by TJ_98370 » Mon Sep 10, 2007 3:22 pm
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Troubled offshore funds may have to become more creative in looking to protect their U.S. assets from creditors, if a controversial new bankruptcy court decision is upheld. A U.S. bankruptcy court in New York has declined to recognize the Cayman Islands liquidation proceedings filed by two Bear Stearns hedge funds whose Cayman liquidators had sought to protect against seizure of U.S. assets by filing petitions for protection under Chapter 15 of the Bankruptcy Code. Chapter 15 is a comparatively new addition to U.S. law, and the meaning and effect of that law are still being tested. .........
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............In a controversial Opinion issued on August 30, 2007 by Bankruptcy Judge Burton R. Lifland, the court declined to recognize the funds' Cayman liquidation proceedings, whether as "foreign main" or "foreign non-main." Instead, Judge Lifland invited the funds' foreign representatives to commence an involuntary Chapter 11 proceeding, if protection for U.S. assets was desired. Judge Lifland held that a Cayman exempted company could not, under Cayman Law, have the requisite "center of main interest," or COMI, in the Caymans, as exempted companies must inherently transact business abroad. As for the Bear Stearns funds, Judge Lifland opined that the funds' COMI was likely in New York, despite registration in the Cayman Islands, as the funds' day-to-day operations and assets were New York-based. Without a COMI in the Cayman Islands, Judge Lifland declined to deem the Cayman liquidation proceedings as the funds' main proceeding.......
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TJ_98370 on Mon Sep 10, 2007 3:32 pm, edited 1 time in total.