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BRIEF-Main owner withdraws petition for bankruptcy in PA Resources

Written By Unknown on Rabu, 15 April 2015 | 16.47

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UPDATE 1-Detroit, Stockton bankruptcies may flag wider problems -Fed's Dudley

(Adds comments on financing operating deficits, pensions; background)

NEW YORK, April 14 (Reuters) - The municipal bankruptcies in Detroit and Stockton, California, may foretell more widespread problems in the United States than is implied by current bond ratings, a top Federal Reserve official said on Tuesday.

"While these particular bankruptcy filings have captured a considerable amount of attention, and rightly so, they may foreshadow more widespread problems than what might be implied by current bond ratings," New York Fed President William Dudley said at a closed-door workshop on Chapter 9, the part of the U.S. bankruptcy code covering local government insolvencies.

"We need to focus our attention today on addressing the underlying issues before any problems grow to the point where bankruptcy becomes the only viable option," he added, according to a text of his speech.

Dudley, whose Fed district includes the debt-stricken U.S. territory of Puerto Rico, did not mention by name any municipalities or states that risked going the way of Detroit and Stockton. But he highlighted the difficulties some jurisdictions face when they issue debt to finance operating deficits, and when they under-fund public pensions.

In Chicago, for example, unfunded pension liabilities for the city, the board of education and other local governments that draw taxes from it exceed $35 billion, according to the Civic Federation, an independent fiscal watchdog.

The city, which received a warning last week from ratings agency Standard & Poor's, has $8.3 billion in general obligation bond debt and frequently uses debt to close budget shortfalls.

Puerto Rico, meanwhile, is struggling with more than $70 billion in total debt and must overcome opposition from local lawmakers as well as demands from investors for extra security as it attempts to sell more debt.

Dudley said borrowing to pay off a current year operating deficit is inconsistent with running a balanced budget, leaves the municipality with no new asset, and is "equivalent to asking future taxpayers to help finance today's public services."

Unfunded pension liabilities are estimated to be as high as several trillion dollars, Dudley said.

"At a certain point, the debt service burden clashes with maintaining a sufficient ongoing provision of services to forestall people from voting with their feet," he said.

"This may occur well before the point that debt service capacity appears to be fully exhausted," Dudley added. "In other words, the prioritization of cash flows to debt service may not be sustainable beyond a certain point." (Additional reporting by Dan Burns; Editing by Chizu Nomiyama)


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CCB mandates banks for Tier 2 bonds

HONG KONG, April 15 (IFR) - China Construction Bank has mandated itself, Citigroup, HSBC and Standard Chartered as joint global co-ordinators for an offering of US dollar Tier 2 bonds.

The timing of the issuance is subject to market conditions, and other bookrunners may be added.

This would be the first offshore bank capital bond to be sold by a Chinese financial institution so far this year.

CCB has also received approval to sell up to Rmb20bn (US$3.2bn) of offshore preference shares and up to Rmb60bn of onshore preference shares, which count towards Additional Tier 1 capital.

CCB is rated A/A1/A. (Reporting By Frances Yoon, editing by Dharsan Singh and Daniel Stanton)


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ECB tells banks to write down Heta exposure by over half-Handelsblatt

Written By Unknown on Selasa, 14 April 2015 | 16.47

FRANKFURT, April 14 (Reuters) - The European Central Bank has told banks with exposure to Austria's Heta bad bank to write it down by more than 50 percent, Germany's Handelsblatt newspaper reported on Tuesday, citing unnamed banks.

The requested writedown would apply to debt guaranteed by Carinthia but would be higher - at least 95 percent - for other debt with a lower ranking that is not guaranteed by Austria, the newspaper reported. The ECB was not immediately available to comment.

Heta was formed from defunct Austrian lender Hypo Alpe Adria, and last month the Bundesbank said German banks and insurers had a total exposure of 7.1 billion euros. ($7.5 billion).

Carinthia, Hypo's home province, has more than 10 billion euros in debt guarantees for Heta, and is trying to figure out how to handle them given that its annual budget is only around 2 billion euros.

($1 = 0.9483 euros) (Reporting By John O'Donnell; editing by Michael Shields)


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BRIEF-Evraz Highveld commences business rescue proceedings

April 14 (Reuters) - Evraz Highveld Steel And Vanadium Ltd :

* Suspension of listing and cautionary announcement

* Co does not have adequate funding to meet its obligations for short term

* Commencement of business rescue proceedings by co is expected to have a material impact on price of co's shares

* Believes that implementation of voluntary business rescue will afford business practitioner opportunity to consider continued implementation of turnaround plan and successfully re-establish co

* To appoint Messers Daniel Terblanche and Piers Marsden as joint business rescue practitioners

* Shareholders are hereby advised that agreement between Macrovest and Evraz has lapsed

* Due to uncertainties associated with business rescue proceedings company will not be able to release its results as required today Source text for Eikon: Further company coverage:


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BRIEF-Evraz says Evraz Highveld's business rescue announcement hinders stake sale

April 14 (Reuters) - Evraz :

* Board of directors of Evraz Highveld Steel and Vanadium decided to file for voluntary business rescue procedures

* Post this decision Evraz will not be able to complete sale of 34 pct of issued share capital of company to Macrovest

* Starting 14 April 2015 Evraz Highveld Steel and Vanadium will be managed by an independent business rescue practitioner appointed by board of Highveld Further company coverage:


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Potential DTA clampdown threatens peripheral banks

Written By Unknown on Senin, 13 April 2015 | 16.47

* Lenders in southern Europe face potential EUR40bn capital loss

* Italian bank association defends use of guarantees

By Anna Brunetti

LONDON, April 10 (IFR) - Southern European banks are facing the loss of more than 40bn of capital, after the European Commission launched an informal investigation into the deferred tax assets that many have been using to bolster their capital ratios.

The EU legislator is requesting information from Greece, Italy, Portugal and Spain on the guarantees they provide on banks' DTAs to determine whether they represent state aid, which is illegal under European law. Most other countries do not provide such guarantees.

Those guarantees have allowed lenders to turn DTAs - something common to many jurisdictions in and outside of Europe - into credit and include them in their Core Equity Tier 1 reserves.

A Commission spokesperson said the probe would take time and no legal action was on the horizon yet. "Should we take a decision, we'll have to weigh a number of factors including existing rules and financial stability. So this is a complex matter and will require some time," she said.

But the impact of a probe on peripheral lenders, which during the crisis amassed billions of euros in losses-related tax assets, could be considerable if the EC determines that the guarantees constitute state aid.

