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DW Investment help RadioShack stave off bankruptcy -Bloomberg

Written By Unknown on Sabtu, 08 November 2014 | 16.47

Fri Nov 7, 2014 7:32pm EST

Nov 7 (Reuters) - RadioShack Corp was helped by David Warren's DW Investment Management LP from going bankrupt, as the hedge fund bought the biggest piece of the struggling electronics retailer's loan, Bloomberg reported on Friday citing people familiar with the matter.

RadioShack had earlier said that it may need to file for bankruptcy protection if its cash situation worsens. The company said it was also exploring other options, including a sale or an investment, and liquidation as the last resort.

The hedge fund, DW Investment Management LP, which advises Brevan Howard Asset Management LLP on credit investments, owns at least $100 million of the $325 million first-lien loan arranged last month by RadioShack's biggest shareholder, according to the report. (bloom.bg/1pxVCZd)

Standard General LP, which lined up the loan as part of a $585 million financing package, sold the rest of the first-lien loan to other hedge funds, Bloomberg reported citing people familiar with the matter.

RadioShack was not immediately available for comment. (Reporting by Rosmi Shaji in Bangalore)


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UPDATE 3-Detroit wins court approval for plan to exit bankruptcy

Fri Nov 7, 2014 6:05pm EST

(Adds comment by Detroit Emergency Manager Kevyn Orr)

By Lisa Lambert

DETROIT Nov 7 (Reuters) - Detroit won U.S. Bankruptcy Court approval on Friday for a road map to end its fiscal free fall and revitalize a city sinking under a huge debt load and dysfunctional government.

Judge Steven Rhodes confirmed the city's plan to shed about $7 billion of its $18 billion of debt and obligations and plow $1.7 billion into improvements, finding it both fair to creditors and feasible to implement.

"The city has worked honestly, diligently, and tirelessly to accomplish precisely the remedy that the bankruptcy code establishes for municipalities," Rhodes said in the ruling he read from the bench.

He acknowledged the anger the bankruptcy fueled among many Detroit residents and urged them to look forward.

"And so I ask you, for the good of the city's fresh start, to move past your anger. Move past it and join in the work that is necessary to fix this city," he said.

He also called Detroit's inability to provide adequate services to its residents "inhumane and intolerable," saying that the city's plan aims to fix that problem.

Once the proud symbol of U.S. industrial strength, Detroit fell on hard times after decades of population loss, rampant debt and financial mismanagement left it struggling to provide basic services to residents. During the 15-1/2-month bankruptcy process, the city's historic collection at the Detroit Institute of Arts (DIA) came into play as a potential pot of assets to satisfy creditors.

The journey through Chapter 9 municipal bankruptcy began on July 18, 2013, with major creditors girding for battle, and has wound down in a flurry of settlements. A so-called Grand Bargain taps in to $816 million from foundations, the DIA and the state of Michigan to ease pension cuts and protect city-owned art work from sale.

In his ruling, Rhodes said that settlement, which was key in winning the support for the plan from Detroit's two retirement systems and scores of city workers and retirees, "borders on miraculous." Bigger cuts to retiree healthcare were justified because that benefit, unlike pensions, was not protected under Michigan's constitution, he said.

However, a deal that granted unsecured holders of the city's unlimited tax general obligation bonds a 74 percent recovery was possibly at the top range of reasonableness, Rhodes said. He also noted that bond repayment can no longer be the only top budget priority in Michigan ahead of pensions.

Richard Ciccarone, head of Merritt Research Services, said Detroit changed the risk profile for municipal bonds.

"It's a milestone for municipal credit risk. If we look back over the past 50 years, this stands out as evidence that municipal bonds are not risk-free."

Two companies that guaranteed payments on Detroit bonds and were the last major holdout creditors in the case, Syncora Guarantee Inc and Financial Guaranty Insurance Co , received options to develop parcels of land. Rhodes imposed the plan on two classes of miscellaneous creditors.

With the cost of Detroit's consultants and lawyers topping $140 million, Rhodes said a process will be established to determine if those fees are reasonable.

Attending Rhodes' ruling were Detroit's state-appointed emergency manager, Kevyn Orr, who took Michigan's biggest city to bankruptcy court, and Mayor Mike Duggan, who is now tasked with carrying out the plan. Orr came under fire from many Detroit constituents and city-elected leaders when he was appointed by Michigan Governor Rick Snyder to turn the city around.

"The rule of law, comity, civility and unity prevailed. Sometimes not too easily - but eventually," Orr said at a news conference following the ruling.

Duggan, at the same news conference, took issue with Rhodes' concern that it is a possible conflict of interest for the mayor and a member of the city council to have a seat on a nine-member, state-created oversight board for a post-bankruptcy Detroit.

"I am going to sit on that financial review commission to make darn sure that every single document they ask for, every single concern they raise is responded to promptly by the city of Detroit," Duggan said.

Michigan Governor Rick Snyder, who authorized the bankruptcy, also noted at the news conference that much work remains to be done. "We need to redouble our efforts on the neighborhoods, to make Detroit a place where people want to raise their families." (Additional reporting by Karen Pierog in Chicago, Peter Suciu and Serena Daniels in Detroit, Hilary Russ and Megan Davies in New York; editing by David Greising, Lisa Shumaker and Matthew Lewis)

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U.S. SEC seeks to double $200 mln damages award against businessman Wyly

By Joseph Ax and Nate Raymond

NEW YORK Fri Nov 7, 2014 6:25pm EST

NEW YORK Nov 7 (Reuters) - The U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission will ask a federal judge to more than double the money Texas businessman Sam Wyly must pay from $200 million to $455 million for his involvement in an offshore fraud scheme, a lawyer for Wyly said on Friday.

U.S. District Judge Shira Scheindlin in New York has already ordered Wyly and the estate of his late brother Charles to pay $187.7 million plus interest to the SEC, which the regulator has said should total just under $300 million.

Sam Wyly, 80, who last appeared on Forbes' list of the 400 richest Americans in 2010 with a net worth of $1 billion, is responsible for around two-thirds of damages and has filed for bankruptcy in Dallas, saying he cannot afford the SEC's claim as well as potential tax claims from the Internal Revenue Service.

Scheindlin will preside over a hearing Wednesday at which the SEC will have an opportunity to convince her that the damages should be even higher.

