Monday, September 30, 2013

Reuters: Bankruptcy News: Brazil's OGX on track to miss $44.5 mln interest payment -sources

Reuters: Bankruptcy News
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Brazil's OGX on track to miss $44.5 mln interest payment -sources
Sep 30th 2013, 23:25

By Guillermo Parra-Bernal and Sabrina Lorenzi

SAO PAULO/RIO DE JANEIRO, Sept 30 | Mon Sep 30, 2013 7:25pm EDT

SAO PAULO/RIO DE JANEIRO, Sept 30 (Reuters) - Brazilian oil producer OGX Petróleo e Gas Participações SA is on track to forego a $44.5 million interest payment due on Tuesday, two sources with knowledge of the plans said, moving the company closer to the largest Latin American corporate debt default ever.

Should the company decide to miss the coupon payment, an announcement will be made within a few days, said one of the sources. The other said OGX wants to use a 30-day grace period that starts when the company misses the payment to conclude debt restructuring talks with bondholders.

The most likely path for OGX, controlled by former billionaire Eike Batista, is to file for bankruptcy protection in late October following the decision to forego the payment, the second source added.

The sources spoke on condition of anonymity because they were not authorized to speak publicly about the situation.

A spokeswoman for OGX declined to comment.

OGX hired Blackstone Group LP and investment banking firm Lazard Ltd to help the ailing oil producer "review its capital structure." A group of bondholders, preparing for a contentious negotiation with the cash-strapped oil company, hired financial advisory firm Rothschild to advise them on a potential debt restructuring.

Pacific Investment Management Co, the world's largest bond fund known as Pimco, and BlackRock Inc, the world's largest money manager, are part of the group. Combined, bondholders on that group own more than half of OGX's $3.6 billion in outstanding bonds.

Tuesday's payment is on $1.1 billion of bonds due in 2022 . OGX faces an approximately $100 million coupon payment on its debt due in 2018 this December.

Bondholders were irked after Brazil's biggest banks refinanced maturing debt and stretched out debt repayments for Batista's cash-strapped mining, logistics and energy conglomerate, Grupo EBX. Banks have also been repaid some of the debt with proceeds from asset sales.

The pressure exerted by state and private-sector banks on EBX could enable them to virtually eliminate any significant loss on their exposure to the struggling group. But bondholders are set to face hefty losses on their investments with Batista, who less than two years ago had the world's seventh-largest fortune worth about $35 billion.

Prices on the bonds have tumbled more than 80 percent this year, making them the worst performing emerging-market bonds, according to Thomson Reuters data. Shares of OGX slumped 25 percent on Monday.

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Reuters: Bankruptcy News: Detroit's expected bond default seen raising constitutional issue

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Detroit's expected bond default seen raising constitutional issue
Sep 30th 2013, 23:07

Sept 30 | Mon Sep 30, 2013 7:07pm EDT

Sept 30 (Reuters) - Detroit is poised to default on about $641 million of its general obligation bonds on Tuesday, an event that is likely to spur a legal challenge over Detroit's decision to take tax money earmarked for bond payments and apply it instead to city needs.

About $411 million of the bonds targeted for default were subject to voter approval and raise money through property taxes, called millages.

A default on bonds that had been considered secured obligations could give rise to a claim that it is a violation of Michigan's constitution, which prohibits diverting revenue from tax millages to alternative purposes.

If the city does default, bondholders can still expect to receive payments, but the funds will come from bond insurance policies purchased by Detroit as its financial picture weakened in recent years.

Kevyn Orr, the state-appointed emergency manager who has been running the city since March, first warned bondholders on June 14 that he was labeling nearly $641 million of unlimited tax and limited tax general obligation debt outstanding as unsecured.

His plan to pay pennies on the dollar to unsecured creditors, including general obligation bondholders, through the future sale of notes is the template for Detroit's reorganization plan should the city be deemed eligible to remain in federal bankruptcy court, according to Orr's spokesman, Bill Nowling.

With Detroit sinking under more than $18 billion of debt and other obligations, Orr on July 18 filed what would be the biggest municipal bankruptcy in U.S. history.

"It seen pretty clear, you need to stop collecting the millage," said Eric Lupher, director of local affairs at the Citizens Research Council of Michigan, a non-partisan public affairs research group.