"In such case, under normal competition practice it would have to require a retroactive change in national rules," a lawyer said. And this would put a number of banks under great pressure, she said.

The Basel III capital framework is already scheduled to progressively cut DTAs from banks' regulatory capital. However, Europe's own capital rules allowed DTAs to remain in the ratio if they were transformed into tax credit, the lawyer said.

"In many cases, if you were to remove the benefit of the guarantees and revert to the original Basel rules, these banks could take material hits to their capital ratios," said Benjie Creelan-Sandford, senior banks analyst at Macquarie.

According to Macquarie data, UniCredit held 10.7bn of guaranteed DTAs in the third quarter last year, while Intesa Sanpaolo and Santander held 8.5bn and 7.9bn respectively.

The three lenders could lose between 100bp and 250bp of their core capital ratios if they were forced to deduct guaranteed DTAs, Creelan-Sandford said. Intesa has a fully loaded capital ratio of 13% at present, but a change in the DTAs treatment would remove more than 160bp from this level.

"You could argue the bank would be able to absorb it, but it would nonetheless take away a lot of its excess capital," Creelan-Sandford said.

Changes in rules would strike an even harder blow to other lenders for which DTAs represent a higher portion of their prudential cushions. Sabadell and Banco Comercial Portugues, for example, could take hits of 4% to 5% to their capital ratios, he said.

A THORNY ISSUE

Despite the fact that banks were allowed to count DTAs towards their core capital ratio for the ECB's stress tests last year, the central bank has repeatedly warned against the risk related to these securities.

"The ECB has been very clear that it wants to iron out inconsistencies that currently exist in the balance sheets of banks in different European countries, and DTAs are clearly one area of focus," said Jon Peace, head of European banks research at Nomura.

"They have already written to many banks with large DTAs, so the biggest users have been on warning for some time. Many are already working on ways to sort the problem out, which is why we've seen recent capital issues from peripheral banks," he said.

BBVA and Santander, for example, raised 1.5bn each in Additional Tier 1 in February and March, respectively.

The main issue with DTAs is that they can be counted as capital in the present, but only work in practice if banks are profitable in the future, RBS analysts wrote in a note.

Public guarantees allow banks to bypass this gap by transforming them into credit that can be monetised in the present, the lawyer said.

"Thus, you can argue you're no longer relying on future profits as you have a direct claim to your sovereign," she said. This means claims could be redeemed even when the bank faced insolvency or liquidation, she said.

ITALIAN REACTION

The Italian Banking Association (ABI) posted a response to the European Commission on Tuesday defending the use of guarantees - without which, it said, it could take up to 18 years for a domestic bank to be able to deduct losses from its tax bill.

"It is clear that the intervention of the Italian legislator was necessary to avoid a double penalisation for the banks working in Italy; the first regarding the tax profile, the second regarding the regulatory requirements," said Giovanni Sabatini, the association's director general.

"It seems bizarre that a regulation that contributes to re-establishing a level playing field between European banks can be misinterpreted as state aid," he added.

The commission stood on the cautious side on Tuesday, saying it was not prejudging the outcome of its enquiry.

Creelan-Sandford said that it is unlikely that a rule change would happen overnight.

"A more likely outcome is that the ECB requires some banks to raise their underlying capital ratios, which means that dividend payments for these banks would come under pressure for a certain period," he said.

But the lawyer said this would be a politically tricky move for the ECB.

"Indirectly, the ECB would basically question the solvency and liquidity of a member state, and the strength of its banking system," she said.

"Politically, that would be a very uncomfortable move." (Reporting By Anna Brunetti, additional reporting by Alice Gledhill; editing by Gareth Gore and Matthew Davies)


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German lenders should write off half of bonds from Austria's Heta - Bundesbank

FRANKFURT, April 10 (Reuters) - German lenders should prepare to write off at least half the value of the bonds they hold in Austrian 'bad bank' Heta Asset Resolution AG, a Bundesbank board member said in an interview published on Friday.

"I think this situation has to be taken seriously by the German banks," Andreas Dombret told news agency Bloomberg in an interview in Johannesburg, where he addressed the local chamber of commerce.

"It's advisable and recommendable to take provisions on this, and ... I would say it should be a minimum of a 50 percent provision for potential losses," he added.

Heta was formed from defunct Austrian lender Hypo Alpe Adria, and last month the Bundesbank said German banks and insurers had a total exposure of 7.1 billion euros ($7.54 billion). ($1 = 0.9421 euros) (Reporting by David Milliken; editing by John O'Donnell)


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Creditors agree not to execute on OGX DIP financing

SAO PAULO, April 10 (Reuters) - Creditors of Brazil's OGX Petroleo e Gas, the bankrupt oil company created by tycoon Eike Batista, agreed not to execute payments or guarantees stipulated in a debtor-in-possession (DIP) financing secured in 2014 by the company.

In a filing published on Friday, the company said creditors agreed to convert DIP financing into common shares of OGX as stipulated in the financial agreement. Creditors would refrain from any new judicial demands or ask for early repayment, the filing said.

The agreement includes the continued operation and maintenance of the OSX-3 and OSX-1 floating production, storage and offloading vessels and the costs involved in the abandonment of the Tubarão Martelo and Tubarão Azul oil fields. (Reporting by Reese Ewing; Editing by Lisa Shumaker)


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German lenders should write off half of bonds from Austria's Heta - Bundesbank

Written By Unknown on Minggu, 12 April 2015 | 16.47

FRANKFURT, April 10 (Reuters) - German lenders should prepare to write off at least half the value of the bonds they hold in Austrian 'bad bank' Heta Asset Resolution AG, a Bundesbank board member said in an interview published on Friday.

"I think this situation has to be taken seriously by the German banks," Andreas Dombret told news agency Bloomberg in an interview in Johannesburg, where he addressed the local chamber of commerce.

"It's advisable and recommendable to take provisions on this, and ... I would say it should be a minimum of a 50 percent provision for potential losses," he added.

Heta was formed from defunct Austrian lender Hypo Alpe Adria, and last month the Bundesbank said German banks and insurers had a total exposure of 7.1 billion euros ($7.54 billion). ($1 = 0.9421 euros) (Reporting by David Milliken; editing by John O'Donnell)


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Potential DTA clampdown threatens peripheral banks

* Lenders in southern Europe face potential EUR40bn capital loss

* Italian bank association defends use of guarantees

By Anna Brunetti

LONDON, April 10 (IFR) - Southern European banks are facing the loss of more than 40bn of capital, after the European Commission launched an informal investigation into the deferred tax assets that many have been using to bolster their capital ratios.