During a hearing in Dallas bankruptcy court on Friday, Terrell Oxford, a lawyer for Wyly, said in written testimony read in court that the SEC is expected to seek $195 million plus interest from Sam Wyly, for a total of approximately $455 million.

The SEC is likely to ask that Scheindlin increase the award against Charles Wyly's estate, as well.

Meanwhile, lawyers for Wyly also disclosed at the hearing that preliminary settlement talks involving the Wyly family, the SEC and the IRS had taken place earlier on Friday.

"We began to get to know each other," said Josiah Daniel, another Wyly lawyer, adding that the parties discussed "in broad strokes" how a resolution might be reached through the bankruptcy proceeding.

A spokesman for the SEC did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

The SEC's case is centered on a system of trusts in the Isle of Man that the regulator said netted the brothers $553 million in untaxed profits over a decade of hidden trades in four companies they controlled.

The companies included Sterling Software Inc, Michaels Stores Inc, Sterling Commerce Inc and Scottish Annuity & Life Holdings Ltd, now Scottish Re Group Ltd.

Charles Wyly died in 2011, a year after the SEC sued, and his estate was substituted as a defendant. His widow, Caroline, has filed for bankruptcy as well, citing the SEC claim.

A jury found the Wylys liable for fraud earlier this year, leading to Scheindlin's damages ruling in September.

The SEC and the Wylys, including their children and grandchildren who are beneficiaries of the offshore trusts, have clashed on whether the regulator is entitled to tap into the hundreds of millions of dollars held offshore.

Sam Wyly's bankruptcy lawyer has said Wyly may be willing to repatriate the money held in the trusts as part of the bankruptcy proceeding in an effort to settle the SEC and IRS claims.

The bankruptcy case is In re Samuel E. Wyly, U.S. Bankruptcy Court, Northern District of Texas, No. 14-35043.

The SEC case is U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission v. Wyly et al, U.S. District Court, Southern District of New York, 10-5760. (Reporting by Joseph Ax; Editing by Diane Craft)

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Turnover on NY bankruptcy court brings heightened uncertainty

Written By Unknown on Jumat, 07 November 2014 | 16.47

By Nick Brown

NEW YORK Fri Nov 7, 2014 1:00am EST

NEW YORK Nov 7 (Reuters) - The stable of judges on Manhattan's federal bankruptcy court is undergoing dramatic turnover that could bring more uncertainty to one of the go-to venues for rescuing companies on the brink of financial ruin.

In January, Robert Gerber, the judge overseeing litigation stemming from the General Motors' ignition-switch recall debacle, will assume "recall" status, allowing court administrators to hire a new judge, people familiar with the matter told Reuters.

Two more judges are expected to join the court early next year, meaning that by the end of 2015 a third of the nine-member bench will be new, and at least four veteran judges will have left the bench since 2012.

It is the first time since 2000 that at least three new judges will join the New York court within a year and the change may affect the pace of the court's proceedings, the lawyers' fees and even the court's case load.

Under recall status, common for long-serving bankruptcy judges, Gerber will technically retire but continue to serve. According to one person, Gerber is considering leaving for good at the end of 2015. His chambers declined to comment and he has not announced any such plans publicly.

Also gone or leaving are Judge James Peck, who handled Lehman Brothers' liquidation, and Judge Allan Gropper, who adjudicated Kodak's restructuring and has announced his retirement.

Replacements for Peck and Gropper have been selected and are undergoing background checks, according to Karen Milton, circuit executive for the Second Circuit, which oversees judge succession in Manhattan.

NON-POLITICAL

Bankruptcy judges are not political appointees. Unlike federal judges nominated by the president and confirmed by the U.S. Senate, bankruptcy judges are selected by a panel of federal judges in their district. They are appointed to 14-year terms, are not term-limited and can retire any time.

Gerber, a 15-year veteran known as a thoughtful if occasionally ornery courtroom sheriff, has overseen a number of big bankruptcies, including those of chemical company LyondellBasell, satellite operator TerreStar and GM's whirlwind Chapter 11 sale in 2009.

Among the largest items left on his docket is litigation over whether GM can invoke the terms of the sale to shield itself from claims that it covered up ignition switch defects prior to its bankruptcy.

The case, in which Gerber has to decide whether to invalidate an order that he himself approved, would stay in his courtroom as long as he continued to serve on recall status and would go to a new judge if the case dragged on beyond his departure.

A judge with less personal history in the GM case might rule differently on the validity of the liability shield. Still, it is impossible to tell how a new judge would view future legal arguments, though any conclusions already reached in the case would probably be honored by the new judge.

"BABY JUDGES SCHOOL"

Bench turnover can slow things down in busy courthouses as new judges get up to speed. They even attend an orientation seminar known as "Baby Judges School."

A departing judge's most complex cases, however, would not necessarily go to that judge's successor. For example, when Peck retired, Lehman went to incumbent Judge Shelley Chapman, who has quickly taken the reins and issued complex decisions.

Where new judges could have the biggest impact is behind the scenes. While all judges apply the same federal bankruptcy law, they employ various strategies to foster cooperation between warring stakeholders and take different approaches to issues such as scheduling or settlement talks.

Unlike in other areas of law, judges also get to approve bankruptcy lawyers' fees because every dollar for lawyers is a dollar less for creditors. With top-tier partners charging $1,000 or more an hour, New York lawyers will be watching for any signs of the court getting tougher on fees, which might persuade some to take their cases elsewhere.

"One of the things that drives bankruptcy lawyers to file in New York is they (the judges) are kind and friendly on professional fees," said one lawyer.

Judges from outside the New York bankruptcy industry could be stricter because they are not used to such hefty fees, said bankruptcy expert Stephen Lubben, a professor at Seton Hall University School of Law.

But more likely, Lubben said, the new judges will be ex-bankruptcy lawyers from New York familiar with practices there.

One widely rumored candidate to fill one of the currently open seats is former Judge James Garrity, who now heads Morgan Lewis & Bockius' restructuring practice. Garrity, who served as a Manhattan bankruptcy judge from 1991 through 1999, did not return a call seeking comment. Milton declined to comment on Garrity, or on Gerber's plans.

