Fedders Bankruptcy Case Files in Delaware

Fedders North America, Inc. and sixteen affiliated debtors, including its parent company, the Fedders Corporation filed petitions under Chapter 11 of the Bankruptcy Code in Delaware earlier today. Judge Brendan Linehan Shannon will preside over these cases.

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American Home Mortgage Files Bankruptcy in Delaware

This morning, in a filing that had been widely anticipated in the past two weeks, causing tremors in financial markets, American Home Mortgage Holdings, Inc. and certain of its affiliates filed petitions under Chapter 11 of the Bankruptcy Code in the United States District Court for the District of Delaware. Judge Christopher S. Sontchi has been assigned to these cases, which rank among the largest ever filed by a mortgage lender.

Unlike the string of subprime lender cases that have been filed this year, many of which filed in Delaware, this is a case of an Alt-A lender seeking bankruptcy protection. Alt-A loans, sometimes called “no doc loans,” are those made to borrowers with better credit scores, but with little or no income verification. In the wake of the recent subprime collapse, Alt-A lenders were predicted by many analysts to be highly vulnerable. According to press accounts, in recent weeks, other lenders with portfolios of Alt-A loans have moved to cut back on such transactions.

According to the debtors’ declaration in support of their petitions, these filings were brought on by rising default rates and falling real estate values that led to margin calls with respect to the debtors’ credit facilities. On Friday, August 3, 2007, the debtors terminated 6,500 employees in anticipation of these filings and the closing of the debtors’ businesses. As of December 31, 2006, the debtors report that they held a leveraged portfolio of mortgage loans and mortgage-backed securities of approximately $15.6 billion, while debtor American Home Mortgage Servicing, Inc. serviced approximately 197,000 loans with an aggregate principal amount of approximately $46.3 billion.

Caribbean Supermarket Chain Pueblo Files For Chapter 11 Protection

This morning, Nutritional Sourcing Corporation - a holding company for affiliated debtors Pueblo International LLC and FLBN, LLC - along with these affiliates, filed petitions for Chapter 11 relief in the United States Bankruptcy Court for the District of Delaware. These cases have been assigned to the Honorable Peter J. Walsh.

 

According to press reports, debtors FLBN and Pueblo International operates the Pueblo chain of supermarkets in Puerto Rico and the U.S. Virgin Islands. According to press accounts, the St. Croix and St. Thomas, VI Pueblo supermarkets closed suddenly in recent weeks amid rumors of a sale of the chain to Whole Market Foods LLC, a St. Thomas-based company. According to Pueblo’s website, Pueblo was the first supermarket franchise in Puerto Rico and U.S. Virgin Islands, established in 1955. Pueblo also operates Blockbuster video stores in Puerto Rico and the Virgin Islands.

 

National Sourcing’s financial report for the fiscal year ending October 28, 2006 reports that rising oil prices and increased competition have had a deleterious effect on its performance. In recent years, the number of supermarkets and video stores operated by the debtors have decreased. This financial report also indicates that the debtors were highly leveraged.       

Northwest Suburban Community Hospital, Inc. Files Chapter 11 Petition

Northwest Suburban Community Hospital, Inc., a wholly-owned subsidiary of non-debtor Chatham Capital Corp., filed a petition for relief under Chapter 11 of the Bankruptcy Code by commencing a case in the United States Bankruptcy Court for the District of Delaware on July 30, 2007. This case, has been assigned to the Honorable Kevin Gross under case number 07-11018.

According to the debtor’s first day declaration, beginning in 1997, the debtor operated a treatment facility for morbidly obese patients at its facility in Belvidere, Illinois. However, because of declining business and revenue attributed by the debtor to increased competition and insufficient levels of reimbursement from Blue Cross Blue Shield of Illinois, the debtor ceased its treatment of obesity in January 2007. Since that time, the debtor has continued to operate an emergency standby department at its facility.

According to the declaration, the debtor’s liabilities exceed its assets by in excess of $3.7 million. The debtor is using the bankruptcy process to effect a sale of its facility. SwedishAmerican Hospital is the proposed stalking horse, with a bid of $5,750,000.