The EU legislator is requesting information from Greece, Italy, Portugal and Spain on the guarantees they provide on banks' DTAs to determine whether they represent state aid, which is illegal under European law. Most other countries do not provide such guarantees.

Those guarantees have allowed lenders to turn DTAs - something common to many jurisdictions in and outside of Europe - into credit and include them in their Core Equity Tier 1 reserves.

A Commission spokesperson said the probe would take time and no legal action was on the horizon yet. "Should we take a decision, we'll have to weigh a number of factors including existing rules and financial stability. So this is a complex matter and will require some time," she said.

But the impact of a probe on peripheral lenders, which during the crisis amassed billions of euros in losses-related tax assets, could be considerable if the EC determines that the guarantees constitute state aid.

"In such case, under normal competition practice it would have to require a retroactive change in national rules," a lawyer said. And this would put a number of banks under great pressure, she said.

The Basel III capital framework is already scheduled to progressively cut DTAs from banks' regulatory capital. However, Europe's own capital rules allowed DTAs to remain in the ratio if they were transformed into tax credit, the lawyer said.

"In many cases, if you were to remove the benefit of the guarantees and revert to the original Basel rules, these banks could take material hits to their capital ratios," said Benjie Creelan-Sandford, senior banks analyst at Macquarie.

According to Macquarie data, UniCredit held 10.7bn of guaranteed DTAs in the third quarter last year, while Intesa Sanpaolo and Santander held 8.5bn and 7.9bn respectively.

The three lenders could lose between 100bp and 250bp of their core capital ratios if they were forced to deduct guaranteed DTAs, Creelan-Sandford said. Intesa has a fully loaded capital ratio of 13% at present, but a change in the DTAs treatment would remove more than 160bp from this level.

"You could argue the bank would be able to absorb it, but it would nonetheless take away a lot of its excess capital," Creelan-Sandford said.

Changes in rules would strike an even harder blow to other lenders for which DTAs represent a higher portion of their prudential cushions. Sabadell and Banco Comercial Portugues, for example, could take hits of 4% to 5% to their capital ratios, he said.

A THORNY ISSUE

Despite the fact that banks were allowed to count DTAs towards their core capital ratio for the ECB's stress tests last year, the central bank has repeatedly warned against the risk related to these securities.

"The ECB has been very clear that it wants to iron out inconsistencies that currently exist in the balance sheets of banks in different European countries, and DTAs are clearly one area of focus," said Jon Peace, head of European banks research at Nomura.

"They have already written to many banks with large DTAs, so the biggest users have been on warning for some time. Many are already working on ways to sort the problem out, which is why we've seen recent capital issues from peripheral banks," he said.

BBVA and Santander, for example, raised 1.5bn each in Additional Tier 1 in February and March, respectively.

The main issue with DTAs is that they can be counted as capital in the present, but only work in practice if banks are profitable in the future, RBS analysts wrote in a note.

Public guarantees allow banks to bypass this gap by transforming them into credit that can be monetised in the present, the lawyer said.

"Thus, you can argue you're no longer relying on future profits as you have a direct claim to your sovereign," she said. This means claims could be redeemed even when the bank faced insolvency or liquidation, she said.

ITALIAN REACTION

The Italian Banking Association (ABI) posted a response to the European Commission on Tuesday defending the use of guarantees - without which, it said, it could take up to 18 years for a domestic bank to be able to deduct losses from its tax bill.

"It is clear that the intervention of the Italian legislator was necessary to avoid a double penalisation for the banks working in Italy; the first regarding the tax profile, the second regarding the regulatory requirements," said Giovanni Sabatini, the association's director general.

"It seems bizarre that a regulation that contributes to re-establishing a level playing field between European banks can be misinterpreted as state aid," he added.

The commission stood on the cautious side on Tuesday, saying it was not prejudging the outcome of its enquiry.

Creelan-Sandford said that it is unlikely that a rule change would happen overnight.

"A more likely outcome is that the ECB requires some banks to raise their underlying capital ratios, which means that dividend payments for these banks would come under pressure for a certain period," he said.

But the lawyer said this would be a politically tricky move for the ECB.

"Indirectly, the ECB would basically question the solvency and liquidity of a member state, and the strength of its banking system," she said.

"Politically, that would be a very uncomfortable move." (Reporting By Anna Brunetti, additional reporting by Alice Gledhill; editing by Gareth Gore and Matthew Davies)


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Creditors agree not to execute on OGX DIP financing

SAO PAULO, April 10 (Reuters) - Creditors of Brazil's OGX Petroleo e Gas, the bankrupt oil company created by tycoon Eike Batista, agreed not to execute payments or guarantees stipulated in a debtor-in-possession (DIP) financing secured in 2014 by the company.

In a filing published on Friday, the company said creditors agreed to convert DIP financing into common shares of OGX as stipulated in the financial agreement. Creditors would refrain from any new judicial demands or ask for early repayment, the filing said.

The agreement includes the continued operation and maintenance of the OSX-3 and OSX-1 floating production, storage and offloading vessels and the costs involved in the abandonment of the Tubarão Martelo and Tubarão Azul oil fields. (Reporting by Reese Ewing; Editing by Lisa Shumaker)


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Potential DTA clampdown threatens peripheral banks

Written By Unknown on Sabtu, 11 April 2015 | 16.47

* Lenders in southern Europe face potential EUR40bn capital loss

* Italian bank association defends use of guarantees

By Anna Brunetti

LONDON, April 10 (IFR) - Southern European banks are facing the loss of more than 40bn of capital, after the European Commission launched an informal investigation into the deferred tax assets that many have been using to bolster their capital ratios.

The EU legislator is requesting information from Greece, Italy, Portugal and Spain on the guarantees they provide on banks' DTAs to determine whether they represent state aid, which is illegal under European law. Most other countries do not provide such guarantees.

Those guarantees have allowed lenders to turn DTAs - something common to many jurisdictions in and outside of Europe - into credit and include them in their Core Equity Tier 1 reserves.

A Commission spokesperson said the probe would take time and no legal action was on the horizon yet. "Should we take a decision, we'll have to weigh a number of factors including existing rules and financial stability. So this is a complex matter and will require some time," she said.

But the impact of a probe on peripheral lenders, which during the crisis amassed billions of euros in losses-related tax assets, could be considerable if the EC determines that the guarantees constitute state aid.

"In such case, under normal competition practice it would have to require a retroactive change in national rules," a lawyer said. And this would put a number of banks under great pressure, she said.

The Basel III capital framework is already scheduled to progressively cut DTAs from banks' regulatory capital. However, Europe's own capital rules allowed DTAs to remain in the ratio if they were transformed into tax credit, the lawyer said.