Judge Burton Lifland, who presided over litigation from Bernard Madoff's Ponzi scheme, died this year, while former chief Judge Arthur Gonzalez, of Chrysler and Enron fame, left in 2012. Due to the nature of their status, Lifland and Gonzalez will not be replaced, but their departures represent key veteran losses for the court. (Reporting by Nick Brown; Editing by Tom Hals and Tomasz Janowski)

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PRESS DIGEST - Wall Street Journal - Nov 7

Fri Nov 7, 2014 12:57am EST

Nov 7 (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.

* U.S. President Barack Obama secretly wrote to Iran's Ayatollah Ali Khamenei in October and described a shared interest in fighting Islamic State militants in Iraq and Syria. The letter aimed at strengthening the campaign against Islamic State and nudging Iran's religious leader closer to a nuclear deal. (on.wsj.com/1sjSWKk)

* A year after its IPO, Twitter Inc CEO Dick Costolo has confounded investors with mixed messages and a series of executive changes. The CEO remains popular with employees, but some big investors are frustrated. (on.wsj.com/110g5uC)

* Home Depot Inc said hackers got into its systems last April by stealing a password from a vendor. Home Depot, which said 56 million credit card accounts were compromised by hackers, now says 53 million email addresses were stolen as well. (on.wsj.com/1xlcUrq)

* The Securities and Exchange Commission delivered a win to the $2 trillion exchange-traded-fund industry Thursday night, approving a new type of fund structure that does not have to disclose its holdings. The SEC said Boston-based Eaton Vance Corp can launch a so-called nontransparent ETF that will trade on an exchange but doesn't have to disclose its holdings and doesn't follow an index like a typical fund. (on.wsj.com/1tGr0TJ)

* House Speaker John Boehner warns President Barack Obama that unilateral action on immigration would "poison the well" for any cooperation with the new republican party. House Speaker and President held a year of confidential talks on immigration that ended in failure this summer. (on.wsj.com/13P9VP9)

* PepsiCo Inc President Zein Abdalla, widely viewed as a potential successor to Chairman and Chief Executive Indra Nooyi, is leaving the snack and beverage giant on Dec. 31. Hugh Johnston, PepsiCo's finance chief is now viewed as a potential internal candidate to succeed Nooyi. (on.wsj.com/1xeQyto)

* Bank of America Corp is in advanced talks with U.S. regulators to settle an investigation into whether the bank manipulated foreign-exchange rates. The bank said to lower its previously announced third-quarter results to a loss of four cents a share, from a per-share loss of one penny as it plans to set aside an extra $400 million for legal expenses. (on.wsj.com/1ybDtiT)

* The Securities and Exchange Commission is looking into trading activity in GT Advanced Technologies Inc's securities and is seeking information about its sapphire business. GT Advanced filed for bankruptcy protection on Oct.6 after Apple Inc unveiled its latest iPhone models with glass screens, rather than GT Advanced's sapphire. (on.wsj.com/1skp68x)

* Petroleo Brasileiro SA said it would raise gasoline prices by 3 percent and diesel prices by 5 percent in Brazil starting midnight Friday, following months of agitation from investors for such a move. The fuel price increase signals that the government of President Dilma Rousseff may ease government controls on the company. (on.wsj.com/1vRNE9V)

* Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac reported sharply lower profits but still earned enough for a combined $6.8 billion payment to the U.S. Treasury. The companies currently must pay nearly all of their profits to the U.S. Treasury. The weaker results stemmed mainly from slower home-price appreciation. (on.wsj.com/110ERuM)

* Walgreen Co raised $8 billion on Thursday to fund its purchase of international pharmacy chain Alliance Boots GmbH. The deal is tied as this year's fifth-largest corporate debt sale. Walgreen already owned a 45 percent stake in Alliance Boots, acquired in 2012. (on.wsj.com/1tjh4vE)

* Walt Disney Co Chief Executive Robert Iger said Disney is "well-positioned" if the market demands a move to a la carte cable programming. But he said too quick a shift could imperil the industry's business model. (on.wsj.com/1qsIEH7)

* Hundreds of car owners suing General Motors Co for alleged economic losses, personal injury or deaths connected to a defective ignition switch will have their arguments heard in a New York court. Jesse Furman, U.S. district judge set a trial date for the case on January 2016. (on.wsj.com/1xbiz4c)

* Microsoft Corp aims to maximize users over dollars with its Office franchise that lets mobile users access most Office 365 functions for free. Microsoft is not dropping the fee for Office 365 on laptops or desktops, and it still requires a paid subscription for access to some features in mobile versions. (on.wsj.com/1pqMrKf) (Compiled by Zara Mascarenhas in Bangalore)

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Detroit's dash through bankruptcy awaits court nod

Fri Nov 7, 2014 1:00am EST

Nov 7 (Reuters) - Detroit's nearly 16-month odyssey through bankruptcy reaches the finish line on Friday, when a federal judge will issue his ruling on whether the city's plan for shedding debt and investing in its future is both feasible and fair.

U.S. Bankruptcy Court Judge Steven Rhodes could approve the entire plan put forward by the city's emergency manager, Kevyn Orr. He also could send the plan back for partial revision. An all-out rejection, while possible, is not widely expected.

"I don't think (Rhodes) will throw it all out," said James Spiotto, managing director of Chapman Strategic Advisors in Chicago and a municipal bankruptcy expert. "He might ask for clarification or adjustments."

The feasibility of Detroit's plan is expected to occupy most of the court's attention during a proceeding scheduled to begin at 1 p.m. EST (1800 GMT) on Friday. Most of the fairness questions appear to have been answered with the settlements Detroit reached with major creditors, including bond-insurance companies and public employee pension funds.

Court-appointed expert, Martha Kopacz, testified the city's plan is feasible. But she said the relatively fast pace of the city's case may have produced more generous terms for creditors and pushed Detroit "to the skinny end of feasibility."

Kopacz, a senior managing director at Phoenix Management in Boston, also said Detroit was "at the edge" of its ability to repay $275 million the city plans to borrow to finance its exit from bankruptcy.

The plan to shed about $7 billion of Detroit's $18 billion of debt includes $1.7 billion of reinvestment initiatives through 2023. Those would be funded in part by improved revenue and cost savings.

Spiotto said the $1.7 billion "may turn out to be a drop in the bucket," as Detroit's needs over the next decade would likely eclipse that amount.

Michael Sweet, bankruptcy attorney with Fox Rothschild in San Francisco, said Detroit will need to succeed with efforts to revitalize. "They have to get people to come back and stay and feel safe and secure," he said. "The city needs to prove it's back."

