is expected to be of more interest to investors.

"Max Bahr, in particular, is an established brand that is working and there is also interest in Praktiker," the administrators said in a statement on Tuesday.

The administrators said at a press conference in Hamburg that they aimed to sell as many of the stores as possible in a package, with any buyer for Max Bahr taking on some Praktiker stores. Furthermore, any investor should be prepared to pump in at least 100 million euros ($132.5 million).

"We believe that a more inclusive offer will bring better results," said Jens-Soeren Schroeder.

Sources told Reuters last week there had already been interest from private equity.

Around 300 stores affected by the insolvency would continue trading for now and talks are ongoing over a loan to keep them permanently open, the administrators said.

Praktiker, whose blue and yellow stores are a familiar sight in German out of town shopping centres, ran into difficulties after scrapping its popular "20 percent off everything" discounts. The long winter compounded its problems and forced it to file for insolvency earlier this month.

Pay for the 14,000 of the group's employees affected by the insolvency has been secured until the end of September. A report over the weekend suggested 4,000 jobs could go and a dozen stores could soon be closed.

The administrators said on Tuesday it was too early to provide information on individual stores. Of the 300 stores in the insolvency process, 168 are Praktiker stores, 78 are Max Bahr stores and a further 54 are Praktiker-branded shops that have recently been converted to the Max Bahr signage. ($1 = 0.7547 euros) (Reporting by Jan Schwartz and Victoria Bryan; Editing by Louise Heavens)

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Reuters: Bankruptcy News: Germany's Praktiker appoints Macquarie in hunt for investor

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 
Germany's Praktiker appoints Macquarie in hunt for investor
Jul 30th 2013, 14:56

FRANKFURT, July 30 | Tue Jul 30, 2013 10:56am EDT

FRANKFURT, July 30 (Reuters) - The insolvency administrators of German DIY store chain Praktiker have stepped up the search for an investor by appointing Macquarie as advisor, they said on Tuesday.

The administrators hope that by finding an investor they can secure as many jobs and stores as possible at the group, which has around 20,000 full and part-time employees.

The group filed for insolvency earlier this month for the Praktiker-branded units, but spared its more successful Max Bahr chain.

But prospects for the group took a nosedive last week when it announced it was also filing for insolvency for Max Bahr.

Sources told Reuters last week there had already been interest from private equity.

"Max Bahr, in particular, is an established brand that is working and there is also interest in Praktiker," the administrators said in a statement on Tuesday.

They said they did not expect any results from the search before the start of September, but that all the 300 stores affected by the insolvency would continue trading for now.

Praktiker, whose blue and yellow stores are a familiar sight in German out of town shopping centres, ran into difficulties after scrapping its popular "20 percent off everything" discounts. The long winter compounded its problems and forced it to file for insolvency earlier this month.

Pay for the 14,000 of the group's employees affected by the insolvency has been secured until the end of September. A report over the weekend suggested 4,000 jobs could go and a dozen stores could soon be closed.

The administrators said on Tuesday it was too early to provide information on individual stores. Of the 300 stores in the insolvency process, 168 are Praktiker stores, 78 are Max Bahr stores and a further 54 are Praktiker-branded shops that have recently been converted to the Max Bahr signage. (Reporting by Victoria Bryan; Editing by Louise Heavens)

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Monday, July 29, 2013

Reuters: Bankruptcy News: U.S. bankruptcy court OKs $93 mln pact between Getty, Lukoil

Reuters: Bankruptcy News
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U.S. bankruptcy court OKs $93 mln pact between Getty, Lukoil
Jul 29th 2013, 18:01

By Nick Brown

July 29 | Mon Jul 29, 2013 2:01pm EDT

July 29 (Reuters) - A bankruptcy judge on Monday signed off on a deal for Russian oil giant Lukoil to pay $93 million to its former Getty Petroleum Marketing Inc unit to resolve a trial over Getty's collapse.

