Showing posts with label chapter 9. Show all posts
Showing posts with label chapter 9. Show all posts

Tuesday, July 23, 2013

Personal Bankruptcy- A General Overview

Today we're going to focus on personal bankruptcy..

Its a funny thing-- If you're a corporation, going bankrupt attaches no social stigma whatsoever...  

Nothing to it.. File a 'Chapter 11', some creditors get burned, there's restructuring of payments and then the business continues operating as normal...

The public really doesn't care or in most cases even know..
Now when its personal filing, then the individual is supposed to feel some kind of shame or remorse, and particularly when its a famous celebrity doing the filing, they're are ridiculed.

Funny double standard we set up...

Most people don't know much about bankruptcy-- even those who've had to file, basically put their trust and faith in some scavenger attorney to save their financial rear-ends, never realizing until its too late your attorney really works for the other side..

So we're just going to give you a brief, easy to understand primer of  the various types of bankruptcy and how the process works generally..  
Before we begin, if you are thinking of filing, don't base your decision solely on this posting-- do the necessary research to find out what's the best course of action for you.  And most importantly, do not feel any embarrassment or shame for doing so...   

Corporations certainly do not...

We begin..
In Title 11 of the United States Code (the Federal Bankruptcy Code), there are four bankruptcy filings:

Chapter 7 - Liquidation
    
Chapter 11 - Reorganization
    
Chapter 12 - Adjustment of Debts of a Family Farmer with Regular Annual Income
    
Chapter 13 - Adjustment of Debts of an Individual with Regular Income

There is also a Chapter 9 but that deals with municipalities such as what's occurring with Detroit
We will take a moment to explain each one but as an individual, if you ever did need to file at a future point, you'd be concerned with either '7', '11' or '13'

Chapter 7:

Companies, married couples and individuals are allowed to file..

A debtor filing for this is essentially scrapping everything and starting over, hoping for a clean financial slate. 

Once the filing is underway, an administrator or trustee is appointed to maneuver the sale of the debtor's assets. This does not necessarily mean that everything the person owns is sold.  
Sometimes an individual has nothing or holds possessions it is not legally obligated to sell thus the creditors do not receive any repayment yet the debts are fully discharged.

Both federal and state laws allow for certain exemptions such as his or her primary residence or personal items like clothing. 

Now once the debtor's assets are liquidated, the trustee pays certain creditors a portion of the money raised.  Usually you pay your attorney who keeps a percentage for him/herself..

As we said before, not all of the creditors receive money from the proceeds, so many of those financial obligations are "forgiven," or discharged. 
Once someone has filed for bankruptcy under Chapter 7, he or she cannot file again for seven years, and debts that were not forgiven in a previous filing will not be discharged in the next filing.

Important: there are certain debts for which the debtor will receive no forgiveness. Alimony, child support and taxes are not discharged under any bankruptcy filing, and student loans** are seldom discharged. 

So if a lot of your debt falls into these categories, you might be better off filing Chapter 13.

** As we often try to warn people here, don't attend college and take on student debt unless you really have a game plan mapped out for a career path where there's a true job market need for your skill sets.
Chapter 9:

As mentioned before, this only applies to a municipality, such as a city, town, village, county, taxing district, municipal utility, and school district...

 Under Chapter 9 Bankruptcy, the municipality is expected to reorganize and propose a plan of repayment, similar to Chapter 11, which we will address right now...

Chapter 11:

This was originally intended only for large corporations but now individuals can file as well though to be honest very few do so..

When a business is unable to service its debt or pay its creditors, the business or its creditors can file with a federal bankruptcy court for protection under either Chapter 7 or Chapter 11.
In Chapter 7, the business ceases operations, a trustee sells all of its assets, and then distributes the proceeds to its creditors. Any residual amount is returned to the owners of the company. 

The simplest way to understand is to picture the famous Bain Capital from former Presidential Candidate Mitt Romney's past..

A company is bought on the down side.. '7' is filed and certain entities like the filer profit off the sales while the creditors recoup back pennies on the dollar, taking sizable losses

In Chapter 11, in most instances the debtor remains in control of its business operations as a debtor in possession, and is subject to the oversight and jurisdiction of the court.
In other words, the company or business continues to operate and function.  K-Mart and Sears are examples..

We won't go into too much more depth on this since our focus is personal not corporate bankruptcy.

Chapter 13:

For simplification purposes we won't focus on Chapter 12 here since '12' and '13' are basically the same filing, except that Chapter 12 is for family farmers and Chapter 13 is for other individuals. 

As long as you have a steady, reliable income, less than $269,250 in unsecured debt and less than $807,750 in secured debt, you can file Chapter 13.   
If your debt load was higher, in all likelihood you'd file as Chapter 11.

However, most people filing who do not do so under '7' do so here...

Once the filing is made, the debtor is assigned a trustee, with the two developing a proposal for a repayment plan. The court decides whether to accept or alter the plan or dictate another repayment plan altogether. 

