Acceder

Participaciones del usuario Futurecyborg

Futurecyborg 28/05/10 03:00
Ha respondido al tema Washington Mutual demanda a la FDIC por 17 billones US$ + daños
Hoy esta la noche movidita en cuanto a objeciones se refiere;lo mas destacable la objecion al POR/DS presentada por las WAHUQ (Piers Trustee),otro grupo con derecho a voto que objeta al DS/POR http://wmish.com/various/4406-1.pdf 2 objeciones al examiner solicitado por Susman,por parte de Debtors y unsecured creditors http://www.kccllc.net/documents/0812229/0812229100527000000000041.pdf http://www.kccllc.net/documents/0812229/0812229100527000000000052.pdf 2 objeciones contra el Chapter 7 presentado por WMI noteholders,una del EC y otra por los WMB bonholders http://www.kccllc.net/documents/0812229/0812229100527000000000050.pdf http://www.kccllc.net/documents/0812229/0812229100527000000000051.pdf No creo que te aburras esta noche,tienes para leer un buen rato... Vene,la frase parece un poco ambigua y no me termina de aclarar las dudas,veremos si el dia 2 entra algun cambio en el POR/DS Saludos
Ir a respuesta
Futurecyborg 28/05/10 00:41
Ha respondido al tema Washington Mutual demanda a la FDIC por 17 billones US$ + daños
No me hagas mucho caso Venerando pero creo que el ultimo dia de plazo para modificar y presentar el DS fue el viernes 21 y creo que ya no pueden modificarlo pues no da tiempo a las partes en contra a estudiarlo y objetar antes del 3 de Junio,mañana 28 vence el plazo para presentar objeciones al ultimo DS,por cierto Rosen acaba de archivar un escrito en la Corte contra el discovery solicitado por Susman,trata de limitar el discovery y suplica a la Corte aplazar el hearing de aprobacion del POR del 20 de Julio a la primera semana de Agosto,otra demora mas http://www.kccllc.net/documents/0812229/0812229100527000000000030.pdf
Ir a respuesta
Futurecyborg 27/05/10 16:52
Ha respondido al tema Washington Mutual demanda a la FDIC por 17 billones US$ + daños
Creo que segun la ley de BK,la Corte sólo podria aprobar el Chapter 7 siempre y cuando las partes en litigio obtuviesen mayor retorno de sus deudas que en Chapter 11 y creo tambien que el Chapter 7 seria mas ventajoso para las preferentes,pues al ser la liquidacion de WMI,los bonistas WMB se quedarian fuera del reparto y los $150M que WMI les da en el ultimo Amended POR pasarian a las pref,aparte que aflorarian todos los assets escondidos,IMHO
Ir a respuesta
Futurecyborg 27/05/10 16:32
Ha respondido al tema Washington Mutual demanda a la FDIC por 17 billones US$ + daños
Completamente de acuerdo con tu post,es una aportacion voluntaria,cada cual que actue segun su conciencia,lo postee como una informacion mas,en mi caso he enviado una aportacion testimonial de $50 ,más bien como una muestra de apoyo al esfuerzo de estos dos accionistas que estan luchando por los intereses de todos en lograr la reunion de accionistas en WA Saludos
Ir a respuesta
Futurecyborg 27/05/10 16:25
Ha respondido al tema Washington Mutual demanda a la FDIC por 17 billones US$ + daños
Conseguiran seguro los votos de los bonistas que representan $8.3B,pero votaran en contra otros grupos que representan mas capital,$7.5B preferentes y Cayman,$13B WMB bonos,mas las DIMEQ y comunes que aunque no tienen derecho a voto se da por supuesto que estan en contra del POR,lo que no se es el quorum nesesario para aprobar o denegar el POR,si alguien tiene alguna informacion al respecto le agradeceria la posteara saludos
Ir a respuesta
Futurecyborg 27/05/10 16:16
Ha respondido al tema Washington Mutual demanda a la FDIC por 17 billones US$ + daños
We (several WMI shareholders) have created a donation fund to help with the legal expenses being incurred by the two shareholders who have sued WMI in Washington State to force it to hold a long-overdue annual shareholders' meeting. The two shareholders, Michael Willingham and Esopus Creek Value, L.P., happen to be members of the Equity Committee, but their lawsuit in Washington State is not an Equity Committee action. Therefore, the legal expenses are being paid for by the two shareholders, even though their effort is intended to help all shareholders. With the "Shareholders' Meeting Action Fund" we will collect donations and then use them to reimburse the two shareholders for documented legal expenses arising from their lawsuit in Washington State. We have put in place a set of controls on disbursements which are intended to insure that the donations are used only as intended. The donation process is being conducted through our shareholder rights web site, WamuEquityRights.org (which was used to conduct the Joinder effort). You can read more about the Shareholders' Meeting Action Fund and the controls we have put in place, as well as make a donation via PayPal, at the following page on our web site: Shareholders' Meeting Action Fund www.wamuequityrights.org/index.php?optio...