Judge Shelley Chapman approved the settlement at a hearing in U.S. Bankruptcy Court in Manhattan, Abid Qureshi, a lawyer for Lukoil, told Reuters.

Getty, a gas station operator, declared bankruptcy in December 2011, eventually appointing a trustee, Alfred Giuliano, to liquidate its assets and pay back creditors.

A key piece of Giuliano's strategy was to sue Lukoil, saying the company stripped Getty of its best gas stations and exacerbated its insolvency. The sides reached a settlement earlier this month, halting a trial after 17 days of testimony.

Giuliano alleged that Lukoil moved Getty's most profitable stations to another subsidiary in 2009 in exchange for $120 million, far less than what Getty felt the assets were worth. Under the settlement, Lukoil will pay the Getty estate an extra $93 million, resolving both the trial and a separate dispute between the parties over the allocation of tax benefits, court documents show.

The trial was unique in that most of it was held behind closed doors, a rarity in bankruptcy court, which puts a premium on transparency.

During the 2009 transaction at the center of the dispute, Lukoil's lawyers at Akin, Gump, Strauss, Hauer & Feld represented both the buyer and seller because, at the time, Getty and Lukoil were part of the same corporate family.

Because Akin was on both sides of the deal, the parties in the trial had access to information that would normally be kept confidential due to attorney-client privilege. That information was fair game in the trial, but still not fit for the public.

The uncharacteristic sealing led to logistical issues in managing the case, including the accidental release of sealed transcripts.

Asked last month by Reuters for transcripts for all dates that were public, Veritext LLC, a court transcription company, supplied transcripts that included four days of trial that the court later told Veritext should have been sealed.

In a statement, Veritext said "the transcripts were sent in accordance with standard bankruptcy court procedure" but did not elaborate.

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Reuters: Bankruptcy News: RPT-Detroit again leans on Tigers, other teams to lift city's spirits

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 
RPT-Detroit again leans on Tigers, other teams to lift city's spirits
Jul 29th 2013, 10:59

Mon Jul 29, 2013 6:59am EDT

By Joseph Lichterman

DETROIT, July 29 (Reuters) - For five days in July 1967 riots tore apart Detroit, exacerbating racial tensions, and forcing the National Guard to quell the violence.

The Tigers, Detroit's Major League Baseball team, felt immense pressure to win the next season to help bring the city together.

"They pretty much understood to a man that if they had a successful season and won the pennant ... it would help hold the city together," said Tim Wendel, author of "Summer of '68: The Season That Changed Baseball, and America, Forever."

That October, the Tigers won baseball's World Series.

"We definitely had a good influence on the people, having something positive to talk about," Al Kaline, a member of the 1968 team and a baseball Hall of Famer, said in an interview. "If you went to the grocery shop, you'd talk about the Tigers instead of the riots. If you'd go to the barbershop you'd talk about the Tigers instead of the riots."

Today, 45 years later, Detroit may again appeal to the Tigers or one of Detroit's three other major professional sports teams: the NFL's Lions, NBA's Pistons and NHL's Red Wings. This time, it will be to renew pride in a city demoralized after filing the largest municipal bankruptcy in U.S. history.

"When we go to the playoffs or the World Series, it puts Detroit on the national stage," Tigers all-star pitcher Justin Verlander said. "Sports mean a lot to the city, and it means a lot to hopefully play a small part in getting the city jump started."

The Tigers were American League champions last year, but were swept in the World Series by the San Francisco Giants. Now, they are in first place in the American League Central Division, fighting for a third straight playoff appearance. They have the highest local television ratings of any team in baseball.

"This has been one of the most hopping baseball cities in the United States of America for the past seven or eight years," Tigers manager Jim Leyland said. "Hands down. Slam dunk."

'HOCKEY TOWN'

Even after five decades of population flight that has cut the city's population by almost two-thirds, Detroit remains one of America's biggest sports towns. Its four major pro franchises have 23 championships among them. Only four North American cities have more. All its teams have made playoffs runs in the past five years.