The constitution prevents revenue from tax millages from being diverted to cover a city's operational expenses. The millage "is only used to pay principal and interest. You just can't ignore that now because you need the money," Lupher said.

Anthony Minghine, associate executive director of the Michigan Municipal League, said that if any Michigan city were to tap debt service millage for operating purposes outside of bankruptcy proceeding the move would definitely be called into question.

"A (property tax) millage was levied for a specific purpose and if you don't use it for that purpose -- I want my money back," he said, referring to property taxpayers who may not agree with diverting the money. He added that it was unclear how voter-approved general obligation bonds will fare in Detroit's bankruptcy case.

Orr has said all unsecured debt is subject to immediate moratoria on payments, and the bonds that come due Tuesday are the second to fall under the moratorium after the city defaulted on $1.45 billion of pension debt in June.

The purpose of the moratorium was "to conserve cash so that (Detroit) can continue to provide essential services to its citizens," Orr said in his June 14 statement. His office pegged principal and interest payments on the city's general obligation bonds at $129 million in fiscal 2014, which began July 1.

Nowling and Michigan officials have declined to comment on the plan for the tax revenue earmarked for paying off Detroit's voter-approved general obligation bonds.

Of $1 billion of outstanding debt carrying Detroit's general obligation pledge, Orr has said he believes only $349 million of limited and unlimited tax general obligation bonds and nearly $90 million of notes and loans should be considered secured liabilities of the city.

Orr's office may shed some light on the situation later this week. Nowling said "the city will discuss its rationale for making any payment decision after it has made it."

Detroit bondholders can receive full payment on general obligation debt thanks to insurance policies purchased by the city.

Assured Guaranty, a major insurer of Detroit's bonds, said in a statement that it will meet its obligations under the policy sold to the city. "As always, investors that hold bonds insured by Assured Guaranty can be certain that they will continue to receive uninterrupted full and timely payment of scheduled principal and interest when due," it said in a statement.

Assured insures about $187 million of Detroit's unlimited tax general obligation bonds and $17.7 million of the city's limited tax bonds as of the end of fiscal 2012, according to a debt summary from Orr's office.

Other bond insurers -- National Public Finance Guarantee Corp, the public finance subsidiary of MBIA Inc.; Ambac Assurance Corp; and Syncora Guarantee -- also said they would make payments on Detroit debt they insure.

Ahead of the default, Fitch Ratings on Monday dropped Detroit's current credit rating to the lowest level of D, from C, affecting $613.8 million of limited and unlimited tax general obligation bonds.

In a report earlier this month, Fitch noted there is little precedent for classifying unlimited tax general obligation bonds as unsecured debt. Should a bankruptcy court approve Detroit's treatment of these bonds as unsecured debt, Fitch will reassess its ratings of tax-supported debt ratings within Michigan and perhaps the rest of the country, the firm said in a statement.

Frank Shafroth, director of the State and Local Government Leadership Center at George Mason University, said Detroit's treatment of unlimited tax general obligation bonds has a "fair chance" of getting appealed all the way to the U.S. Supreme Court if the bankruptcy court goes along with the move.

Detroit's historic bankruptcy filing and the uncertainty it is causing in the $3.7 trillion municipal bond market has grabbed the attention of regulators and others.

John Cross, head of the Securities and Exchange Commission's Office of Municipal Securities, said the office is closely following developments in Detroit's case with an eye toward implications it could have for general obligation bonds and public pensions beyond Detroit.

Allen Robertson, the newly elected president of the National Association of Bond Lawyers, said his group will be looking at general obligation bonds in the context of disclosure and bankruptcy cases like Detroit's. If the bankruptcy court agrees with Orr's handling of general obligation bonds, he said, investors and others would probably reconsider their assumptions about full faith and credit pledges on debt.

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Reuters: Bankruptcy News: Fitch cuts Detroit's GO ratings to D on imminent default

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Fitch cuts Detroit's GO ratings to D on imminent default
Sep 30th 2013, 20:31

Sept 30 | Mon Sep 30, 2013 4:31pm EDT

Sept 30 (Reuters) - Fitch Ratings on Monday dropped Detroit's general obligation bonds ratings to the lowest level of D from C ahead of the city's expected Tuesday default on its debt-service payments.

The downgrade affects about $411 million of the city's unlimited tax GO bonds and $202.8 million of limited tax GO bonds, Fitch said.