"In many cases, if you were to remove the benefit of the guarantees and revert to the original Basel rules, these banks could take material hits to their capital ratios," said Benjie Creelan-Sandford, senior banks analyst at Macquarie.

According to Macquarie data, UniCredit held 10.7bn of guaranteed DTAs in the third quarter last year, while Intesa Sanpaolo and Santander held 8.5bn and 7.9bn respectively.

The three lenders could lose between 100bp and 250bp of their core capital ratios if they were forced to deduct guaranteed DTAs, Creelan-Sandford said. Intesa has a fully loaded capital ratio of 13% at present, but a change in the DTAs treatment would remove more than 160bp from this level.

"You could argue the bank would be able to absorb it, but it would nonetheless take away a lot of its excess capital," Creelan-Sandford said.

Changes in rules would strike an even harder blow to other lenders for which DTAs represent a higher portion of their prudential cushions. Sabadell and Banco Comercial Portugues, for example, could take hits of 4% to 5% to their capital ratios, he said.

A THORNY ISSUE

Despite the fact that banks were allowed to count DTAs towards their core capital ratio for the ECB's stress tests last year, the central bank has repeatedly warned against the risk related to these securities.

"The ECB has been very clear that it wants to iron out inconsistencies that currently exist in the balance sheets of banks in different European countries, and DTAs are clearly one area of focus," said Jon Peace, head of European banks research at Nomura.

"They have already written to many banks with large DTAs, so the biggest users have been on warning for some time. Many are already working on ways to sort the problem out, which is why we've seen recent capital issues from peripheral banks," he said.

BBVA and Santander, for example, raised 1.5bn each in Additional Tier 1 in February and March, respectively.

The main issue with DTAs is that they can be counted as capital in the present, but only work in practice if banks are profitable in the future, RBS analysts wrote in a note.

Public guarantees allow banks to bypass this gap by transforming them into credit that can be monetised in the present, the lawyer said.

"Thus, you can argue you're no longer relying on future profits as you have a direct claim to your sovereign," she said. This means claims could be redeemed even when the bank faced insolvency or liquidation, she said.

ITALIAN REACTION

The Italian Banking Association (ABI) posted a response to the European Commission on Tuesday defending the use of guarantees - without which, it said, it could take up to 18 years for a domestic bank to be able to deduct losses from its tax bill.

"It is clear that the intervention of the Italian legislator was necessary to avoid a double penalisation for the banks working in Italy; the first regarding the tax profile, the second regarding the regulatory requirements," said Giovanni Sabatini, the association's director general.

"It seems bizarre that a regulation that contributes to re-establishing a level playing field between European banks can be misinterpreted as state aid," he added.

The commission stood on the cautious side on Tuesday, saying it was not prejudging the outcome of its enquiry.

Creelan-Sandford said that it is unlikely that a rule change would happen overnight.

"A more likely outcome is that the ECB requires some banks to raise their underlying capital ratios, which means that dividend payments for these banks would come under pressure for a certain period," he said.

But the lawyer said this would be a politically tricky move for the ECB.

"Indirectly, the ECB would basically question the solvency and liquidity of a member state, and the strength of its banking system," she said.

"Politically, that would be a very uncomfortable move." (Reporting By Anna Brunetti, additional reporting by Alice Gledhill; editing by Gareth Gore and Matthew Davies)


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German lenders should write off half of bonds from Austria's Heta - Bundesbank

FRANKFURT, April 10 (Reuters) - German lenders should prepare to write off at least half the value of the bonds they hold in Austrian 'bad bank' Heta Asset Resolution AG, a Bundesbank board member said in an interview published on Friday.

"I think this situation has to be taken seriously by the German banks," Andreas Dombret told news agency Bloomberg in an interview in Johannesburg, where he addressed the local chamber of commerce.

"It's advisable and recommendable to take provisions on this, and ... I would say it should be a minimum of a 50 percent provision for potential losses," he added.

Heta was formed from defunct Austrian lender Hypo Alpe Adria, and last month the Bundesbank said German banks and insurers had a total exposure of 7.1 billion euros ($7.54 billion). ($1 = 0.9421 euros) (Reporting by David Milliken; editing by John O'Donnell)


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Creditors agree not to execute on OGX DIP financing

SAO PAULO, April 10 (Reuters) - Creditors of Brazil's OGX Petroleo e Gas, the bankrupt oil company created by tycoon Eike Batista, agreed not to execute payments or guarantees stipulated in a debtor-in-possession (DIP) financing secured in 2014 by the company.

In a filing published on Friday, the company said creditors agreed to convert DIP financing into common shares of OGX as stipulated in the financial agreement. Creditors would refrain from any new judicial demands or ask for early repayment, the filing said.

The agreement includes the continued operation and maintenance of the OSX-3 and OSX-1 floating production, storage and offloading vessels and the costs involved in the abandonment of the Tubarão Martelo and Tubarão Azul oil fields. (Reporting by Reese Ewing; Editing by Lisa Shumaker)


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UPDATE 1-Canadian oil company to liquidate due to crisis in Yemen

Written By Unknown on Jumat, 10 April 2015 | 16.47

(Adds comment from Calvalley Petroleum CFO)

By Nia Williams

CALGARY, Alberta, April 9 (Reuters) - Canadian oil and gas producer Calvalley Petroleum Inc said on Thursday it will liquidate and restructure due to the political crisis in Yemen, where it has almost all of its operations.

The Calgary-based junior has a 50 percent working interest in a block in Yemen's Sayun-Masila Basin, producing 3,700 barrels per day gross, but was forced to shut down production on Tuesday as conflict in the Middle Eastern country escalated.

The block is owned by the Yemeni government.

Saudi Arabia and Arab allies have launched air strikes against the Iran-allied Houthi movement in Yemen, which has taken most of the country and forced President Abd-Rabbu Mansour Hadi to flee to Riyadh.

The company said its efforts to diversify out of Yemen or sell itself or its assets had not resulted in "compelling" opportunities.

Under the restructuring, shareholders will have options to buy shares in the company's unlisted unit, Calvalley Energy Ltd. Those who decide not to will receive cash. Calvalley's financial chief said both options are better than trying to sell one's shares.

"With the current events in Yemen and lack of other alternatives we think this is the best position for shareholders at the moment," said Gerry Elms, Calvalley chief financial officer.

Shareholders will vote on May 8 on whether to take shares in Calvalley Energy Ltd, a private subsidiary in Cyprus.

Elms said there may be an opportunity to list Calvalley Energy Ltd as a public company in future, but much would depend on the situation in Yemen and whether production is able to resume.