The Tigers, Lions and Red Wings, the three teams that play within the city limits, collectively drew about 4 million spectators over their most recent seasons.

The National Basketball Association Pistons, who play their home games in suburban Auburn Hills, have struggled of late. But from 2003 to 2008, they won the 2004 National Basketball Association championship and made six-straight Eastern Conference playoff appearances.

In hockey circles, Detroit is known simply "Hockey Town," and the Red Wings are the model of consistency. One of the National Hockey League's "Original Six" franchises, the team has made the playoffs for 22 straight years, winning four Stanley Cup championships since 1997.

Over the last decade, the Wings have assembled a daunting record of 232-120 on its home ice in "the Joe," as locals call the Joe Louis Arena, named for the Detroit native who was a legendary boxing champion in the 1930s.

And then there are the Lions.

Though they made the playoffs in the 2011-12 season, the city's perennially bottom-dwelling football team has not won a National Football League championship since 1957, around the time the city's population peaked and a decade before the first Super Bowl was played. In 2008, they became the first team in NFL not to win a single game over a 16-game season.

The consistent losing has not kept fans away from games, and the Lions dominate conversation in the city throughout the fall.

But right now, it's all about the Tigers. On Friday night, the 17th sell-out crowd of the season packed into 41,782-seat Comerica Park to watch Detroit beat the Philadelphia Phillies by a 2-1 score. So far this season, the Tigers have drawn 1.8 million fans downtown for games.

"It's the only time it feels like a real city," Mike Flynn, 57, said during Friday night's game. Flynn moved to Detroit in 1980 and lived in the city for six years before moving to the suburbs.

Some people question whether the city should have helped finance expensive new stadiums for the Tigers and Lions. But others say the importance of sports in Detroit goes far beyond dollars and sense.

'BLUE COLLAR'

The teams and the city's principal industry, car making, have close connections. William Clay Ford Sr., grandson of Henry Ford, owns the Lions. The Pistons are named for a key component in an automotive engine. The Red Wings logo features wings mounted on a car wheel.

Before the 2009 season General Motors, then itself on the verge of bankruptcy, told the Detroit Tigers it would no longer be able to sponsor the center-field fountain at Comerica Park that shoots off streams of water after Tigers home runs.

The fountain dominates the stadium's outfield, and despite multiple offers for alternative sponsorships, the Tigers decided to keep GM's logo on the fountain, along with Ford Motor Co's Blue Oval and Chrysler's Pentastar at no cost to the companies. "The Detroit Tigers support our automakers," the fountain read.

Still, some local residents are troubled by the contrast between the wealth of the teams and the impovershed city that supports them. The Tigers, for example, have the fifth highest payroll in baseball, paying players a collective $148 million. Detroit's median household income is just $27,000, roughly half the national average and the lowest of any major U.S. city.

"It's jarring to think about players making as much as they do when the community is impoverished," said Skidmore College professor Daniel Nathan, president of the North American Society for Sport History.

Yet when Lions coach Jim Schwartz was asked at a press conference last week whether the Lions, coming off a disappointing 4-12 season, needed an "emergency manager" to turn the team around, he said he welcomed the comparisons between the city and team.

"I'd like those comparisons to be resiliency, blue-collar, hard work, toughness," Schwartz said. "I think those are the things that are most important about the city of Detroit. Those are the things that I hope the Lions reflect."

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Reuters: Bankruptcy News: In cash-strapped Detroit, few question sports arena funding

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 
In cash-strapped Detroit, few question sports arena funding
Jul 29th 2013, 10:59

Mon Jul 29, 2013 6:59am EDT

By Joseph Lichterman

DETROIT, July 29 (Reuters) - While Detroit has become a top emblem of U.S. urban economic decline with its recent bankruptcy filing, it remains a resilient and vibrant sports town.

Major League Baseball's Tigers and the National Football League's Lions, like teams in other U.S. cities, have obtained public financing for new arenas, despite questions about their promised economic windfalls.