In reaching his decision, Judge Rhodes can draw on thousands of exhibits and hours of testimony from Orr, Mayor Mike Duggan, pension actuaries, and others during a confirmation hearing that started Sept. 2 and concluded Oct. 27.

The biggest-ever municipal bankruptcy began on July 18, 2013 with major creditors girding for battle and has wound down in a flurry of settlements. A so-called "Grand Bargain" taps into $816 million from foundations, the Detroit Institute of Arts and the state of Michigan to ease pension cuts and protect city-owned art work from sale. Two companies that guaranteed payments on Detroit bonds, Syncora Guarantee Inc and Financial Guaranty Insurance Co, received options to develop parcels of land.

Judge Rhodes has signaled support for the settlements, noted Juliet Moringiello, a professor at Widener School of Law in Harrisburg, Pennsylvania. "There would have been clearer signals all along if this isn't good enough," she said.

Meanwhile, consultants and law firms have billed Detroit $140 million, with Orr's former law firm, Jones Day, billing the most at $52.3 million through Oct. 24.

Rhodes has mentioned the possibility that the city could turn to mediation or even litigation over its bankruptcy-related fees.

The costliness alone may deter other fiscally troubled cities from filing for bankruptcy, Spiotto said. "It's the wake-up call for other municipalities. Don't let it go too far," he said. (Reporting by Karen Pierog in Chicago, Tom Hals in Delaware and Lisa Lambert in Washington; Editing by David Greising and Lisa Shumaker)

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GM tells court it not liable for claims over pre-bankruptcy cars

Written By Unknown on Kamis, 06 November 2014 | 16.47

By Jessica Dye and Nick Brown

NEW YORK Wed Nov 5, 2014 7:16pm EST

NEW YORK Nov 5 (Reuters) - General Motors said in a court filing on Wednesday that it should not have to face lawsuits based on safety issues in cars made before its 2009 bankruptcy, including a faulty ignition switch that led to the recall of 2.6 million cars earlier this year.

The brief, filed in Manhattan bankruptcy court, lays out GM's legal arguments and is the opening salvo in litigation from GM drivers who say the automaker should make them whole for losses related to recalls this year.

The ignition switch recalls, which began in February, have since grown to encompass numerous problems affecting millions of vehicles. The company is facing some 130 lawsuits over accidents and lost vehicle value.

In April, GM asked Judge Robert Gerber of the U.S. Bankruptcy Court in Manhattan, who oversaw the bankruptcy, to bar claims related to vehicles made before 2009 based on the terms of the sale order that created the so-called "New GM." Liabilities related to older vehicles were largely retained by a shell company now known as "Old GM."

Plaintiffs' lawyers have asked Gerber to rule that bankruptcy protection does not apply because their clients were not informed about the problems at the time and had no chance to argue their cases during the proceedings.

On Wednesday, GM said plaintiffs' lawyers were trying to re-litigate issues that had been aired fully and settled five years ago.

"(P)laintiffs resurrect the same failed arguments as the creditors before them made in seeking payments from New GM for Old GM's liabilities," the brief said.

The dispute is broken into four so-called "threshold" issues that Gerber decided should be dealt with at the outset of the case. GM maintains it has the upper hand on all four.

It rejected plaintiffs' contention that they were not given notice of the bankruptcy sale in violation of their due process rights. It also stressed that none of its actions constitute fraud against the bankruptcy court, which is reserved for "egregious" conduct that "defiles the court itself." And it asserted that any grievances about the sale process should be against Old GM, which was responsible for the transaction.

Furthermore, the carmaker said, the defects at issue are liabilities that remain the responsibility of Old GM.

In an emailed statement, GM spokesman Alan Adler said the company believed its position was consistent with federal law and legal precedent. Adler added that the company has established an out-of-court program run by lawyer Kenneth Feinberg to provide compensation for claims on behalf of individuals injured or killed in pre-bankruptcy crashes.

A lead lawyer for the plaintiffs, Steve Berman, said in an email that the filing was expected.

"I say bring it, we will beat it," he said.

Plaintiffs' response is due on Dec. 16, and Gerber has scheduled a hearing for Jan. 26. (Reporting by Jessica Dye and Nick Brown; Editing by Alexia Garamfalvi and Andre Grenon)

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Nickel miner Talvivaara's subsidiary to apply for bankruptcy

HELSINKI Thu Nov 6, 2014 3:06am EST

HELSINKI Nov 6 (Reuters) - Finnish nickel miner Talvivaara said on Thursday its subsidiary Talvivaara Sotkamo Ltd, which includes its actual mining assets, will apply for bankruptcy after failing to raise financing.

The parent company will continue its operations for the time being and aims to secure financing to buy the operations from Talvivaara Sotkamo, the company said.

Hurt by repeated production disruptions and environmental damage, Talvivaara last year suspended its mining operations at its only mine in northern Finland, and started a court-led debt restructuring process.

In September, its administrator proposed Talvivaara's debt would be cut by up to 99 percent in a eight-year restructuring plan. (Reporting By Jussi Rosendahl; editing by Susan thomas)


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UPDATE 1-OW Bunker says at risk of bankruptcy after discovering fraud

Thu Nov 6, 2014 3:57am EST

* Company says discovered fraud by unnamed staff at Singapore unit

* Says to file for court restructuring process

* Head of risk management fired as result of trading loss

* Owes $750 million to 13 banks

* Shares suspended, had listed in March at 145 crowns (Adds comments from chairman, trader and details)

By Ole Mikkelsen

COPENHAGEN, Nov 6 (Reuters) - Danish shipping fuel supplier OW Bunker A/S has warned it is at risk of bankruptcy after discovering fraud by unnamed senior employees in its Singapore-based subsidiary which will send it deep into the red this year.

"The company is at risk of going bankrupt. We have decided to file for the commencement of a court restructuring process," Chairman Niels Henrik Jensen told Reuters. The group, whose shares have been suspended, said it had fired its head of risk management.

The extent of the fraud is not yet clear but preliminary findings suggest a potential loss of around $125 million, the company said, without giving any details of the nature of the fraud.

At the same time a review of the company's risk management contracts means further losses than previously announced now can be expected. An estimated trading loss of $24.5 million announced on Oct. 23 is upgraded to around $150 million, the company added.

