Acceder

Washington Mutual demanda a la FDIC por 17 billones US$ + daños

26,5K respuestas
Washington Mutual demanda a la FDIC por 17 billones US$ + daños
3 suscriptores
Washington Mutual demanda a la FDIC por 17 billones US$ + daños
Página
1.124 / 3.346
#8985

Re: Weil se esta atrincherando

Vision objetiva y no siempre optimista de otros.
Hasta que no se vean mociones y situaciones favorables al EC yo tampoco me creo nada.

#8986

Re: Weil se esta atrincherando

Terminó la audiencia?

La próxima fecha es el 13 o el 21 de Abril ?

Dodge

PD. Perdonen tantas preguntas, me perdí !

#8987

Re: Weil se esta atrincherando

Bueno todas las opciones son validas. Creo que ya sabemos porque se fue Joyce. Algo no cuajo en el trabajo de Venable, muy pòsible su pobre actuación del 12 de marzo. A Mike W no le gusto y decidio ir a x los que creia + cualificados.

Yo no quiero ver conspiraciones, tenemos 3 miembros en el EC si ellos se fueran me preocuparia. Este giro es bueno sino el mercado nos habria engullido.

Esto es mejor que una peli de Hitchcock

#8988

Re: Weil se esta atrincherando

Coincido en términos generales. Pero quedan muchas preguntas. ¿se fue Joyce porque no estaba de acuerdo con Venable?, aquí podría volver, ¿Se fue porque iban a sacar a Venable?, ¿cuánto tiempo insumirá para que los nuevos abogados entren en tema? ¿o se fue porque no estaba de acuerdo con esta contratación?. La verdad que lo que está pasando es un misterio y lo bueno es como ha dicho Mr. es que el mercado no nos penalizó con los precios.

#8989

Re: Weil se esta atrincherando

Los precios no han variado porque hoy no ha cambiado nada.
La reclamacion de los bonistas esta en el aire y solo ha habido entrada y salida de abogados.
Esto no puede mover los precios en absoluto.
Venable decepcionante porque ha estado mas de un mes y no ha hecho ni un movimiento.
Lo de Joyce canta bastante que esta en relación a Venable, no se, mucha casualidad si no es así.

#8990

Re: Weil se esta atrincherando

He! Juampi para el carro Que ser psicoanalista no es eso.Yo tambien admiro el optimismo del Sr Simpson pero mas aun su trabajo vitalidad diligencia y generosidad al abrir y aportar sus conocimientos a este foro. Y le estoy muy agradecida por todo ello pero creo que no hay que confundir conceptos.
Saludos a todos Go wamu!!!

#8991

Conflicts Force Big Law Firms to Lose Clients W.S.J

Big blue-chip law firms are losing potentially lucrative assignments to smaller firms even as the industry sees a spike in lawsuits against banks stemming from the financial crisis.

The reason for the change: ethics rules that govern conflicts of interest for lawyers and their firms.

Law firms usually can't sue or investigate banks that they have represented, unless the clients take the unusual step of waiving the conflict. Thus, many small to midsize firms, which count fewer banks as defense clients, are filling a growing demand for conflict-free lawyers able to file lawsuits against banks.

Litigation against banks includes claims that they misstated the value of mortgage-related securities or reneged on financing agreements. Ambac Assurance Corp. recently sued a unit of Credit Suisse Group, alleging the securities firm made misleading representations about attributes of home-equity lines of credit backing bonds the insurer guaranteed. A Credit Suisse spokesman says the suit lacks merit. Last year, MBIA Insurance Corp. sued Countrywide Financial Corp., now owned by Bank of America Corp, claiming it misrepresented the quality of mortgage-backed securities. Bank of America declined to comment.

Consolidation in the banking business has made it only harder for law firms to handle lawsuits against banks. It is increasingly difficult, lawyers said, for firms to find a major bank they haven't represented at some point. As a result, they are bumping up against the conflict-of-interest rules formulated by the American Bar Association and state bar groups.

The development is particularly frustrating to leaders at the nation's law firms, which, over the past two years, have sustained a decline in business steeper than any in the past 20 years. At many, revenue and profit have dipped, and firms have turned to cost cutting, mostly by laying off lawyers and staff by the dozens.

