InvestorsHub Logo

Enterprising Investor

06/08/12 1:20 PM

#7 RE: johnnyk2394 #6

FINRA Reported Trades of Unsecured Bonds from 6/05/12-6/06/12:

Issue: RDCC.GO
Coupon Rate: 8.500
Maturity Date: 06/01/2012

http://cxa.gtm.idmanagedsolutions.com/finra/BondCenter/BondTradeActivitySearchResult.aspx?StartDate=06/05/2012&EndDate=06/06/2012&SelectionOption=2&TradeSize=&SortBy=0&ID=NzYxMTRFQUM2

Issue: RDCC.GK
Coupon Rate: 8.500
Maturity Date: 04/17/2013

http://cxa.gtm.idmanagedsolutions.com/finra/BondCenter/BondTradeActivitySearchResult.aspx?StartDate=06/05/2012&EndDate=06/06/2012&SelectionOption=2&TradeSize=&SortBy=0&ID=NzYxMTNCQVIw

Issue: RDCC.GE
Coupon Rate: 8.875
Maturity Date: 06/30/2015

http://cxa.gtm.idmanagedsolutions.com/finra/BondCenter/BondTradeActivitySearchResult.aspx?StartDate=06/05/2012&EndDate=06/06/2012&SelectionOption=2&TradeSize=&SortBy=0&ID=NzYxMTNCQUU5

The vast majority of the trades detailed in the links above were $1MM+. I am highly confident some hedge funds now have a little more to work with going forward.

Enterprising Investor

06/08/12 4:40 PM

#8 RE: johnnyk2394 #6

BRK/A Sells ResCap Bonds Days After Seeking Probe (6/08/12)

By Steven Church on June 08, 2012

Berkshire Hathaway Inc. (BRK/A) (A), the holding company run by the billionaire Warren Buffett, sold its unsecured Residential Capital LLC bonds, two days after calling for a probe of the mortgage lender’s pre-bankruptcy deals.

Ted Weschler, a Berkshire investment manager, disclosed the sale yesterday in a court filing. Berkshire on June 4, asked the judge overseeing ResCap’s bankruptcy in Manhattan to approve an examiner to investigate deals made before the company sought court protection, including transactions with its parent, Ally Financial Inc. (ALLY) (ALLY)

Berkshire, based in Omaha, Nebraska, held more than $500 million of ResCap’s unsecured bonds before the sale. The company sold them on June 5 and June 6, Weschler said, without disclosing prices. Berkshire still holds more than $900 million of ResCap’s junior secured bonds, according to the filing.

Buffett didn’t immediately respond to e-mailed questions sent to an assistant.

An investigation of ResCap’s deals “must be conducted by an impartial examiner appointed by the court,” Berkshire said in court papers.

ResCap, a real estate financing firm based in Minneapolis, filed bankruptcy May 14 with plans to sell most of its assets to Fortress Investment Group LLC. (FIG) (FIG)

Legal Claims

Ally, a Detroit-based bank that specializes in car loans, supported the bankruptcy filing as a way to resolve legal claims related to mortgage-backed securities. Ally is 74 percent-owned by the U.S. Treasury after receiving a bailout.

Prices for three of ResCap’s unsecured bonds rose on June 5 after Berkshire asked for an investigation, according to Trace, the bond-price reporting system of the Financial Industry Regulatory Authority.

Yesterday and today, those same bonds fell. The 6.5 percent bonds that matured on June 1 dropped more than 7 percent. The 6.5 percent bonds maturing next year fell 16 percent. And the 6.875 percent bonds fell almost 12 percent. All were selling for 17.6 cents on the dollar, according to Trace.

U.S. Bankruptcy Judge Martin Glenn in Manhattan hasn’t ruled on Berkshire’s request. Glenn gave unsecured creditors permission to investigate deals that the bankrupt mortgage company made to help Ally avoid billions of dollars of potential legal liability.

Approval’s Effect

His approval gives company lawyers permission to interview witnesses under oath and subpoena documents.

The committee’s request to look into the deals is routine in large corporate bankruptcies. Berkshire’s is rarer. Results of such investigations are usually given more weight by judges because they are considered independent.

ResCap filed for bankruptcy May 14 with plans to sell most of its assets to Fortress Investment Group LLC. Ally, supported the bankruptcy filing as a way to resolve legal claims related to mortgage-backed securities. Ally is 74 percent owned by the U.S. Treasury after receiving a bailout.

ResCap has proposed dispensing with potential lawsuits against Ally as part of the sale of mortgage loans and other financial assets to its parent company.

Ally agreed to pay ResCap $750 million to settle any claims against the parent, buy as much as $1.6 billion of securities if others don’t, and provide $150 million to help finance ResCap’s operations during bankruptcy, according to a company statement.

The case is In re Residential Capital LLC, 12-12020, U.S. Bankruptcy Court, Southern District of New York (Manhattan).

To contact the reporter on this story: Steven Church in Wilmington, Delaware, at schurch3@bloomberg.net.

To contact the editor responsible for this story: John Pickering at jpickering@bloomberg.net.

Enterprising Investor

06/11/12 11:59 PM

#13 RE: johnnyk2394 #6

ResCap Junior Notes Projected to Get 105 Cents on the Dollar (6/11/12)

By Dakin Campbell - May 15, 2012 11:41 AM CT

Residential Capital LLC, the bankrupt mortgage unit of Ally Financial Inc. (ALLY), could pay 105 cents on the dollar to junior secured guaranteed note holders under in the company’s bankruptcy plan announced yesterday.

The 9.625 percent notes due 2015 are projected to pay out par plus accrued, including 93 cents on the dollar of secured recovery and another 12 cents in unsecured funds, according to a document prepared for bondholders by Houlihan Lokey and obtained by Bloomberg News. The figures used estimated market values as of Dec. 31, 2012, according to the document.

To contact the reporter on this story: Dakin Campbell in San Francisco at dcampbell27@bloomberg.net