"We have no indication when or if things in Yemen are going to improve. It's difficult to put a crystal ball in front of you and say what will happen," he added.

Calvalley also has a small working interest in a property in Saskatchewan, Canada, although Elms said that related to reclamation liabilities. (Additional reporting by Anannya Pramanick in Bengaluru; editing by Saumyadeb Chakrabarty and Matthew Lewis)


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Spain's Martinsa Fadesa enters liquidation after failing to strike deal with banks

MADRID, April 9 (Reuters) - Property developer Martinsa Fadesa said on Thursday a court had begun its liquidation, seven years after it became one of the most notable casualties of Spain's real estate crash and filed for bankruptcy.

The liquidation, after a struggle with creditors over a debt pile of close to 7 billion euros ($7.52 billion), is one of the country's biggest ever bankruptcies.

Spanish property prices reached a peak in 2007 and have plunged some 40 percent since - dragging the economy into recession, sending developers to the wall and later sparking a banking crisis as lenders choked on souring real estate debts.

Martinsa Fadesa, born out of the merger of two big property groups just before the real estate bubble burst, had tried to strike a deal with its banks, asking them to write off large chunks of its loans and swap debt for assets.

The banks, which held about 4 billion euros of the 6.65 billion euros in debt Martinsa had as of June last year, rejected the plan. They have already made heavy provisions against losses on the company's loans.

KPMG and Bankinter, which is representing bank creditors, will steer the liquidation process. ($1 = 0.9310 euros) (Reporting by Carlos Ruano, Writing by Sarah White; Editing by Elaine Hardcastle)


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BRIEF-Teixeira Duarte clarifies on SATU Oeiras' dissolution process

April 10 (Reuters) - Teixeira Duarte SA :

* Said on Thursday that its wholly-owned subsidiary Teixeira Duarte - Engenharia e Construções SA holds 49 pct of SATU Oeiras - Sistema Automático de Transporte Urbano EM SA, which is under dissolution process

* Due to that the company clarifies that, by the end of 2013, Teixeira Duarte - Engenharia e Construções had already included losses of 39.6 million euros ($42 million) in its accounts

* In Q3 2014 reported additional 1.3 million euros and in Q4 2014 another 1.5 million euros in loses, related to the outlined participation

* Once SATU system is closed the subsidiary will cease to have any costs related to it Source text: bit.ly/1Gw2ehB

Further company coverage:

($1 = 0.9394 euros) (Gdynia Newsroom)


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BRIEF-PA Resources main owner says no to new funding

Written By Unknown on Kamis, 09 April 2015 | 16.47

April 7 (Reuters) - PA Resources

* Gunvor Group has today informed the company that it will not participate with new funding, in the form of equity or new loans, in the ongoing refinancing process

* PA Resources says in addition Gunvor Group has also requested repayment of amounts outstanding under RBL facility (84 MUSD and accrued interest)

* PA Resources' management and board of directors will revert with new information soon as possible Source text for Eikon: Further company coverage: (Reporting By Anna Ringstrom)


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BRIEF-Florida developer buys Atlantic City's Revel for $82 mln - AP

Thomson Reuters is the world's largest international multimedia news agency, providing investing news, world news, business news, technology news, headline news, small business news, news alerts, personal finance, stock market, and mutual funds information available on Reuters.com, video, mobile, and interactive television platforms. Thomson Reuters journalists are subject to an Editorial Handbook which requires fair presentation and disclosure of relevant interests.

NYSE and AMEX quotes delayed by at least 20 minutes. Nasdaq delayed by at least 15 minutes. For a complete list of exchanges and delays, please click here.


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EveryWare Global files for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection

April 8 (Reuters) - EveryWare Global Inc, a marketer of cookware and tabletop products, filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection late on Tuesday.

The company listed assets of $100 million to $500 million and liabilities of $500 million to $1 billion in its petition in the Delaware bankruptcy court.

Earlier this month, EveryWare said it expected to file for a prepackaged bankruptcy that would give its lenders control of the company after it emerges from bankruptcy within 60-75 days.

The company said its secured lenders would own 96 percent of common stock and it would no longer trade publicly after emerging from bankruptcy.

EveryWare which was formed through the merger of Anchor Hocking LLC and Oneida Ltd in March 2012, markets and distributes products such as bakeware, storageware and cookware in the United States, Canada, Mexico and Asia.

The case is in U.S. Bankruptcy Court, District of Delaware, Case No: 15-10743. (Reporting by Rama Venkat Raman in Bengaluru; Editing by Anupama Dwivedi)


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BRIEF-PA Resources main owner says no to new funding

Written By Unknown on Rabu, 08 April 2015 | 16.47

April 7 (Reuters) - PA Resources

* Gunvor Group has today informed the company that it will not participate with new funding, in the form of equity or new loans, in the ongoing refinancing process

* PA Resources says in addition Gunvor Group has also requested repayment of amounts outstanding under RBL facility (84 MUSD and accrued interest)

* PA Resources' management and board of directors will revert with new information soon as possible Source text for Eikon: Further company coverage: (Reporting By Anna Ringstrom)


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BRIEF-Florida developer buys Atlantic City's Revel for $82 mln - AP

Thomson Reuters is the world's largest international multimedia news agency, providing investing news, world news, business news, technology news, headline news, small business news, news alerts, personal finance, stock market, and mutual funds information available on Reuters.com, video, mobile, and interactive television platforms. Thomson Reuters journalists are subject to an Editorial Handbook which requires fair presentation and disclosure of relevant interests.

NYSE and AMEX quotes delayed by at least 20 minutes. Nasdaq delayed by at least 15 minutes. For a complete list of exchanges and delays, please click here.


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EveryWare Global files for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection

April 8 (Reuters) - EveryWare Global Inc, a marketer of cookware and tabletop products, filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection late on Tuesday.

The company listed assets of $100 million to $500 million and liabilities of $500 million to $1 billion in its petition in the Delaware bankruptcy court.

Earlier this month, EveryWare said it expected to file for a prepackaged bankruptcy that would give its lenders control of the company after it emerges from bankruptcy within 60-75 days.

The company said its secured lenders would own 96 percent of common stock and it would no longer trade publicly after emerging from bankruptcy.

EveryWare which was formed through the merger of Anchor Hocking LLC and Oneida Ltd in March 2012, markets and distributes products such as bakeware, storageware and cookware in the United States, Canada, Mexico and Asia.

