Obbligazioni societarie HIGH YIELD e oltre, verso frontiere inesplorate - Vol. 2

Famsa revoca il Chapter 11 ma solo per il bond 2020 oggetto di ristrutturazione, non si finisce mai di imparare non pensavo esistesse una cosa così fantasiosa. In effetti lo sapevano già da prima visto che la ristrutturazione non prevede esborsi di denaro, in caso contrario non penso sarebbe fattibile estromettere il bond dal Chapter 11.
assemblea per i creditori al 27 luglio
probabile bancarotta fraudolenta per irregolari registrazioni infragruppo, in effetti a fine dicembre risultava cassa per pagare le scadenze del nuovo anno e invece è finita con le pezze al kulo
 
Ultima modifica:
Famsa revoca il Chapter 11 ma solo per il bond 2020 oggetto di ristrutturazione, non si finisce mai di imparare non pensavo esistesse una cosa così fantasiosa. In effetti lo sapevano già da prima visto che la ristrutturazione non prevede esborsi di denaro, in caso contrario non penso sarebbe fattibile estromettere il bond dal Chapter 11.
assemblea per i creditori al 27 luglio
probabile bancarotta fraudolenta per irregolari registrazioni infragruppo, in effetti a fine dicembre risultava cassa per pagare le scadenze del nuovo anno e invece è finita con le pezze al kulo



...questi vendevano a credito...:-D:-D:-D
 
Argentina's government sent a bill to Congress late on Thursday night laying out its plans to restructure public debt in dollars issued under local law, offering creditors new instruments in both foreign currency and pesos. RTRS
 
Questo è l’esempio più semplice e aderente la situazione dovuta al covid19
Quando il bond al 9,65% (mi sembra) ha sempre pagato fino al call, Takko si barcamenava
Ora con un bond ad un tasso del 40% in meno (circa) vanno a gambe all’aria
Meno male ne sono stato fuori

Pare e dico pare che Takko si rimetta a pagare il coupon. Si spiega il rally da 20 centesimi a 60...
 
CBL & Associates (NYSE:CBL) reaches a forbearance agreement with holders representing more than 50% of its operating partnerships 5.95% senior unsecured notes due 2026 until July 22.
Also extends forbearance agreement on 5.25% senior unsecured notes due 2023 and on its bank credit agreement to July 22.
Continues to negotiate with its debt holders.
If any of the 2023 notes, 2026 notes, or credit agreement were accelerated, it would trigger a default event under the operating partnership's 4.60% senior unsecured notes due 2024, which could lead to the acceleration of all amounts due under those notes.
CBL has skipped a $18.6M interest payment due June 15 on the 2026 notes and an $11.8M interest payment on the 2023 notes. (SA)

CBL & Associates Properties Inc., the owner of more than 100 shopping malls across the U.S., is preparing to file for bankruptcy, according to people with knowledge of the plans.
The company has been negotiating with its lenders in an effort to enter Chapter 11 with a consensual restructuring agreement in place, said the people, who asked not to be identified discussing confidential matters. The plans aren’t final, and elements could change, the people said. CBL declined to comment.
CBL, which operates mostly so-called Class B malls, has been hurt in part by struggles of retailers including Dick’s Sporting Goods Inc. and Ascena Retail Group Inc., among the landlord’s top tenants based on revenue at the end of 2019. CBL’s own financial distress shows the impact of retail-sector failures, which have come fast and furious in recent years.
Shares of CBL plunged 11% after Bloomberg reported the bankruptcy preparations, and dropped an additional 18% as of 4:40 p.m. in late New York trading.
The mall owner said in June that the loss of income from stores withholding rent during the Covid-19 pandemic had forced it to skip an interest payment due on some of its more than $3 billion debt. It has a forbearance agreement with debt-holders that was extended until July 22, according to a regulatory filing this week. Bloomberg
 

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