The Tigers' home stadium Comerica Park, which opened in 2000, was built at a cost of $300 million, 38 percent of which was publicly financed. Tigers owner Mike Ilitch, who also owns the Red Wings, paid $185 million. Indian casino revenue and a voter-approved 2 percent rental car tax and 1 percent hotel tax paid the public's share, according to the National Sports Law Institute at Marquette University.

Ford Field, the Lions' domed stadium, was built next door to Comerica and opened in 2002 at a cost of $430 million, 36 percent of which was publicly financed by the same Wayne County tourist tax and payments from the city of Detroit, the state of Michigan, and the quasi-public Downtown Development Authority. The Lions, owned by Henry Ford's grandson William Clay Ford Sr., paid $70 million. There were also $50 million in other corporate contributions, the institute said.

And while area bars and restaurants are typically packed on game days, the neighborhood is a ghost town when neither team is playing. After the games, most fans go straight back to their homes in the suburbs.

Sports economist Andrew Zimbalist, a professor at Smith College, compared the economic impact of a new stadium to that of a large grocery store or department store.

"As a general matter, stadiums and arenas basically reallocate geographically spending within a metropolitan area," he said, adding that most of the money spent at sporting events goes to cover team costs like payroll. The Tigers, for instance, have the fifth-highest payroll in baseball, paying their players a combined $148 million.

Still, a state board recently approved issuing bonds to help pay for a new arena for the Red Wings at the heart of a proposed 45-block entertainment district just north of downtown.

The total project is slated to cost $650 million. About 44 percent of the project would be financed through public sources. Most of the public money will come through state property tax abatements on the now mostly vacant land where the arena will be built.

Despite such questionable economics, the project faced only modest local opposition.

Gretchen Whitmer, the Democratic leader in the Michigan State Senate, said the state would be better off investing money in areas like public safety or schools.

"I think the best investment we can make as a state is to ensure that we have good schools, that we have public safety that will show up in a time of crisis, those are the types of things that really draw residents into the city of Detroit and I would say that's the best type of investment we can make as a state if we want to get people living in the city," Whitmer said.

Nonetheless, some still contend the costs are worth it for what a new stadium contributes to a city's psyche.

"You can show me a spreadsheet, and I'll still trump you because it's the psychic benefit of having a sports club," sports historian John Thorn said. "It separates a city from thinking of itself as big league or thinking of itself as bush league."

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Reuters: Bankruptcy News: Naming mediator brings authority to fractious Detroit 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 
Naming mediator brings authority to fractious Detroit bankruptcy case
Jul 29th 2013, 04:00

By Nick Brown

July 29 | Mon Jul 29, 2013 12:00am EDT

July 29 (Reuters) - Of all the legal maneuvers so far in Detroit's bankruptcy case by unions or the city's emergency manager, the one that may have the most impact was when the judge decided to name a mediator.

In a July 23 filing in U.S. Bankruptcy Court, Judge Steven Rhodes said he would appoint another federal judge, Gerald Rosen, as a mediator.

A mediator would be an authoritative voice for compromise in a contentious, messy case, the biggest-ever municipal bankruptcy filing in U.S. history. Detroit, which filed on July 23, has more than $18 billion in debt and 100,000 creditors ranging from retired city workers to Wall Street bond investors.

"I think that's going to be the key move in the case, in terms of getting it toward a solution," Christopher Klein, a bankruptcy judge in Sacramento, California, said. Klein, who is overseeing the bankruptcy of the town of Stockton, spoke last week on a panel organized by the American Bankruptcy Institute.

Rosen, a Republican, is chief district judge of the U.S. District Court for the Eastern District of Michigan. With a long career in Michigan politics and as a member of the conservative-libertarian Federalist Society, he brings a unique perspective to a case that touches on the subjects of states rights and property rights.

Rhodes in his court filing deemed a mediator "necessary and appropriate" but did not specify which issues he feels should be mediated. He has scheduled a hearing on his proposal for Friday.