The case is in U.S. Bankruptcy Court, District of Delaware, Case No: 15-10743. (Reporting by Rama Venkat Raman in Bengaluru; Editing by Anupama Dwivedi)


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BRIEF-Dmail Group wants to file to court request to for admission to procedure for arrangement with creditors

Written By Unknown on Selasa, 07 April 2015 | 16.47

April 3 (Reuters) - Dmail Group SpA :

* Announced on Thursday that it has decided to file to a relevant court a request for admission to the procedure for arrangement with creditors

* The resolution was adopted as a result of the checks performed which found it impossible to achieve the expected results from the debt restructuring agreement approved on July 31, 2014

Source text for Eikon:

Further company coverage:

(Gdynia Newsroom)


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Italy prosecutor requests trial for current and former UniCredit chiefs

BARI, Italy, April 3 (Reuters) - An Italian prosecutor has asked for the current and former chief executives of UniCredit to stand trial over the bank's alleged role in the 2004 bankruptcy of sofa company Divania, a person close to the matter said on Friday.

The local prosecutor in the southern town of Bari has asked for Unicredit chief executive Federico Ghizzoni and his predecessor Alessandro Profumo to stand trial along with 14 others, on charges of abetting bankruptcy.

Prosecutors allege that UniCredit, Italy's biggest bank by assets, persuaded Divania to sign 203 derivatives contracts in 2002 and 2003 that led to losses of 15 million euros ($16.5 million) and the company's eventual bankruptcy, according to judicial sources.

UniCredit reiterated on Friday its long-held position that its current and past employees had behaved correctly with relation to Divania, which once employed 400 people in Italy's "Sofa District".

The bank said in a statement that Ghizzoni had been working abroad at the time of the events in question so could not have been involved in any way.

UniCredit added that a Bari court had decided last year, in a separate strand of the investigation, to acquit all the bank's current and former employees who had been involved.

Profumo, currently chairman of Banca Monte dei Paschi di Siena, said on Friday that there had been no wrongdoing in the current case, just as there had not been in the one that eventually led to last year's acquittals.

According to a 2008 article in Italian magazine L'Espresso, Divania's owner, Francesco Saverio Parisi, said he was badly advised by UniCredit and claimed 280 million euros in damages.

UniCredit said the court sentence that upheld Divania's bankruptcy in June 2011 showed that the company's derivatives transactions could not have played a role in its collapse.

Losses incurred through derivatives contracts for complex financial transactions have prompted several lawsuits in Italy. Many local governments and small companies have accused banks of misleading them to gain a profit.

A judge must now review the case and decide whether to order a trial or else reject the prosecutor's request. (Additional reporting by Valentina Za, writing by Isla Binnie; Editing by Crispian Balmer)


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PRESS DIGEST- New York Times business news - April 6

April 6 (Reuters) - The following are the top stories on the New York Times business pages. Reuters has not verified these stories and does not vouch for their accuracy.

* With "A Rape on Campus," Rolling Stone's widely discredited article, traditional safeguards broke down at pretty much every level of the editorial process. The report, published by the Columbia Graduate School of Journalism and commissioned by Rolling Stone, said the magazine failed to engage in "basic, even routine journalistic practice" to verify details of the ordeal that the magazine's source, identified only as Jackie, described to the article's author, Sabrina Rubin Erdely. (nyti.ms/1JcpAat)

* Standard General, which will take over 1,700 of the 4,000 RadioShack stores, said that eliminating the retailer's heavy cost structure and some old business practices left a core worth saving. (nyti.ms/1yObPbV)

* Greece's finance minister, Yanis Varoufakis, and the International Monetary Fund's chief, Christine Lagarde, met in Washington as the due date neared for a 458 million euro ($503.25 million) payment to the fund. (nyti.ms/1F3MlyC)

* Tucked away in a quiet design studio in this fast-growing city, a team of young animators, illustrators and computer programmers is bringing an ancient Chinese village to digital life. The project, part of the next installment of the blockbuster Hollywood film franchise "Kung Fu Panda," represents a shift in China's moviemaking ambitions. (nyti.ms/1IBfPld)

* For those who have spent more than a decade fighting for stricter regulation of the Internet, the official publication of the rules in the Federal Register, expected as early as Monday, will give reality to their latest victory. For those opposed, it is likely to touch off a flurry of lawsuits. (nyti.ms/1MVIQyl)

* A hotly awaited report that was expected to provide guidance for shareholders and institutional investors as to whom to support in Elaine Wynn's battle to stay on the Wynn Resorts Ltd's board instead suggested all board nominees be rejected and denounced the company's "manifest failures of governance." (nyti.ms/1CrJ7gY) ($1 = 0.9101 euros) (Compiled by Supriya Kurane in Bengaluru)


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Italy prosecutor requests trial for current and former UniCredit chiefs

Written By Unknown on Senin, 06 April 2015 | 16.47

BARI, Italy, April 3 (Reuters) - An Italian prosecutor has asked for the current and former chief executives of UniCredit to stand trial over the bank's alleged role in the 2004 bankruptcy of sofa company Divania, a person close to the matter said on Friday.

The local prosecutor in the southern town of Bari has asked for Unicredit chief executive Federico Ghizzoni and his predecessor Alessandro Profumo to stand trial along with 14 others, on charges of abetting bankruptcy.

Prosecutors allege that UniCredit, Italy's biggest bank by assets, persuaded Divania to sign 203 derivatives contracts in 2002 and 2003 that led to losses of 15 million euros ($16.5 million) and the company's eventual bankruptcy, according to judicial sources.

UniCredit reiterated on Friday its long-held position that its current and past employees had behaved correctly with relation to Divania, which once employed 400 people in Italy's "Sofa District".

The bank said in a statement that Ghizzoni had been working abroad at the time of the events in question so could not have been involved in any way.

UniCredit added that a Bari court had decided last year, in a separate strand of the investigation, to acquit all the bank's current and former employees who had been involved.

Profumo, currently chairman of Banca Monte dei Paschi di Siena, said on Friday that there had been no wrongdoing in the current case, just as there had not been in the one that eventually led to last year's acquittals.

According to a 2008 article in Italian magazine L'Espresso, Divania's owner, Francesco Saverio Parisi, said he was badly advised by UniCredit and claimed 280 million euros in damages.

UniCredit said the court sentence that upheld Divania's bankruptcy in June 2011 showed that the company's derivatives transactions could not have played a role in its collapse.

Losses incurred through derivatives contracts for complex financial transactions have prompted several lawsuits in Italy. Many local governments and small companies have accused banks of misleading them to gain a profit.