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Reuters: Bankruptcy News: UPDATE 1-Canada wireless upstart Mobilicity wins creditor protection

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UPDATE 1-Canada wireless upstart Mobilicity wins creditor protection
Sep 30th 2013, 21:31

Mon Sep 30, 2013 5:31pm EDT

By Alastair Sharp

TORONTO, Sept 30 (Reuters) - Wireless telecom company Mobilicity, one of the smallest players in the Canadian market, said on Monday it has won creditor protection from an Ontario court as it seeks regulatory approval for a transaction that would allow it to keep operating.

Mobilicity said the transaction is currently being reviewed by the federal government, but did not identify the possible buyer. It said in July it was talking to several interested parties.

A source told Reuters in June that Verizon Communications Inc was in talks with Mobilicity, although Verizon has since said it is not interested in the Canadian telecoms market.

The company said its customers would not notice any change in wireless service while it is in protection and that its dealer network remains open for business.

The Ontario Superior Court of Justice, which granted the protection under the Companies' Creditors Arrangement Act, also approved debtor-in-possession financing for some of Mobilicity's noteholders to a maximum amount of C$30 million ($29.2 million).

Earlier this year, the federal government effectively blocked a C$380 million deal for major operator Telus Corp to buy Mobilicity by saying Telus could not take over Mobilicity's wireless spectrum licenses.

Mobilicity did not apply to take part in next year's auction of valuable airwaves although its biggest debtholder, private equity firm Catalyst Capital Group Inc, and its founder and executive chairman, John Bitove, have both applied separately.

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Reuters: Bankruptcy News: Tesco puts U.S. grocery chain in bankruptcy, seeks sale

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Tesco puts U.S. grocery chain in bankruptcy, seeks sale
Sep 30th 2013, 19:30

By Tom Hals

Sept 30 | Mon Sep 30, 2013 3:30pm EDT

Sept 30 (Reuters) - Britain's Tesco Plc put its U.S. grocery store chain into bankruptcy on Monday as part of a plan to sell most of the 167 stores to a private equity firm led by billionaire Ron Burkle.

The bankruptcy ends the grand entrance onto the U.S. stage of Britain's biggest supermarket chain. When Tesco launched the chain in Arizona, California and Nevada in 2006, many expected the deep-pocketed company to quickly expand to challenge the dominant U.S. food retailer, Wal-Mart Stores Inc.

But Tesco jumped into the U.S. Southwest just as the region's sizzling real estate market began to cool, and the U.S. business never generated a profit, according to Bankruptcy Court documents.

Under the proposed sale, an affiliate of Tesco will lend Burkle's private equity firm Yucaipa Cos $120 million to help fund the takeover of the chain, Fresh & Easy Neighborhood Market Inc. Yucaipa anticipates acquiring and operating 150 stores.

Tesco has said the stores that are not sold will be closed. It has said about 4,000 jobs will be preserved out of 4,187 current employees.

A unit of Tesco will end up with a 22.5 percent stake in the Yucaipa affiliate that acquires the grocery store chain, according to documents filed in the U.S. Bankruptcy Court in Delaware.

The proposed sale to Yucaipa will serve as a leading bid in a court-supervised auction, which Fresh & Easy said it plans to hold on Nov. 11. The company asked the court to schedule a hearing on Nov. 13 to approve the sale.

Tesco spent $610 million in the first two years building the business, and sales eventually grew to $1.2 billion annually, according to court documents.

But the business was never able to support the top-of-the-market leases, and it was losing $22 million a month over the past year, according to the documents.

Bankruptcy will allow Fresh & Easy to reject or renegotiate leases that are no longer economical.

The company's biggest creditor is Tesco, which is owed $738 million. Tesco has taken a 1 billion pound (or $1.6 billion) writedown on the U.S. chain.

Fresh & Easy also owes $18.4 million to vendors.

The Chapter 11 bankruptcy filing comes as Tesco is in the midst of $1.6 billion turnaround plan. Once the envy of British retailers, Tesco has been hurt by falling profits, a costly retreat from the U.S. and Japanese markets, and revelations that horsemeat had been found in some meat products sold by Tesco and other retailers.

The case is In Re: Fresh & Easy Neighborhood Market Inc, U.S. Bankruptcy Court, District of Delaware, No. 13-12569.