Ir a respuesta
Futurecyborg 26/05/10 01:50
Ha respondido al tema Washington Mutual demanda a la FDIC por 17 billones US$ + daños
* Law.com Home The Work May 25, 2010 4:56 PM The WaMu Bankruptcy Won't End Posted by Zach Lowe The Washington Mutual Chapter 11 case has been contentious from the start, complete with accusations of sabotage. So it's fitting that a global settlement that would pave the way for resolving the mess seems to be perpetually out of reach. The newest twist: A group of senior bondholders who own debt from WaMu's banking unit announced Monday that it is opposing a proposed settlement between the bankrupt estate, the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation, other bondholders, and WaMu's new owners at JPMorgan Chase, according to Reuters and this release from Boies, Schiller & Flexner attorneys representing the dissident bondholders. Meanwhile, a separate group of WaMu shareholders, this one represented by Susman Godfrey, has also expressed concerns about the proposed settlement. This group is upset at the possibility that the bankrupt estate (advised by Weil, Gotshal & Manges and a litigation team from Quinn, Emanuel, Urquhart & Sullivan) may be leaving money on the table in the proposed settlement. Boies Schiller's clients have similar concerns, but also claim the settlement short-changes their class of bondholders while benefiting others, Reuters says. As you can see, there are a ton of moving parts here. In broad terms, the controversy stems from a series of disputes between the WaMu estate and JPMorgan over the latter's acquisition of the troubled bank during the height of the economic crisis. As you may recall, the FDIC rescued the bank, placed it into a receivership, and then sold it to JPMorgan (represented at the time by Sullivan & Cromwell) for $1.9 billion. Washington Mutual has since made two claims: Fierst, that by leaking false information about WaMu's finances, JPMorgan discouraged rival bidders that might have been able to save the bank. Second, that JPMorgan wrongly withdrew $4 billion in deposits from WaMu shortly before WaMu's bankruptcy filing, according to court records and this round-up from the Associated Press. The WaMu estate pursued potential litigation against JPMorgan and sought broad discovery of documents related to the JPMorgan-WaMu deal. The two sides have also argued about how to split up tax refunds WaMu is to receive (and, in some cases, has already received) linked to past losses, the AP says. The estate and JPMorgan (represented again in the bankruptcy litigation by S&C) have agreed on the broad parameters of a settlement that would return most of the $4 billion in deposits to the estate and revise how everyone would split up the tax refunds. The FDIC and its legal team at DLA Piper must also approve the deal, and the agency indicated last week it would do so, according to The New York Times. Various parties who hold debt linked to WaMu's parent company (represented by several firms, including White & Case and Wilmer Cutler Pickering Hale and Dorr) are either leaning toward approving the deal or reviewing it, according to the AP. But Boies Schiller partner William Isaacson says bondholders who hold debt in WaMu's bank unit stand to recover much less than other noteholders in the proposed deal. We reached out to Isaacson to learn a bit more about his clients, but we haven't yet heard back. We'll let you know if we do. A hearing on the proposed plan is scheduled for June 3 in federal bankruptcy court in Delaware.
Ir a respuesta