A judge must now review the case and decide whether to order a trial or else reject the prosecutor's request. (Additional reporting by Valentina Za, writing by Isla Binnie; Editing by Crispian Balmer)


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BRIEF-Dmail Group wants to file to court request to for admission to procedure for arrangement with creditors

April 3 (Reuters) - Dmail Group SpA :

* Announced on Thursday that it has decided to file to a relevant court a request for admission to the procedure for arrangement with creditors

* The resolution was adopted as a result of the checks performed which found it impossible to achieve the expected results from the debt restructuring agreement approved on July 31, 2014

Source text for Eikon:

Further company coverage:

(Gdynia Newsroom)


16.47 | 0 komentar | Read More

PRESS DIGEST- New York Times business news - April 6

April 6 (Reuters) - The following are the top stories on the New York Times business pages. Reuters has not verified these stories and does not vouch for their accuracy.

* With "A Rape on Campus," Rolling Stone's widely discredited article, traditional safeguards broke down at pretty much every level of the editorial process. The report, published by the Columbia Graduate School of Journalism and commissioned by Rolling Stone, said the magazine failed to engage in "basic, even routine journalistic practice" to verify details of the ordeal that the magazine's source, identified only as Jackie, described to the article's author, Sabrina Rubin Erdely. (nyti.ms/1JcpAat)

* Standard General, which will take over 1,700 of the 4,000 RadioShack stores, said that eliminating the retailer's heavy cost structure and some old business practices left a core worth saving. (nyti.ms/1yObPbV)

* Greece's finance minister, Yanis Varoufakis, and the International Monetary Fund's chief, Christine Lagarde, met in Washington as the due date neared for a 458 million euro ($503.25 million) payment to the fund. (nyti.ms/1F3MlyC)

* Tucked away in a quiet design studio in this fast-growing city, a team of young animators, illustrators and computer programmers is bringing an ancient Chinese village to digital life. The project, part of the next installment of the blockbuster Hollywood film franchise "Kung Fu Panda," represents a shift in China's moviemaking ambitions. (nyti.ms/1IBfPld)

* For those who have spent more than a decade fighting for stricter regulation of the Internet, the official publication of the rules in the Federal Register, expected as early as Monday, will give reality to their latest victory. For those opposed, it is likely to touch off a flurry of lawsuits. (nyti.ms/1MVIQyl)

* A hotly awaited report that was expected to provide guidance for shareholders and institutional investors as to whom to support in Elaine Wynn's battle to stay on the Wynn Resorts Ltd's board instead suggested all board nominees be rejected and denounced the company's "manifest failures of governance." (nyti.ms/1CrJ7gY) ($1 = 0.9101 euros) (Compiled by Supriya Kurane in Bengaluru)


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Judge to approve latest deal to buy Atlantic City's Revel Casino

Written By Unknown on Minggu, 05 April 2015 | 16.47

April 2 (Reuters) - A federal bankruptcy judge in New Jersey on Thursday said she would approve an $82 million sale of Atlantic City's Revel Casino Hotel to Florida developer Glenn Straub.

U.S. Bankruptcy Court Judge Gloria Burns said from the bench that she would sign off on the deal, the third one she has approved. The previous two agreements failed.

The offer, from polo club owner and distressed real estate mogul Straub, is a far cry from the $2.4 billion it cost to build the gleaming casino complex. Revel opened in 2012 to much fanfare but never turned a profit and went bankrupt twice.

Burns delayed the approval in part to see if other interested buyers could finalize deals, but none did. Burns noted that Revel's estate was losing money every day as it waited.

"We've been here multiple times," she said, adding that she would approve the latest deal with Straub.

Straub's previous agreement, to buy Revel for $95 million, failed to close on time. Before that, Brookfield Asset Management backed out of its $110 million agreement. (Reporting by Hilary Russ; Editing by David Gregorio)


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BRIEF-Dmail Group wants to file to court request to for admission to procedure for arrangement with creditors

April 3 (Reuters) - Dmail Group SpA :

* Announced on Thursday that it has decided to file to a relevant court a request for admission to the procedure for arrangement with creditors

* The resolution was adopted as a result of the checks performed which found it impossible to achieve the expected results from the debt restructuring agreement approved on July 31, 2014

Source text for Eikon:

Further company coverage:

(Gdynia Newsroom)


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Italy prosecutor requests trial for current and former UniCredit chiefs

BARI, Italy, April 3 (Reuters) - An Italian prosecutor has asked for the current and former chief executives of UniCredit to stand trial over the bank's alleged role in the 2004 bankruptcy of sofa company Divania, a person close to the matter said on Friday.

The local prosecutor in the southern town of Bari has asked for Unicredit chief executive Federico Ghizzoni and his predecessor Alessandro Profumo to stand trial along with 14 others, on charges of abetting bankruptcy.

Prosecutors allege that UniCredit, Italy's biggest bank by assets, persuaded Divania to sign 203 derivatives contracts in 2002 and 2003 that led to losses of 15 million euros ($16.5 million) and the company's eventual bankruptcy, according to judicial sources.

UniCredit reiterated on Friday its long-held position that its current and past employees had behaved correctly with relation to Divania, which once employed 400 people in Italy's "Sofa District".

The bank said in a statement that Ghizzoni had been working abroad at the time of the events in question so could not have been involved in any way.

UniCredit added that a Bari court had decided last year, in a separate strand of the investigation, to acquit all the bank's current and former employees who had been involved.

Profumo, currently chairman of Banca Monte dei Paschi di Siena, said on Friday that there had been no wrongdoing in the current case, just as there had not been in the one that eventually led to last year's acquittals.

According to a 2008 article in Italian magazine L'Espresso, Divania's owner, Francesco Saverio Parisi, said he was badly advised by UniCredit and claimed 280 million euros in damages.

UniCredit said the court sentence that upheld Divania's bankruptcy in June 2011 showed that the company's derivatives transactions could not have played a role in its collapse.

Losses incurred through derivatives contracts for complex financial transactions have prompted several lawsuits in Italy. Many local governments and small companies have accused banks of misleading them to gain a profit.

A judge must now review the case and decide whether to order a trial or else reject the prosecutor's request. (Additional reporting by Valentina Za, writing by Isla Binnie; Editing by Crispian Balmer)


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BRIEF-Dmail Group wants to file to court request to for admission to procedure for arrangement with creditors

Written By Unknown on Sabtu, 04 April 2015 | 16.47

April 3 (Reuters) - Dmail Group SpA :

* Announced on Thursday that it has decided to file to a relevant court a request for admission to the procedure for arrangement with creditors

* The resolution was adopted as a result of the checks performed which found it impossible to achieve the expected results from the debt restructuring agreement approved on July 31, 2014

Source text for Eikon:

Further company coverage:

(Gdynia Newsroom)


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Judge to approve latest deal to buy Atlantic City's Revel Casino

April 2 (Reuters) - A federal bankruptcy judge in New Jersey on Thursday said she would approve an $82 million sale of Atlantic City's Revel Casino Hotel to Florida developer Glenn Straub.