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Reuters: Bankruptcy News: UPDATE 1-Fitch cuts Detroit's GO ratings to D on imminent default

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UPDATE 1-Fitch cuts Detroit's GO ratings to D on imminent default
Sep 30th 2013, 20:56

Mon Sep 30, 2013 4:56pm EDT

Sept 30 (Reuters) - Fitch Ratings on Monday dropped Detroit's general obligation bonds ratings to the lowest level of D, from C, a day ahead of the city's expected default on its debt-service payments.

"Fitch takes this action in response to the city's publicly announced intention to default on the scheduled interest payments on limited and unlimited tax general obligation bonds due on Oct. 1, 2013," the rating agency said in a statement.

Kevyn Orr, Detroit's state-appointed emergency manager, announced on June 14 a payment moratorium on about $641 million of general obligation debt considered to be unsecured. Orr's spokesman said earlier this month that nothing has changed since that time.

Detroit, which filed what would be the biggest municipal bankruptcy on July 18, classified about $411 million of voter-approved unlimited tax general obligation bonds as unsecured debt, even though the bonds are backed by a special property tax levy.

Fitch said its downgrade affects about $411 million of the city's unlimited tax general obligation bonds and $202.8 million of limited tax general obligation bonds.

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Reuters: Bankruptcy News: Canadian wireless upstart Mobilicity files for creditor protection

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Canadian wireless upstart Mobilicity files for creditor protection
Sep 30th 2013, 20:57

TORONTO, Sept 30 | Mon Sep 30, 2013 4:57pm EDT

TORONTO, Sept 30 (Reuters) - Struggling Canadian wireless telecom company Mobilicity has filed for and received creditor protection as it seeks regulatory approval for a transaction that would allow it to keep operating, the company said on Monday.

Mobilicity said the transaction is currently being reviewed by Industry Canada, but did not identify the possible buyer.

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Reuters: Bankruptcy News: Comcast to bid for Houston sports network if court forces sale

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Comcast to bid for Houston sports network if court forces sale
Sep 30th 2013, 16:15

By Tom Hals

Sept 30 | Mon Sep 30, 2013 12:15pm EDT

Sept 30 (Reuters) - Comcast Corp is prepared to bid if it can force a sale of the financially troubled, regional-sports network that carries the games of the Houston Astros baseball team and the Houston Rockets, the city's basketball team, court papers show.

Affiliates of Comcast, which owns NBCUniversal, on Friday filed for involuntary bankruptcy against Houston Regional Sports Network LP, and said in court papers the network should be put up for sale for the benefit of creditors.

Comcast "believes the network's assets have meaningful value, and would be prepared to make a bid to acquire either the network (under a plan of reorganization) or substantially all of its assets," the media conglomerate said in court documents.

Comcast also said that it wanted the court to appoint a trustee to replace the network's management, which is at a "complete impasse," according to court documents.

The network's three-member board consists of representatives of Comcast, the Houston Rockets of the National Basketball Association and the Houston Astros of Major League Baseball, according to documents filed by a Comcast affiliate.

The network has been locked in a dispute with cable and satellite television providers over how much it should receive per subscriber, which has limited the network's reach.

Comcast, which loaned the network $100 million through an affiliate, also said it was prepared to provide the financing necessary to keep the network operating until the bankruptcy could be resolved.

The Astros called the filing "improper," although the team had not been paid its media rights fees by the network for the last three months, according to a Friday press release.

Creditors can put a company into bankruptcy involuntarily if they can prove the debtor is not paying its bills. The company generally has about 20 days to respond to the filing.

Creditors of Allied Systems Holding Inc, a major hauler of cars for auto dealers that was majority owned by private equity firm Yucaipa Cos, used an involuntary bankruptcy petition to force the company into Chapter 11 last year.

The case is In Re: Houston Regional Sports Network LP, U.S. Bankruptcy Court, Southern District of Texas, No. 13-35998

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Sunday, September 29, 2013

Reuters: Bankruptcy News: Bahrain's Arcapita eyes new investments after first Gulf Chapter 11

Reuters: Bankruptcy News
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Bahrain's Arcapita eyes new investments after first Gulf Chapter 11
Sep 29th 2013, 14:23

Sun Sep 29, 2013 10:23am EDT

* New Arcapita entity eyes new deals after Chap. 11 - CEO

* Firm split in two after restructuring - one holds existing assets

* Other to manage asset sale process, complete new deals

* Targeting health, edu, logistics sectors; assets yielding 8 pct

* Brand still carries credibility with investors

* First Gulf firm to use Chap. 11 process

By David French

DUBAI, Sept 29 (Reuters) - Bahrain-based Arcapita is aiming to build a new asset management firm with a debut local deal in the logistics, education or healthcare sector as the company recovers from the first Chapter 11 bankruptcy process undertaken by a Gulf Arab entity.