Jensen said Danske Bank and Nordea still support the company but since 11 international banks had withdrawn their support, management had decided to seek a court restructuring procedure.

Head of risk management Jane Dahl Christensen has been fired as a consequence of the trading loss.

By revenue OW Bunker is the third-largest company in Denmark and it owes the 13 banks $750 million.

"This is major news and the loss is massive. Even for an oil company the loss is massive, let alone a bunker (fuel) trader," a Singapore based oil trader said.

OW Bunker is in discussions with syndicate banks and said it will inform the market further as soon as possible.

OW Bunker was listed on Nasdaq Copenhagen in March at 145 Danish crowns per share, giving it a stock market value of about 5.3 billion Danish crowns ($892 million). Morgan Stanley, Carnegie, Nordea and ABG Sundal Collier lead the flotation.

Management has twice since downgraded profit guidance for the year.

OW Bunker shares closed at 83.50 crowns on Wednesday. The company has around 20,000 shareholders with private equity company Altor as the biggest shareholder holding 42.8 percent.

(1 US dollar = 5.9409 Danish crown) (Additional reporting by Rachel Armstrong and Jessica Jaganathan in Singapore; Editing by Stephen Coates and David Holmes)

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UPDATE 1-Energy Future Holdings given conditional OK to take Oncor bids

Written By Unknown on Rabu, 05 November 2014 | 16.48

Mon Nov 3, 2014 3:07pm EST

(New from paragraph three with comments from judge and background)

By Tom Hals

Nov 3 (Reuters) - Bankrupt power company Energy Future Holdings Corp received conditional court approval to accept bids for its majority stake in Oncor, a power transmission company in Texas worth billions of dollars.

Delaware Bankruptcy Judge Christopher Sontchi said on Monday Energy Future could begin accepting bids once it had changed the way affiliates approved of the plan to sell Oncor. He also said the bidding process must involve the two official creditors committees and the time frame for the sale should be extended.

"We are not reinventing the wheel here," said Sontchi as he read Monday's ruling following four days of testimony and argument that ended last week.

"The immense size of this case and $18 billion asset is certainly unusual and the involvement of public companies as bidders is a complicating factor. But there is no reason to depart from established practices that have developed for selling an asset in bankruptcy," the judge said.

Creditors had objected to the proposed process because it involved sealed bids to choose an initial bidder, known as a stalking horse. Once the stalking horse was chosen, Energy Future planned to have an open auction when all bids could be reviewed by participants.

Sontchi said Energy Future would have to allow the participation of the two official creditors committees in the selection of a stalking horse bidder. The company originally set a deadline for final bids for the role of stalking horse on Nov. 21, which Sontchi said would have to be extended.

Sources have told Reuters that potential bidders include NextEra Energy Inc of Juno Beach, Florida; Hunt Consolidated Inc of Dallas; and Houston-based CenterPoint Energy Inc.

Oncor, which is not bankrupt, distributes power to 3 million homes in Texas and operates 120,000 miles of power lines. Energy Future owns 80 percent of Oncor, but it is not selling the stake directly. Instead, the auction will determine the right to own Energy Future's equity when it exits bankruptcy.

As a result, the sale is dependent on Energy Future's confirmation of a plan of reorganization, which it expects to do by the end of 2015. Creditors complained that the Oncor sale, and spin-off of other valuable assets, locked Energy Future into a plan without negotiating with many of its creditors.

Energy Future plans to spin off its Luminant power generating business and its TXU Energy retail electricity supplier to the senior creditors of those units, which are owed $24 billion.

Energy Future took on much of its debt in 2007 in the record buyout of TXU Corp, was led by KKR & Co, TPG Capital Management [TPG.UL} and the private equity arm of Goldman Sachs Group Inc.

The case is Energy Future Holdings Corp, U.S. Bankruptcy Court, District of Delaware, No. 14-10979. (Reporting by Tom Hals in Wilmington, Delaware; Editing by Meredith Mazzilli and Steve Orlofsky)

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Market Chatter- Corporate finance press digest

Mon Nov 3, 2014 11:30pm EST

Nov 4 (Reuters) - The following corporate finance-related stories were reported by media:

* LightSquared, the bankrupt wireless venture owned by Phil Falcone's Harbinger Capital Partners, has reached a deal to bring the company out of bankruptcy under control of lenders, according to a person close to the matter.

* Xiaomi Corp is in talks for a funding round that values the smartphone maker at around $40 billion to $50 billion, people familiar with the matter said. (bloom.bg/1x2Z9xm)

* United Biscuits' (IPO-UNI.L) private equity owners are close to sealing a deal to sell the UK-based cookies and snacks maker to Turkey's Yildiz Holding for about over 2 billion pounds ($3 billion), including debt, a source familiar with the matter told Reuters.

* Total SA returned the 175,000-barrel-per-day crude distillation unit to production on Sunday at its 225,000-bpd Port Arthur, Texas, refinery, sources familiar with operations at the refinery said on Monday.

* Marathon Petroleum Corp's 451,000 barrel-per-day (bpd) Galveston Bay Refinery has cut back production to the minimum on its 60,000-bpd gasoline-producing fluidic catalytic cracking unit 1 (FCCU1) due to work on a pollution-reduction system, said sources familiar with operations at the refinery.

* UK lender Virgin Money is seeking to go ahead with its postponed London stock market listing amid firmer market conditions by the end of next week, two sources familiar with the matter said on Monday.

For the deals of the day click on

For the Morning News Call-EMEA newsletter click on (Compiled by Rishika Sadam in Bangalore)

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UPDATE 1-Market Chatter-Corporate finance press digest

Tue Nov 4, 2014 1:03am EST

(Adds item on Blackstone)

Nov 4 (Reuters) - The following corporate finance-related stories were reported by media:

* Singapore sovereign wealth fund GIC Pte is leading a consortium to buy U.S.-based IndCor Properties from Blackstone Group in a deal valued at about $8 billion including debt, a person familiar with the matter said on Tuesday.

* LightSquared, the bankrupt wireless venture owned by Phil Falcone's Harbinger Capital Partners, has reached a deal to bring the company out of bankruptcy under control of lenders, according to a person close to the matter.

* Xiaomi Corp is in talks for a funding round that values the smartphone maker at around $40 billion to $50 billion, people familiar with the matter said. (bloom.bg/1x2Z9xm)

* United Biscuits' (IPO-UNI.L) private equity owners are close to sealing a deal to sell the UK-based cookies and snacks maker to Turkey's Yildiz Holding for about over 2 billion pounds ($3 billion), including debt, a source familiar with the matter told Reuters.

