Bankruptcy Judge Invalidates Securitization Payment Structure

Editor’s Note: 180787_86_opinion Lehman My reading of this report is that the underlying principle of the ADDITION of conditions and co-obligors changed the homeowner’s note from being negotiable to non-negotiable. This decision doesn’t say that but the underlying reasoning leads me to believe that we are on the precipice of a paradigm shift in the way that derivatives are perceived in court and the marketplace. It appears a large number of other writers agree.

The relevance is that if the derivatives are construed as part of a single transaction in which the homeowner loan was funded, and that there are conditions under which the derivative operates that add or change the original contract as set forth in the note, then the original note was REPLACED with a new deal that did not include the homeowner.

This means the original obligation was replaced with a new obligation in which parties inserted themselves into that contract without disclosure to either the investor who funded the transaction or the homeowner who secured the transaction with the home. In my opinion (check with your own lawyer) the legal effect is that the note was a nullity the moment it was signed or assigned. This eviscerated the security rights of the creditor — although the creditor (if he/she/they can be found) might have some right to sue in equity to create a constructive trust over the property — subject to the various defenses and counterclaims available to the homeowner.

This does NOT mean that the obligation ceases to exist. But it DOES mean that the note is no longer the evidence of the obligation. It is for other reasons (third party payment by Federal agencies, insurers, or counter-parties) that the obligation has been reduced or eliminated. And it is for still other reasons that the off-set to the obligation (payment of several layers of undisclosed yield spread premiums among them), that the obligation could be eliminated or reduced.

The reaction from the financial community clearly shows they are concerned about far-reaching implications of this seemingly minor and esoteric decision. They couldn’t be so concerned and inflamed unless they saw the whole securitization scheme unraveling.

Bloomberg Friday, January 29th, 2010, 10:59 am

A federal bankruptcy court judge in New York ruled earlier this week that long-held assumptions about payments owed to a counterparty in securitization deals cannot be enforced under US Bankruptcy Code, in a decision set to upend the securitization market.

The decision was handed down by Judge James Peck, the judge overseeing the Lehman Brothers bankruptcy proceedings, who said that certain contractual provisions in a Lehman collateralized default obligation (CDO) are unenforceable under Chapter 11.

The CDO, called Dante, was also hedged by a credit default swap (CDS) provided by Lehman Brothers Special Financing (LBSF). Lehman Brothers Holding Inc. (LBHI) provided credit support to LBSF before both units filed bankruptcy in fall 2008.

After Lehman went bankrupt, trustees for the bondholders initially laid claim to the Dante obligations. When they did not receive compensation under the agreements of the CDO, they took Lehman to court. Peck dismissed the trustees’ claim under ipso facto clauses, and by doing so, threw off previously accepted principles of securitization.

“From a credit perspective, [the] ruling has important implications because it contravenes what have been longstanding market assumptions as to the enforceability of the documents as agreed to by the parties at the beginning of the transaction, and more specifically, the priority of payment provisions,” according to commentary on the ruling from credit rating agency Moody’s Investors Service.

Structured finance transactions often contain swaps – interest rate swaps, basis swaps, foreign exchange swaps, total return swaps and credit default swaps (CDS). Moody’s said the presence of this derivative contract can sometimes introduce additional risk of counter-party default. At the time of default, a counterparty could fail to meet its obligations to the issuer and/or be owed a swap termination payment if it is “in the money” at the default event.

In the case of Dante, the bankruptcy triggered early redemption of notes and required distribution of collateral proceeds that secured the notes. The United Kingdom law governing the program documentation provides that payments to the swap counter-party precede payment to noteholders. A default by the counterparty due to bankruptcy would require that payments be made to the swap counterparty only after noteholders are paid in full.

Peck decided these subordination provisions constitute “ipso facto” clauses — those that seek to modify the relationship of contracting parties due to bankruptcy filing — that are void under bankruptcy law.

The ruling contradicts previous decisions on the same case within United Kingdom courts. Additionally, Moody’s said the ruling may bear “profound” and far-reaching implications for structured finance transactions.

“[The ruling] challenges long-held assumptions relating to the subordination of swap termination payments to a swap counterparty following a swap counterparty bankruptcy,” Moody’s said in an e-mailed statement, adding that determining the impact on individual securities will require case-specific analysis.

Write to Diana Golobay.

11 Responses

  1. […] Bankruptcy Judge Invalidates Securitization Payment Structure […]

  2. “…then the original note was REPLACED with a new deal that did not include the homeowner…” It is because of this lending practice that many are claiming prevents banks from foreclosing on a property. The claim is that if the bank cannot produce the deed, then they cannot kick the tenants out..

  3. Very Important note: “This does NOT mean that the obligation ceases to exist. But it DOES mean that the note is no longer the evidence of the obligation.”

  4. Now look at this. Days after the ruling, the Judge is charged with beating his wife! Sounds a lot like Spitzer and how the banksters went after him. Read here…

    http://www.nydailynews.com/news/ny_crime/2009/02/02/2009-02-02_lehman_judge_james_peck_charged_with_hit.html

  5. The info is here…Look at Most recent Opinions

    http://www.nysb.uscourts.gov/

  6. The info is here…

    http://www.nysb.uscourts.gov/

  7. WOW. And to think that the Federal Reserve and the US Government paid out 100 cents on the dollar to AIG’s non-disclosed CDS counterparties when propping up its corpse!

    It’s now even more of an understatement to say that, things would have been different if AIG were allowed to go into bankruptcy.

  8. WE ARE SMALL PEONS. WE ARE LIKE THE SMALL FISH THAT TAG ON TO THE BIG WHALES FOR SHELTER AND FOOD. SAD BUT TRUE.

  9. THE BANKSTERS FINALLY PISSED OFF THE WRONG PEOPLE.

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