Nortel
Networks to pay U.S. bondholders up to $1 billion in interest
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[July 25, 2014]
By Tom Hals
WILMINGTON Del. (Reuters) - Nortel
Networks Inc, the U.S. unit of defunct Canadian telecom company
Nortel Networks Corp, has agreed to pay up to about $1 billion in
interest that has accrued on the $3.9 billion it owes to its U.S.
bondholders, a court filing showed. |
Thursday’s settlement comes as Nortel’s bankrupt units in Canada and
Europe are fighting with the U.S. unit over how to divide $7.3
billion raised by liquidating the global telecommunications company.
The settlement, if approved by U.S. Bankruptcy Court Judge Kevin
Gross in Wilmington, Delaware, could affect Nortel retirees in
Canada and the United Kingdom. They argued that the bondholders
should get $90 million in interest, or no interest at all.
Any funds that are left over in Nortel’s U.S. bankruptcy after
paying off the bondholders and other U.S. creditors could be used to
help to make up for pension shortfalls in Canada and the United
Kingdom.
Under the proposed settlement, bondholders would be entitled to
post-petition interest of $876 million, potentially increasing to as
much as $1.01 billion if Nortel has not repaid them by June 30 next
year. Nortel said the settlement will help speed the resolution of
its bankruptcy.
Nortel sought protection from creditors in courts around the world
in 2009 and its businesses as well as its patents and patent
applications were quickly sold, reducing a once global company to
little more than a pile of cash. But it was never decided how to
allocate the money raised between different insolvency and
bankruptcy proceedings in different countries. Gross and a Canadian
judge held a simultaneous five-week trial, connected by video link,
that ended in June over the question of how to divide the $7.3
billion. The judges have not ruled, and the U.S. estate may not be
allocated enough money to repay the bondholders’ $3.9 billion
principal, let alone interest.
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The monitor overseeing the Canadian bankruptcy did not join the
settlement over the interest payments. An attorney for the monitor,
Ken Coleman of Allen & Overy in New York, did not immediately return
an email request for comment.
The case is In re Nortel Networks Inc, U.S. Bankruptcy Court,
District of Delaware, No. 09-10138.
(Reporting by Tom Hals in Wilmington, Delaware; Additional reporting
by; Mridhula Raghavan in Bangalore; Editing by Jan Paschal)
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