* Total SA returned the 175,000-barrel-per-day crude distillation unit to production on Sunday at its 225,000-bpd Port Arthur, Texas, refinery, sources familiar with operations at the refinery said on Monday.

* Marathon Petroleum Corp's 451,000 barrel-per-day (bpd) Galveston Bay Refinery has cut back production to the minimum on its 60,000-bpd gasoline-producing fluidic catalytic cracking unit 1 (FCCU1) due to work on a pollution-reduction system, said sources familiar with operations at the refinery.

* UK lender Virgin Money is seeking to go ahead with its postponed London stock market listing amid firmer market conditions by the end of next week, two sources familiar with the matter said on Monday.

For the deals of the day click on

For the Morning News Call-EMEA newsletter click on (Compiled by Rishika Sadam in Bangalore)

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UPDATE 1-Energy Future Holdings given conditional OK to take Oncor bids

Written By Unknown on Selasa, 04 November 2014 | 16.48

Mon Nov 3, 2014 3:07pm EST

(New from paragraph three with comments from judge and background)

By Tom Hals

Nov 3 (Reuters) - Bankrupt power company Energy Future Holdings Corp received conditional court approval to accept bids for its majority stake in Oncor, a power transmission company in Texas worth billions of dollars.

Delaware Bankruptcy Judge Christopher Sontchi said on Monday Energy Future could begin accepting bids once it had changed the way affiliates approved of the plan to sell Oncor. He also said the bidding process must involve the two official creditors committees and the time frame for the sale should be extended.

"We are not reinventing the wheel here," said Sontchi as he read Monday's ruling following four days of testimony and argument that ended last week.

"The immense size of this case and $18 billion asset is certainly unusual and the involvement of public companies as bidders is a complicating factor. But there is no reason to depart from established practices that have developed for selling an asset in bankruptcy," the judge said.

Creditors had objected to the proposed process because it involved sealed bids to choose an initial bidder, known as a stalking horse. Once the stalking horse was chosen, Energy Future planned to have an open auction when all bids could be reviewed by participants.

Sontchi said Energy Future would have to allow the participation of the two official creditors committees in the selection of a stalking horse bidder. The company originally set a deadline for final bids for the role of stalking horse on Nov. 21, which Sontchi said would have to be extended.

Sources have told Reuters that potential bidders include NextEra Energy Inc of Juno Beach, Florida; Hunt Consolidated Inc of Dallas; and Houston-based CenterPoint Energy Inc.

Oncor, which is not bankrupt, distributes power to 3 million homes in Texas and operates 120,000 miles of power lines. Energy Future owns 80 percent of Oncor, but it is not selling the stake directly. Instead, the auction will determine the right to own Energy Future's equity when it exits bankruptcy.

As a result, the sale is dependent on Energy Future's confirmation of a plan of reorganization, which it expects to do by the end of 2015. Creditors complained that the Oncor sale, and spin-off of other valuable assets, locked Energy Future into a plan without negotiating with many of its creditors.

Energy Future plans to spin off its Luminant power generating business and its TXU Energy retail electricity supplier to the senior creditors of those units, which are owed $24 billion.

Energy Future took on much of its debt in 2007 in the record buyout of TXU Corp, was led by KKR & Co, TPG Capital Management [TPG.UL} and the private equity arm of Goldman Sachs Group Inc.

The case is Energy Future Holdings Corp, U.S. Bankruptcy Court, District of Delaware, No. 14-10979. (Reporting by Tom Hals in Wilmington, Delaware; Editing by Meredith Mazzilli and Steve Orlofsky)

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Market Chatter- Corporate finance press digest

Mon Nov 3, 2014 11:30pm EST

Nov 4 (Reuters) - The following corporate finance-related stories were reported by media:

* LightSquared, the bankrupt wireless venture owned by Phil Falcone's Harbinger Capital Partners, has reached a deal to bring the company out of bankruptcy under control of lenders, according to a person close to the matter.

* Xiaomi Corp is in talks for a funding round that values the smartphone maker at around $40 billion to $50 billion, people familiar with the matter said. (bloom.bg/1x2Z9xm)

* United Biscuits' (IPO-UNI.L) private equity owners are close to sealing a deal to sell the UK-based cookies and snacks maker to Turkey's Yildiz Holding for about over 2 billion pounds ($3 billion), including debt, a source familiar with the matter told Reuters.

* Total SA returned the 175,000-barrel-per-day crude distillation unit to production on Sunday at its 225,000-bpd Port Arthur, Texas, refinery, sources familiar with operations at the refinery said on Monday.

* Marathon Petroleum Corp's 451,000 barrel-per-day (bpd) Galveston Bay Refinery has cut back production to the minimum on its 60,000-bpd gasoline-producing fluidic catalytic cracking unit 1 (FCCU1) due to work on a pollution-reduction system, said sources familiar with operations at the refinery.

* UK lender Virgin Money is seeking to go ahead with its postponed London stock market listing amid firmer market conditions by the end of next week, two sources familiar with the matter said on Monday.

For the deals of the day click on

For the Morning News Call-EMEA newsletter click on (Compiled by Rishika Sadam in Bangalore)

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UPDATE 1-Market Chatter-Corporate finance press digest

Tue Nov 4, 2014 1:03am EST

(Adds item on Blackstone)

Nov 4 (Reuters) - The following corporate finance-related stories were reported by media:

* Singapore sovereign wealth fund GIC Pte is leading a consortium to buy U.S.-based IndCor Properties from Blackstone Group in a deal valued at about $8 billion including debt, a person familiar with the matter said on Tuesday.

* LightSquared, the bankrupt wireless venture owned by Phil Falcone's Harbinger Capital Partners, has reached a deal to bring the company out of bankruptcy under control of lenders, according to a person close to the matter.

* Xiaomi Corp is in talks for a funding round that values the smartphone maker at around $40 billion to $50 billion, people familiar with the matter said. (bloom.bg/1x2Z9xm)

* United Biscuits' (IPO-UNI.L) private equity owners are close to sealing a deal to sell the UK-based cookies and snacks maker to Turkey's Yildiz Holding for about over 2 billion pounds ($3 billion), including debt, a source familiar with the matter told Reuters.