A survey by Citi Private Bank's Law Firm Group of 50 of the country's 100 largest firms, as measured by revenue, found last year's revenue at the firms was down an average 4% from 2008. These same firms, according to Citi, averaged 7% revenue growth in 2008, and 12% growth from 2001 to 2007. At the same time, smaller law firms have been helped by the fact that they often charge less than large firms—an advantage at a time when companies have had to cut their legal budgets.

Houston bankruptcy lawyer Hugh Ray said he grew so irritated by conflicts last year that he left Andrews Kurth LLP, a 400-lawyer firm he had called home for four decades. The firm counts many financial firms as clients.

Mr. Ray moved to McKool Smith, a 125-lawyer Texas firm with no bank clients. "I came over because my phone was ringing with big-case opportunities, but it kept raising conflicts," the 67-year-old attorney said.

One challenge, he said, came up in the bankruptcy of Tulsa, Okla., oil company SemGroup LP. Mr. Ray said his clients in the bankruptcy matter, a group of oil producers, had been sued by an affiliate of Goldman Sachs Group Inc.

Andrews Kurth told Mr. Ray to step aside in the suit because it had represented Goldman Sachs. Mr. Ray now is handling the suit at his new firm. He said that Andrews Kurth wasn't technically prevented by a conflict from handling the litigation, but it still declined to do so because it didn't want to risk alienating a bank it had represented. Andrews Kurth didn't return requests for comment. Goldman Sachs declined to comment.

The freedom to sue financial firms "is one the single biggest ingredients to the success of our firm," said Michael Carlinsky, a partner at Quinn Emanuel Urquhart & Sullivan LLP. At 400 lawyers, it is as big as some leading corporate-law firms, but Quinn Emanuel has purposely tried to avoid building a banking clientele so that it would have a freer hand to litigate against banks.

Last year, Quinn Emanuel was tapped to represent Washington Mutual Inc. in a suit against J.P. Morgan Chase & Co. The dispute centers around who owns about $4 billion in assets that J.P. Morgan claims it acquired in its 2008 takeover of Washington Mutual's banking operations.

New York law firm Weil, Gotshal & Manges LLP, with 1,200 lawyers, is representing Washington Mutual in its ongoing bankruptcy, but Weil was conflicted from squaring off against J.P. Morgan, according to Quinn Emanuel's Mr. Carlinsky. Quinn Emanuel has had 10 lawyers working on the litigation, Mr. Carlinsky said.

Smaller firms also are gaining increasing market share in white-collar criminal matters. These firms, lawyers said, often have a freer hand to represent Wall Street executives, who regularly assert defenses that cast their employers in a negative light. At the same time, many of the small to midsize firms can offer top-flight counsel.

"Increasingly, in criminal cases you'll see individuals represented by boutique law firms," said Steven Molo, a partner at a six-lawyer New York firm, MoloLamken LLP. Earlier this year, for example, Mr. Molo represented Eric Butler, a former Credit Suisse Group broker sentenced for misleading investors.

Mr. Molo said he wouldn't have been able to handle the matter last year, when he was a partner at 900-lawyer Shearman & Sterling LLP, a large international firm that counts Credit Suisse as a client.

"Conflicts was a factor in my leaving Shearman," he said.

The big law firms are trying to buck the trend. Ethics specialists say the large firms increasingly are seeking waivers or are presenting arguments about why a seeming conflict shouldn't technically disqualify a firm from handling a certain matter. "Excuse-making is on the rise," said Lawrence Fox, a partner at Drinker, Biddle & Reath LLP in Philadelphia who teaches a class on ethics at Harvard Law School.

Conflicts, to be sure, are far from a mortal threat to blue-chip firms. Banks and other corporate clients occasionally will sign waivers, allowing firms to take on legal work even if it might impinge on the clients' legal rights.

Still, as law firms continue to expand internationally, taking on more matters for a growing list of clients, conflicts only will grow harder to avoid.

"Any time a firm is growing and taking on more clients that is good news, but it means more conflicts," said Terry Conner, the managing partner of 550-lawyer Haynes & Boone LLP, a Dallas-based firm that represents many regional and international banks. "We spend a lot of time managing conflicts; it's a fairly constant process," he said.

Write to Nathan Koppel at [email protected]

#8992

¿Algún resumencito de lo que ha pasado hoy

Hola, esta semana estoy de vacaciones y ando conectándome con el móvil así que estoy poco conectado.

¿un resumen breve de lo que ha pasado con los WMB bondholders? Gracias. A ver si me entero por los otros foros...