U.S. Bankruptcy Court Judge Gloria Burns said from the bench that she would sign off on the deal, the third one she has approved. The previous two agreements failed.

The offer, from polo club owner and distressed real estate mogul Straub, is a far cry from the $2.4 billion it cost to build the gleaming casino complex. Revel opened in 2012 to much fanfare but never turned a profit and went bankrupt twice.

Burns delayed the approval in part to see if other interested buyers could finalize deals, but none did. Burns noted that Revel's estate was losing money every day as it waited.

"We've been here multiple times," she said, adding that she would approve the latest deal with Straub.

Straub's previous agreement, to buy Revel for $95 million, failed to close on time. Before that, Brookfield Asset Management backed out of its $110 million agreement. (Reporting by Hilary Russ; Editing by David Gregorio)


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Italy prosecutor requests trial for current and former UniCredit chiefs

BARI, Italy, April 3 (Reuters) - An Italian prosecutor has asked for the current and former chief executives of UniCredit to stand trial over the bank's alleged role in the 2004 bankruptcy of sofa company Divania, a person close to the matter said on Friday.

The local prosecutor in the southern town of Bari has asked for Unicredit chief executive Federico Ghizzoni and his predecessor Alessandro Profumo to stand trial along with 14 others, on charges of abetting bankruptcy.

Prosecutors allege that UniCredit, Italy's biggest bank by assets, persuaded Divania to sign 203 derivatives contracts in 2002 and 2003 that led to losses of 15 million euros ($16.5 million) and the company's eventual bankruptcy, according to judicial sources.

UniCredit reiterated on Friday its long-held position that its current and past employees had behaved correctly with relation to Divania, which once employed 400 people in Italy's "Sofa District".

The bank said in a statement that Ghizzoni had been working abroad at the time of the events in question so could not have been involved in any way.

UniCredit added that a Bari court had decided last year, in a separate strand of the investigation, to acquit all the bank's current and former employees who had been involved.

Profumo, currently chairman of Banca Monte dei Paschi di Siena, said on Friday that there had been no wrongdoing in the current case, just as there had not been in the one that eventually led to last year's acquittals.

According to a 2008 article in Italian magazine L'Espresso, Divania's owner, Francesco Saverio Parisi, said he was badly advised by UniCredit and claimed 280 million euros in damages.

UniCredit said the court sentence that upheld Divania's bankruptcy in June 2011 showed that the company's derivatives transactions could not have played a role in its collapse.

Losses incurred through derivatives contracts for complex financial transactions have prompted several lawsuits in Italy. Many local governments and small companies have accused banks of misleading them to gain a profit.

A judge must now review the case and decide whether to order a trial or else reject the prosecutor's request. (Additional reporting by Valentina Za, writing by Isla Binnie; Editing by Crispian Balmer)


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Brazil court accepts OAS request for creditor protection

Written By Unknown on Jumat, 03 April 2015 | 16.47

SAO PAULO, April 2 (Reuters) - A Brazilian state court accepted a bankruptcy protection request filed by engineering conglomerate Grupo OAS for nine of its units, in the largest corporate failure yet related to the snowballing Petróleo Brasileiro SA corruption scandal.

The decision on Thursday by Judge Daniel Carnio Costa at São Paulo State's 1st District of Judicial Recoveries allows Grupo OAS to begin steps to renegotiate about 8 billion reais ($2.5 billion) in debt, according to a statement. OAS has 60 days to present a debt restructuring proposal to all creditors.

OAS said that every debt incurred from the start of April will be fully repaid, while the bankruptcy protection proceedings will not imperil the payment of salaries and work benefits for the group's 100,000 employees. The Brazilian unit of Alvarez & Marsal Holdings LLC was picked as advisor for the bankruptcy.

The group's decision to enter bankruptcy proceedings on Tuesday was endorsed by creditors and is considered as a prerequisite to restructure OAS' debt with banks, suppliers and bondholders. Plans to obtain a debtor-in-possession loan and talks to sell key assets are at an advanced stage, executives told Reuters that day.

Grupo OAS has struggled for months with the impact of a corruption investigation at state-controlled oil producer Petróleo Brasileiro SA, or Petrobras. Findings by prosecutors that OAS paid bribes to win contracts undercut the builder's access to financing.

The corruption scandal at Petrobras is considered as Brazil's biggest ever, affecting billions of reais in contracts between the oil firm and more than two dozen contractors. An economic downturn, government austerity and a slumping currency also took their toll on OAS in recent months.

OAS follows rivals Alumini Engenharia SA and Galvão Engenharia SA, which filed for bankruptcy protection in recent months as the scandal escalated. Prosecutors say the three firms were part of a cartel of about two dozen firms that paid bribes to Petrobras executives and politicians in exchange for contracts. (Reporting by Guillermo Parra-Bernal; Editing by Christian Plumb)


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Judge to approve latest deal to buy Atlantic City's Revel Casino

April 2 (Reuters) - A federal bankruptcy judge in New Jersey on Thursday said she would approve an $82 million sale of Atlantic City's Revel Casino Hotel to Florida developer Glenn Straub.

U.S. Bankruptcy Court Judge Gloria Burns said from the bench that she would sign off on the deal, the third one she has approved. The previous two agreements failed.

The offer, from polo club owner and distressed real estate mogul Straub, is a far cry from the $2.4 billion it cost to build the gleaming casino complex. Revel opened in 2012 to much fanfare but never turned a profit and went bankrupt twice.

Burns delayed the approval in part to see if other interested buyers could finalize deals, but none did. Burns noted that Revel's estate was losing money every day as it waited.

"We've been here multiple times," she said, adding that she would approve the latest deal with Straub.

Straub's previous agreement, to buy Revel for $95 million, failed to close on time. Before that, Brookfield Asset Management backed out of its $110 million agreement. (Reporting by Hilary Russ; Editing by David Gregorio)


16.47 | 0 komentar | Read More

BRIEF-Dmail Group wants to file to court request to for admission to procedure for arrangement with creditors

April 3 (Reuters) - Dmail Group SpA :

* Announced on Thursday that it has decided to file to a relevant court a request for admission to the procedure for arrangement with creditors

* The resolution was adopted as a result of the checks performed which found it impossible to achieve the expected results from the debt restructuring agreement approved on July 31, 2014

Source text for Eikon:

Further company coverage:

(Gdynia Newsroom)


16.47 | 0 komentar | Read More
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