* Total SA returned the 175,000-barrel-per-day crude distillation unit to production on Sunday at its 225,000-bpd Port Arthur, Texas, refinery, sources familiar with operations at the refinery said on Monday.

* Marathon Petroleum Corp's 451,000 barrel-per-day (bpd) Galveston Bay Refinery has cut back production to the minimum on its 60,000-bpd gasoline-producing fluidic catalytic cracking unit 1 (FCCU1) due to work on a pollution-reduction system, said sources familiar with operations at the refinery.

* UK lender Virgin Money is seeking to go ahead with its postponed London stock market listing amid firmer market conditions by the end of next week, two sources familiar with the matter said on Monday.

For the deals of the day click on

For the Morning News Call-EMEA newsletter click on (Compiled by Rishika Sadam in Bangalore)

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Veolia, CDC to call in loans on Corsica ferry firm SNCM

Written By Unknown on Senin, 03 November 2014 | 16.47

PARIS Fri Oct 31, 2014 8:20am EDT

PARIS Oct 31 (Reuters) - French public passenger transport group Transdev, owned by Veolia and state bank CDC, is to call in loans to its France-Corsica ferry operator unit SNCM next week, it said on Friday, pushing the unit into filing for court protection from insolvency.

Transdev's owners have said court protection from creditors is the only way to shield the loss-making ferry operator from two separate European Union state aid repayment claims totalling 440 million euros.

Following an SNCM supervisory board meeting in Paris, Transdev said it would call in the loans on Monday and said that the legal proceedings would protect SNCM from the claims for repayment of state aid while a buyer is sought.

Once the firm goes under court protection, a new shareholder could buy some of SNCM's eight ferries and continue operations under a new legal structure, with some 800 to 1200 of SNCM's more than 2,000 staff, according to a management plan outlined to unions earlier this month.

The core Marseille-Corsica ferry route, which is subsidised by the state, and two lines to North Africa could continue. But other crossings from Nice and Toulon to Corsica and Sardinia would probably be abandoned, according to the plan.

Loss-making SNCM was kept going by a 103 million-euro loan from Transdev and a 14 million-euro loan from Veolia, as well as cash advances from the state, which has a direct stake of 25 percent in the former monopoly ferry operator.

Transdev owns 66 percent of SNCM. (Reporting By Geert de Clercq; Editing by Greg Mahlich)

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SEB plans debut CoCo following investor meetings

By Aimee Donnellan

Fri Oct 31, 2014 8:18am EDT

LONDON, Oct 31 (IFR) - SEB is preparing to sell a debut contingent convertible (Coco) bond following an investor roadshow that will begin next week, according to a lead manager.

The Swedish lender, rated A1/A+/A+ at the senior level, has hired Bank of America Merill Lynch, JP Morgan, Goldman Sachs, UBS and SEB's syndicate team to arrange investor meetings from November 3-5 ahead of the sale of the bond transaction which will count as Additional Tier 1 capital.

The deal is expected be temporarily written-down if the bank's Common Equity Tier 1 ratio falls below 8%. (Reporting by Aimee Donnellan; editing by Alex Chambers)


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High-yield E&P energy bonds are risky temptations

By Mariana Santibanez

Fri Oct 31, 2014 11:33am EDT

NEW YORK, Oct 31 (IFR) - Investors betting that oil prices will recover are starting to support the battered prices of high-yield bonds from exploration and production (E&P) energy companies.

But market strategists warn they could face steep losses ahead if the price of oil remains under pressure - particularly if they are not more selective about which credits to buy.

West Texas Intermediate, a benchmark for crude pricing, has fallen more than US$20 a barrel since June, from over US$105 at the time to US$82.65 this week.

That tumble has hit bonds in the E&P sector, which have taken a beating in the secondary market.

According to the Bank of America Merrill Lynch Master Index, energy sector spreads widened from around 360bp in June to 576bp on October 15.

But those spreads then tightened 80bp to 496bp by October 24, as the low cash prices drew in opportunistic bargain-hunting investors.

"Clearly there is some optimism that the sector offers value versus the broader market," said UBS strategist Matthew Mish, who believes investors need more due diligence on single B rated E&P names.

UP OR DOWN

At BNP Paribas, credit strategist Mark Howard said the whipsaw price movements were the result of a "tug of war" between differing views on where oil prices are headed.

"High-yield investors think oil prices will stabilize and see E&P bonds as cheap relative to the rest of the market," Howard told IFR.

"Distressed and event-driven funds are rolling up their sleeves and betting oil will fall into the mid/low 70s."

Without question, oil prices will determine the fate of many E&P companies, which typically have bank lines dependent on production volumes and oil prices being at certain levels.

Those that do not achieve enough production at a time when prices are lower - or have not yet started production at all - may lose access to debt capital markets to fund further production growth or survive until prices rise.

"There is concern about less fully formed companies that are going to be exposed if oil goes down to 70," said Howard.

Distressed funds have been shorting energy bonds, expecting the shale boom to be undermined by the global oil glut, and that early production phase companies will run out of cash before full production and free cash flow is achieved.

Oilfield services companies are said to be a particular concern.

Offshore contract drilling services company Hercules Offshore, rated B3/B, saw its 6.75% 2022 bonds drop to 58.75 Friday, sliding further from the mid-60s area after the company disclosed lackluster quarterly results earlier in the month.

Its bonds had already taken a nosedive on the back of falling oil prices, and were trading in the mid-80s at the start of September.

"We are not going to see a lot of bankruptcies if oil stays at 80-85," said Stephen Kotsen, a high-yield portfolio manager at Nomura Asset Management.

"But if it goes to 70 and stays at that level for two to three years, then we could see defaults," he said.

About 40% of the energy sector is rated B2 or lower and has below-average recovery prospects, according to Moody's.

While average one-year default rates for single Bs and triple Cs are 3% and 16% respectively, historically those numbers jump to 8% and 34% in high-default periods.

Even so, the much lower rate of default of single Bs seems to be enough to encourage some investors to take a real punt on the prospect of oil prices not staying lower for too long.

"We are not worried, as we look at bond prices relative to what the assets are worth," said Gibson Cooper, energy analyst at Western Asset Management Company.

He said high-yield E&P had historically lower default rates because of the inherent hard assets behind the bonds, which gave companies several levers to pull during down-cycles.