With Rhodes yet to lay out how mediation will be used, Rosen's role is unclear. He could be asked to help broker a deal resolving the initial objections to Detroit's filing under Chapter 9 of the U.S. Bankruptcy Code, which governs municipal cases. Alternately, his services could be reserved for the more substantive fights over pay back.

COMPLEX ISSUES

Retirees have turned to Michigan state court to try to block Detroit's U.S. Bankruptcy Court filing, saying the state constitution protects their pensions. Creditors have also argued that Detroit Emergency Manager Kevyn Orr failed to negotiate with them in good faith to try to avoid the bankruptcy filing.

On Saturday, Michigan Attorney General Bill Schuette, a Republican, said he would defend retirees who risk losing public pensions because of Detroit's bankruptcy. This put him at odds with Emergency Manager Orr, who was appointed by Governor Rick Snyder, a fellow Republican.

But legal experts say that, ultimately, the case is likely to be resolved in bankruptcy court.

If that happens, a mediator will have a disproportionate impact.

Bankruptcy judges have much less power in Chapter 9 municipal bankruptcies than they do in corporate bankruptcies filed under Chapter 11 of the U.S. Bankruptcy Code. For instance, a judge in Chapter 9 cannot remove municipal officials or tell cities what to do with their property.

A mediator in Chapter 9 bankruptcies plays a central role, acting in settlement talks behind closed doors, unifying disparate creditors and advising them on the realities of the law.

Marc Levinson, a partner at Orrick Herrington & Sutcliffe who represents Stockton, California, in its bankruptcy, said municipal bankruptcies feature less-sophisticated creditors who can benefit from a mediator to walk them through the process.

A mediator can help discourage extreme positions and help bitter adversaries find common ground, said James Spiotto, a Chapter 9 expert and bankruptcy lawyer at Chapman & Cutler.

"It's a reality test," Spiotto said. "Are they in the zone of reality, or do they have no real basis for what they're saying?"

CANDIDATE-TURNED-JUDGE

Rosen was a partner at Detroit-based law firm Miller Canfield in 1990, when President George H.W. Bush named him to the federal bench.

In the 1970s, Rosen was a legislative assistant to Senator Robert Griffin, a Michigan Republican, then ran for Congress in 1982, losing to Democrat Sandy Levin. He has served on the board of the Michigan chapter of the Federalist Society, which emphasizes states' rights and strict adherence to the original meaning of the U.S. Constitution.

Some of the most critical disputes in Detroit's case involve states' rights, namely whether Michigan's state constitution allows the city to cut the pensions of its retirees. But by the time the mediation comes to Rosen, any question of states rights may already have been decided. The case is also subject to Chapter 9 of the U.S. Bankruptcy Code.

"Reality trumps policy, reality should trump politics, and sometimes reality even trumps the law," said Patrick Darby of Bradley Arant Boult Cummings, who represents Jefferson County, Alabama, in its Chapter 9 bankruptcy. "And the reality in Detroit is, there's not enough money."

USE HIM WISELY

According to Darby, mediation works best when there is a clear issue and a limited number of parties.

"When there are two positions on a continuum, the mediator can help find middle ground," he said.

Mediation has had mixed results in Chapter 9. A mediator was unable to help the city of Vallejo, California, reach new labor terms with two of its unions. In Stockton, California, mediation sessions prior to the city's bankruptcy filing helped settle some labor disputes, while other issues remain in mediation.

Sessions typically start with parties together in a conference room presenting their sides, then splitting off into separate rooms, with the mediator shuttling between conferences with each side. It is less formal than court hearings -- while mediators are often judges, they don't wear robes, Spiotto said.

"Guys are usually in shirt sleeves," he said.

Mediators try to relate openly and honestly to parties.

"They say, 'I'm a federal judge, and here's how I think your argument is going to fare in court,'" Darby said.

It Detroit's case, with many creditors battling over a limited amount of money, the process is not so cut-and-dried.

"The best mediator is still going to find it extremely difficult to broker a settlement," Darby said.

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