The Islamic investment firm emerged from Chapter 11 on Sept. 17 after seeking court protection in March 2012 under hedge fund pressure ahead of the repayment of a $1.1 billion Islamic loan.

Under the court-approved restructuring plan, Arcapita is to be split into two entities: one which will hold the existing company assets as they are sold down to pay creditors, with a second in charge of the process' management.

It is the latter which is hoping to rebuild itself going forward, said Atif Abdulmalik, chief executive of Arcapita, with the entity aiming to raise $100 million of new equity from original Arcapita investors by January to help fund dealmaking.

"Our name still carries credibility and integrity as we kept on facing our investors and shareholders even during the darkest days of Chapter 11, telling them that what happened has happened but we're not going to let you lose here," Abdulmalik told Reuters in an interview in Dubai.

"The interest is there, from the same old board members and investors. They're interested to roll the dice again."

Abdulmalik said it was looking for investments that would yield in the region of 8 percent, although this would depend on the transaction, with logistics, education or healthcare the likely areas from which a first deal would emerge.

It had no deal currently lined up, he said.

New investments would be made utilising investor funds and pre-placements with investors as this would be less risky for the company, although some debt may be used to fund acquisitions, Abdulmalik said, adding debt at the company level would be much less than before the crisis.

"To mortgage your future on leverage is a very dangerous game as a mismatch could happen at any time," Abdulmalik said, adding the company had banking relationships it could use to raise finance when it needed it.

OLD ARCAPITA

Like many Gulf private equity and asset managers, Arcapita was hit hard by the financial crisis as the debt used to fund acquisitions made at a time of peak valuations could not be refinanced, with asset sales in a depressed market not viable.

The Chapter 11 process, also the first to use a debtor-in possession financing which complied with Islamic finance principles such as a ban on interest, ensured Arcapita's existing portfolio could be sold without a firesale.

"All the Gulf should have an equivalent of Chapter 11, where you bring creditors and owners and tell them 'this is a good business, the past is the past, is there a deal to be done going forward'," Abdulmalik said.

Gulf bankruptcy law is known for being untested, with creditors finding it difficult to secure enforcement action against assets in states with strict foreign ownership controls.

This has lead to many restructurings, such as the $25 billion Dubai World deal, to be agreements where obligations are extended to allow for businesses and asset values to recover.

Arcapita could use the Chapter 11 framework because it had assets in the United States.

The new Arcapita's assets under management, through its contract with the old firm, was $3 billion, Abdulmalik said, with around 35 businesses in the portfolio including private equity, real estate and infrastructure.

The recovery in values meant some U.S.-based assets would be sold in the near future, he said, without giving specifics.

There were no targets in terms of raising revenue from asset sales but, under the management contract, the new Arcapita would receive incentive fees, with levels depending on the rate of return achieved on the investment, Abdulmalik said.

(Reporting by David French; Editing by David Cowell)

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Saturday, September 28, 2013

Reuters: Bankruptcy News: Brazil OGX, OSX to file for bankruptcy protection - report

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Brazil OGX, OSX to file for bankruptcy protection - report
Sep 28th 2013, 21:29

RIO DE JANEIRO, Sept 28 | Sat Sep 28, 2013 5:29pm EDT

RIO DE JANEIRO, Sept 28 (Reuters) - OGX Petróleo e Gás SA and OSX Brasil SA, the oil company and the shipbuilder controlled by Brazilian tycoon Eike Batista, will seek court protection within a couple of weeks, Veja magazine reported on Saturday without saying how it obtained the information.

Efforts to reach spokeswomen at OGX and EBX, the parent company of Batista's crumbling empire, were unsuccessful. A spokeswoman at OSX did not have an immediate comment on the report.

Shares of OGX and OSX sank to their lowest level on Friday as the company, unable to produce as much oil as initially forecast, rapidly burns cash.

