Showing posts with label UPDATE. Show all posts
Showing posts with label UPDATE. Show all posts

Wednesday, May 23, 2012

UPDATE 1-MF Global to get $168 mln back from JPMorgan

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The remote server returned an unexpected response: (417) Expectation failed.

* JPMorgan to return "excess collateral" to broker-dealer estate - trustee

* Trustee Giddens says still may have legal claims against JPMorgan

By Nick Brown

NEW YORK, May 18 (Reuters) - JPMorgan Chase & Co, under scrutiny for its ties to collapsed commodities firm MF Global, will return $168 million to the estate of MF's broker-dealer, the estate's trustee announced on Fr iday.

James Giddens, tasked with winding down the estate and recovering as much money as possible for its trader clients who lost money when the firm went bust, said JPMorgan will return "excess collateral" that was held in its estate when the bankruptcy began.

Giddens said the returned funds will help with get money back to customers, but is separate from ongoing discussions with JPMorgan over potential legal claims from Giddens that the bank could be holding customer money.

MF Global declared bankruptcy on Oct. 31. Commodity traders with personal accounts lost millions of dollars when, according to Giddens, the firm improperly used client money to cover corporate transactions as the firm sank.

Giddens has said customer accounts could be short about $1.6 billion.

JPMorgan has retained a security interest in the returned collateral so it can seek to recover it if certain allegedly secured positions in MF Global's capital structure turn out to be uncollateralized, according to Giddens' statement.

JPMorgan was the lead lender on MF Global's $1.2 billion loan, and was also one of its primary clearing banks. Customer advocates, primarily Commodity Customer Coalition leader James Koutoulas, have expressed suspicion that customer money could be at JPMorgan.

A spokeswoman for the bank declined to comment.

KOUTOULAS DEEMED 'FRIVOLOUS'

Separately on Friday, Koutoulas was rebuked by a judge for filing "frivolous" court papers attacking the mounting fees of Louis Freeh, the trustee unwinding the MF Global parent company.

U.S. Bankruptcy Court Judge Martin Glenn rejected arguments from Koutoulas that Freeh should not be allowed to extend a Friday deadline to file financial data about the company. Koutoulas had argued the postponement would allow Freeh, a former FBI director, to rack up unreasonable fees.

Glenn stopped short of granting a request by Freeh's attorney, Brett Miller, to sanction Koutoulas, but warned he may impose such punishments for future frivolous acts.

"Be fair warned," Glenn told Koutoulas, a fund manager and lawyer who has assumed the de facto role of representing MF Global's former customers.

Miller said Freeh planned to file the bulk of the data that sparked the controversy, which lays out information on MF Global's debts, assets, transactional history and personnel, later on Friday.

Koutoulas' fight began when Freeh estimated this week that professionals in MF Global's bankruptcy have accrued nearly $25 million in fees. Freeh's report did not say how much of that figure was accrued by Freeh and his lawyers.

Freeh, who has not yet submitted formal compensation requests, would be paid from money he ultimately recovers on behalf of the MF estate through litigation and other means.

Freeh separately asked the court to extend by one month a Friday deadline to file financial data about the company's debts, assets, transaction history and personnel.

Koutoulas objected that Freeh, who had been granted five similar extensions in the past, acted in bad faith by drawing out his work while continuing to rake in fees.

In bankruptcy, legal fees are paid before other creditor claims, meaning each dollar Freeh accrues is a dollar taken away from creditors, Koutoulas said.

Glenn, though, said Koutoulas did not back up his "bad faith" claims with evidence that Freeh actually had an impure motive for seeking the extension.

There is also the question of whether customers would be eligible to be paid back from money recovered by Freeh. Money he recovers is designed to pay back creditors of MF Global's parent estate, not customers of its broker-dealer unit.

Koutoulas said after the hearing that his group, the Commodity Customer Coalition, will soon file a motion seeking to convert MF Global's bankruptcy from a Chapter 11 to a more streamlined liquidation, known as Chapter 7. The move, he says, would save the estate money.

In Chapter 7, a bankrupt estate is put in the hands of a trustee whose job is to sell assets as quickly as possible and distribute money to creditors.

Koutoulas said he initially planned to make the request at Friday's hearing but after being called "frivolous," the moment didn't seem right.

"The plan was to get that into today's hearing, but I ended up having to be a little more defensive than I thought," he said.

The case is In re MF Global Holdings Ltd, U.S. Bankruptcy Court, Southern District of New York, No. 11-15059.



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Sunday, May 20, 2012

UPDATE 1-Stagecoach expands in U.S. with Coach America deal

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The remote server returned an unexpected response: (417) Expectation failed.

* To buy nine Coach America businesses for 85 mln stg

* Deal will help it expand its U.S. megabus.com ops

LONDON May 18 (Reuters) - British bus and rail operator Stagecoach has agreed to buy some of struggling Coach America's U.S. businesses, helping it grow its rapidly expanding North America operation.

Scotland-based Stagecoach said on Friday it had agreed to buy nine of Coach America's businesses, including operations in Texas and California, for 85 million pounds ($134.4 million).

It said the purchases would provide depot infrastructure, enabling it to expand its megabus.com budget coach network.

"Our North American division is the fastest growing part of the group and this transaction will allow us to acquire selected businesses and vehicles at attractive prices in markets and regions we know well," said Stagecoach chief executive Brian Souter.

"The acquisitions in Texas and California in particular will give us an extended geographic footprint to accelerate our growth strategy for the brand, which already covers around 80 key locations in North America."

Coach America is a major operator of bus and coach services in the United States and has been operating under Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection since January 2012.

The businesses being acquired include contract, line-run, charter and sightseeing operations.

The U.S. market has been a bright spot for British transport operators. National Express reported a 5 percent increase in North America revenue in March, while FirstGroup said its U.S. school bus and Greyhound operations continued to perform well.

Stagecoach's own North America bus business' like-for-like sales rose 14 percent in the 11 months to the end of March.

Stagecoach, which transports some 2.5 million passengers a day, said it also had the option to buy up to 85 further coaches from the U.S. firm for around 16 million pounds.

Stagecoach expects the deal to be approved by the United States Bankruptcy Court of Delaware next week.

Shares in Stagecoach, which have outperformed the FTSE All Share Industrial Transportation Index by 8.6 percent in the last year, closed at 233.2 pence on Thursday, valuing the business at around 1.3 billion pounds.



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