"The lender generally recognizes the sector as being cyclical, and will work with the companies to maneuver highly leveraged balance sheets and give companies time to perform," Cooper said.

The high-yield energy sector's default rate stood at 0.4% year-to-date through August 2014 versus 2.9% over all of last year, according to Fitch Ratings. (Reporting by Mariana Santibanez; Editing by Shankar Ramakrishnan, Natalie Harrison and Marc Carnegie)

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SEB plans debut CoCo following investor meetings

Written By Unknown on Minggu, 02 November 2014 | 16.47

By Aimee Donnellan

Fri Oct 31, 2014 8:18am EDT

LONDON, Oct 31 (IFR) - SEB is preparing to sell a debut contingent convertible (Coco) bond following an investor roadshow that will begin next week, according to a lead manager.

The Swedish lender, rated A1/A+/A+ at the senior level, has hired Bank of America Merill Lynch, JP Morgan, Goldman Sachs, UBS and SEB's syndicate team to arrange investor meetings from November 3-5 ahead of the sale of the bond transaction which will count as Additional Tier 1 capital.

The deal is expected be temporarily written-down if the bank's Common Equity Tier 1 ratio falls below 8%. (Reporting by Aimee Donnellan; editing by Alex Chambers)


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Veolia, CDC to call in loans on Corsica ferry firm SNCM

PARIS Fri Oct 31, 2014 8:20am EDT

PARIS Oct 31 (Reuters) - French public passenger transport group Transdev, owned by Veolia and state bank CDC, is to call in loans to its France-Corsica ferry operator unit SNCM next week, it said on Friday, pushing the unit into filing for court protection from insolvency.

Transdev's owners have said court protection from creditors is the only way to shield the loss-making ferry operator from two separate European Union state aid repayment claims totalling 440 million euros.

Following an SNCM supervisory board meeting in Paris, Transdev said it would call in the loans on Monday and said that the legal proceedings would protect SNCM from the claims for repayment of state aid while a buyer is sought.

Once the firm goes under court protection, a new shareholder could buy some of SNCM's eight ferries and continue operations under a new legal structure, with some 800 to 1200 of SNCM's more than 2,000 staff, according to a management plan outlined to unions earlier this month.

The core Marseille-Corsica ferry route, which is subsidised by the state, and two lines to North Africa could continue. But other crossings from Nice and Toulon to Corsica and Sardinia would probably be abandoned, according to the plan.

Loss-making SNCM was kept going by a 103 million-euro loan from Transdev and a 14 million-euro loan from Veolia, as well as cash advances from the state, which has a direct stake of 25 percent in the former monopoly ferry operator.

Transdev owns 66 percent of SNCM. (Reporting By Geert de Clercq; Editing by Greg Mahlich)

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High-yield E&P energy bonds are risky temptations

By Mariana Santibanez

Fri Oct 31, 2014 11:33am EDT

NEW YORK, Oct 31 (IFR) - Investors betting that oil prices will recover are starting to support the battered prices of high-yield bonds from exploration and production (E&P) energy companies.

But market strategists warn they could face steep losses ahead if the price of oil remains under pressure - particularly if they are not more selective about which credits to buy.

West Texas Intermediate, a benchmark for crude pricing, has fallen more than US$20 a barrel since June, from over US$105 at the time to US$82.65 this week.

That tumble has hit bonds in the E&P sector, which have taken a beating in the secondary market.

According to the Bank of America Merrill Lynch Master Index, energy sector spreads widened from around 360bp in June to 576bp on October 15.

But those spreads then tightened 80bp to 496bp by October 24, as the low cash prices drew in opportunistic bargain-hunting investors.

"Clearly there is some optimism that the sector offers value versus the broader market," said UBS strategist Matthew Mish, who believes investors need more due diligence on single B rated E&P names.

UP OR DOWN

At BNP Paribas, credit strategist Mark Howard said the whipsaw price movements were the result of a "tug of war" between differing views on where oil prices are headed.

"High-yield investors think oil prices will stabilize and see E&P bonds as cheap relative to the rest of the market," Howard told IFR.

"Distressed and event-driven funds are rolling up their sleeves and betting oil will fall into the mid/low 70s."

Without question, oil prices will determine the fate of many E&P companies, which typically have bank lines dependent on production volumes and oil prices being at certain levels.

Those that do not achieve enough production at a time when prices are lower - or have not yet started production at all - may lose access to debt capital markets to fund further production growth or survive until prices rise.

"There is concern about less fully formed companies that are going to be exposed if oil goes down to 70," said Howard.

Distressed funds have been shorting energy bonds, expecting the shale boom to be undermined by the global oil glut, and that early production phase companies will run out of cash before full production and free cash flow is achieved.

Oilfield services companies are said to be a particular concern.

Offshore contract drilling services company Hercules Offshore, rated B3/B, saw its 6.75% 2022 bonds drop to 58.75 Friday, sliding further from the mid-60s area after the company disclosed lackluster quarterly results earlier in the month.

Its bonds had already taken a nosedive on the back of falling oil prices, and were trading in the mid-80s at the start of September.

"We are not going to see a lot of bankruptcies if oil stays at 80-85," said Stephen Kotsen, a high-yield portfolio manager at Nomura Asset Management.

"But if it goes to 70 and stays at that level for two to three years, then we could see defaults," he said.

About 40% of the energy sector is rated B2 or lower and has below-average recovery prospects, according to Moody's.

While average one-year default rates for single Bs and triple Cs are 3% and 16% respectively, historically those numbers jump to 8% and 34% in high-default periods.

Even so, the much lower rate of default of single Bs seems to be enough to encourage some investors to take a real punt on the prospect of oil prices not staying lower for too long.

"We are not worried, as we look at bond prices relative to what the assets are worth," said Gibson Cooper, energy analyst at Western Asset Management Company.

He said high-yield E&P had historically lower default rates because of the inherent hard assets behind the bonds, which gave companies several levers to pull during down-cycles.

"The lender generally recognizes the sector as being cyclical, and will work with the companies to maneuver highly leveraged balance sheets and give companies time to perform," Cooper said.

The high-yield energy sector's default rate stood at 0.4% year-to-date through August 2014 versus 2.9% over all of last year, according to Fitch Ratings. (Reporting by Mariana Santibanez; Editing by Shankar Ramakrishnan, Natalie Harrison and Marc Carnegie)

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