Investors fear that OGX will fail to pay OSX for the use of a vessel that guarantees a OSX bond. If OGX defaults, OSX creditors might be forced to seize the vessel to recoup their money.

OGX owes $3.6 billion to foreign bondholders and $900 million to OSX. In a separate report on Saturday, Folha de S.Paulo newspaper said the company has already decided not to pay $45 million in debt interest due next week.

The plunge in the share prices of Batista's companies has caused his fortune, once Brazil's largest, to shrink dramatically, limiting his ability to keep financing OGX, a startup with more investment expenses than revenue. (Reporting by Walter Brandimarte and Guillermo Parra-Bernal; editing by Gunna Dickson)

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Reuters: Bankruptcy News: UPDATE 2-Bankrupt Stockton, California says has deals with key creditors

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UPDATE 2-Bankrupt Stockton, California says has deals with key creditors
Sep 28th 2013, 03:42

Fri Sep 27, 2013 11:42pm EDT

By Jim Christie

SAN FRANCISCO, Sept 27 (Reuters) - Stockton, California said on Friday it had struck tentative deals opening the door to settlements with two major creditors, and putting the city at the "beginning of the end" of its bankruptcy case.

The deals also could avert a major court fight promised by the creditors, bond insurers that led opposition to Stockton's bankruptcy and who had threatened to drag the state pension fund Calpers into their fight with the city.

In a draft of its plan for exiting bankruptcy, Stockton said it had the "outlines of a negotiated settlement" with bond insurer Assured Guaranty over $124.3 million in outstanding pension obligation bonds the city had targeted for losses.

The draft plan also disclosed a preliminary deal with bond insurer National Public Finance Guarantee over $45.1 million in outstanding lease revenue bonds for the city's arena that had been in dispute.

The draft plan provided no details on the potential settlement with Assured and a spokesman for the bond insurer declined to comment. The draft said Assured executive management had not yet reviewed the deal.

"As this document was being finalized, the City was in negotiations with this creditor and had developed the outlines of a negotiated settlement," the draft said.

It also said a preliminary term sheet agreement had been reached with National, along with agreements on other bonds insured by it relating to parking garages and a city building.

National spokesman Kevin Brown confirmed the deal to Reuters: "We're pleased to have reached a settlement agreement with the City of Stockton that should expedite its exit from bankruptcy."

The draft said Stockton is near the "final chapter" of bankruptcy, noting that "while we expect further intense negotiations and court hearings, with perhaps a set back here and there before this is over, this at least is the beginning of the end."

National and Assured led efforts by Stockton's so-called capital markets creditors to block the city's bankruptcy case from moving forward, and they had insisted city pensions managed by Calpers be treated like other debt the city wanted to impair.

The U.S. municipal bond market has been watching Stockton's bankruptcy case closely for more than a year as the city in California's Central Valley had been aiming to force bondholders to swallow losses while leaving pensions untouched.

Alabama's Jefferson County in its bankruptcy restructuring plan in June proposed losses for bondholders, becoming the first local government to do so since the 1930s.

Pension costs are a growing concern for the $3.7 trillion municipal debt market and National and Assured contested Stockton's maintaining payments to Calpers, the California Public Employees' Retirement System.

U.S. Bankruptcy Judge Christopher Klein in April found Stockton eligible for bankruptcy protection and said the showdown the insurers sought over payments to Calpers would have to wait until the city filed its plan for adjusting its debt to exit from bankruptcy.

Calpers, had been sidelined in Stockton's bankruptcy proceedings but was ready to help defend its pension payments.

A spokeswoman for the $269 billion pension fund released a statement hinting at a truce with Stockton's capital market creditors. "We are hopeful this proposed plan of adjustment will allow Stockton to regain its footing and continue to provide the essential services to its citizens," the statement said.

Stockton's draft plan said the city would keep paying into Calpers, noting it would "reform and reduce the costs of its pension program along with other post-employment benefits, but retain the basic Calpers pension which is crucial to the City's ability to recruit and retain a quality workforce."

Dale Ginter, a lawyer for Vallejo, California's, retired employees in that city's bankruptcy, said he sensed exhaustion on the part of Stockton's bond insurers: "People are probably tired. They've spent a lot of money on attorneys fees".

Ginter also believes the bond insurers saw they may be better off cutting deals than continuing to contest pension payments in court when city employees and retirees had given up so much in concessions to help the city fix its finances.

"The employees and the retirees are taking a very big reduction in benefits," said Ginter after reading through Stockton's draft plan.

It projected Stockton's general fund through fiscal 2049-2050 would save $659 million from pension reforms while ending medical benefits for retirees would save $812 million over the same period.

The timing for a clash with Stockton over its plan for adjusting its debt to exit bankruptcy also would have been problematic for the bond insurers.

Stockton's city council recently put a measure to increase the city's sales tax on the November ballot to in part help the city exit bankruptcy following its austerity measures.

With revenue tumbling as its housing market crashed, Stockton cut $90 million in spending from 2008 through last year to balance its budgets and slashed it work force. But early last year Stockton's city council rejected deeper cuts due to concerns about public safety amid a spike in violent crime and it approved declaring bankruptcy.

Stockton's city council will take up the draft on Oct. 3 and the city could file a final plan with Klein early next month. With about 300,000 residents, Stockton was the most populous U.S. city to file for bankruptcy until Detroit filed in July.

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Friday, September 27, 2013

Reuters: Bankruptcy News: UPDATE 1-Bankrupt Stockton, California discloses deals with bond insurers

Reuters: Bankruptcy News
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UPDATE 1-Bankrupt Stockton, California discloses deals with bond insurers
Sep 28th 2013, 02:02

Fri Sep 27, 2013 10:02pm EDT

By Jim Christie

SAN FRANCISCO, Sept 27 (Reuters) - Stockton, California said on Friday it had reached tentative deals with the two creditors that led opposition to its bankruptcy, bond insurers that had threatened to drag the state pension fund Calpers into their fight with the city.

In a draft of its plan for exiting bankruptcy, Stockton said it had the "outlines of a negotiated settlement" with bond insurer Assured Guaranty over $124.3 million in outstanding pension obligation bonds the city had targeted for losses.

The draft plan also disclosed a preliminary deal with bond insurer National Public Finance Guarantee over $45.1 million in outstanding lease revenue bonds for the city's arena that had been in dispute.

The draft plan provided no details on the potential settlement with Assured and a spokesman for the bond insurer declined to comment.

The draft said Assured executive management had not yet reviewed the deal.

"As this document was being finalized, the City was in negotiations with this creditor and had developed the outlines of a negotiated settlement," the draft said.

It also said a preliminary term sheet agreement had been reached with National, along with agreements on other bonds insured by it relating to parking garages and a city building.

National spokesman Kevin Brown confirmed the deal, telling Reuters: "We're pleased to have reached a settlement agreement with the City of Stockton that should expedite its exit from bankruptcy."

National and Assured led efforts by Stockton's so-called capital markets creditors to block the city's bankruptcy case from moving forward, and they had insisted city pensions managed by Calpers be treated like other debt the city wanted to impair.

The U.S. municipal bond market has been watching Stockton's bankruptcy case closely for more than a year as the city had been aiming to force bondholders to swallow losses while leaving pensions untouched.

Alabama's Jefferson County in its bankruptcy restructuring plan in June proposed losses for bondholders, becoming the first local government to do so since the 1930s.

Pension costs are a growing concern for the $3.7 trillion municipal debt market and National and Assured contested Stockton's maintaining payments to Calpers, the California Public Employees' Retirement System.

U.S. Bankruptcy Judge Christopher Klein in April found Stockton eligible for bankruptcy protection and said the showdown the bond insurers sought over payments to Calpers would have to wait until the city filed its plan for adjusting its debt to exit from bankruptcy.

Calpers, had been sidelined in Stockton's bankruptcy proceedings but was prepared to help the city defend its pension payments.

A spokeswoman for the $269 billion pension fund released a statement hinting at a truce with Stockton's capital market creditors.

"We are hopeful this proposed plan of adjustment will allow Stockton to regain its footing and continue to provide the essential services to its citizens," the statement said.

Stockton's draft plan said the city would keep paying into Calpers, noting it would "reform and reduce the costs of its pension program along with other post-employment benefits, but retain the basic Calpers pension which is crucial to the City's ability to recruit and retain a quality workforce."

Stockton's city council will take up the draft on Oct. 3 and the city could file a final plan with Klein early next month. With about 300,000 residents, Stockton was the most populous U.S. city to file for bankruptcy until Detroit filed in July.

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