Once the plan is decided upon, it can last anywhere from three to five years.
So why someone would file for 13 instead of Chapter 7. There are a few reasons for this:

1)   Under Chapter 13 filings, debtors do not have to liquidate their assets -- they actually get to keep everything, not just the items that meet the legal exemption.

2)   In most Chapter 13 cases, the debtor is repaying only a percentage of what he or she actually owes -- sometimes as little as 30 cents to 50 cents on the dollar.
________
In a way, we're quite fortunate in America to have this outlet to discharge debts...  

In places like Ireland and Spain, all debts stay with you forever (much like student loans for us) and in order to not be on the hook to repay, people have to leave their homeland to immigrate elsewhere.

There was also a time when debtors were thrown into prison..  This was the original purpose of establishing both the American colony of Georgia and the Oceania colony and eventual nation of Australia in the early 1700's
Of course, nothing is done for charity sake..  

The system makes money off one's financial successes via higher income taxes, etc..,  and it makes a hell of a lot of money off an individual's demise (attorneys, court costs, liquidators, etc..)

Unless something more important comes up in the news, our next posting will focus on some famous people who had to go through personal bankruptcy in the last decade, how they racked up their debts and how they got through it...

Monday, July 22, 2013

Detroit: America's Urban Ghost Town

"Detroit, Detroit... Its a Hell of a town..
You better stay indoors when the sun goes down."

Today we're going to talk a little bit about Detroit and their recent attempt to file Chapter 9 bankruptcy as a municipality.

We freely admit we haven't been following Detroit's economic demise as much as other topics-- we suppose if you want to see the origins of this collapse of a once bustling city, rent a film Michael Moore made in the mid 1980s called 'Roger and Me'

The 'Roger' in question was Roger Smith, President of GM at the time...
But even though we haven't been following super closely the daily destruction of the US automobile capitol, we can still relay some nuggets of information that mainstream media have conveniently glossed over or ignored altogether...

First, lets go back to that Chapter 9 bankruptcy filing..  Detroit is seeking protection from creditors in Federal court rather than state court.   A judge last week issued a delay in their request...

Why?  What does it matter?

If the bankruptcy is filed in Michigan, then by law pensioners are fully protected.  If the bankruptcy can be implemented in Federal court, there are no laws on the books protecting them..
As Yahoo News explains it: (blue font)

"Detroit residents pay the highest property and income taxes in the state. Last year its business tax doubled. About 40% of revenues go toward retirement benefits and debt, much of which was issued in the last 10 years to finance pension contributions. 

Payments on $1.6 billion of pension-related certificates of participation consume nearly every dollar of property tax revenue. 
Investors jumped at the high yields on Detroit's debt because they expected the city to borrow and raise taxes to the hilt to avoid default. 

If Motown risked defaulting, creditors bet that the state or federal government would swoop in like Superman and save the city in the nick of time.

But no state bailout was forthcoming..."

Now the goal is to take from retirement pensions.
This means people who've worked their whole lives into the system and fully dependent on those monthly checks could/would see them slashed... maybe 10%...  15%...  who knows..  If Detroit is in truth that bad, it could be a 50% cut...

And the unions like all other creditors would have to take it or leave it..

Do you know how many creditors are owed money by Detroit?

More than 100,000.

The entire population right now is short of 700k so that's like one creditor per seven individuals...
This is case is to the US what Cyprus was to the world...

A trial balloon.

In case you forgot Cyprus, when they were collapsing they closed the banks for over 2 full weeks while ATMs ran out of money, then once it was agreed they would raid the deposits of savers, the small island nation issued capital controls..

This meant you could not wire money abroad nor take it upon your person when leaving the country.. Every individual at the airport searched... Not for guns or explosives or drugs...
The government thug police searched people for cash.

And while everyone was sleeping, other western European nations implemented the same policies for banking emergencies..

It's called a 'bail-in' when well-to-do individuals have their private accounts siphoned to keep the banks afloat..

The notion of your money truly being safe and sound in a bank forever now a lie.. its only now whether you the individual accept the new world or still wish to live in illusions of the old..

So back to Detroit..
If they can successfully free themselves from their pension obligations under the guise of not having enough money, then it sets a precedent..  What's to stop Philadelphia or Chicago, Boston or NYC from doing the same..

It would also decimate the unions once and for all..

If they're powerless to protect pensions, what use would they serve??

And you better believe once Detroit shafts all its creditors, it will go to Washington and ask for and receive a Federal bailout..
Can you imagine a heavily black populated urban city in decay being denied by a black president who pretends outwardly to care about them??

Precedent was already set in the 1970s with New York (Pres. Ford had a PR nightmare change of heart after originally telling them to famously 'Drop Dead'..

So other cities will follow Detroit..

Because really, what is money when its just pieces of printed pictures of Presidents backed by nothing...
We keep saying this and we hope it gets through your heads..  Every single month via QE, $85 billion dollars is created from nothing which becomes US debt the taxpayers are on the hook for...

This money goes to banks and the stock market.

And the break down based on a 30 day month is this:
Take the $85B and divide by 30 days =

$2.83 billion a Day

Take the $2.83B and divide by 24 hours =

$118 million per Hour
Take the $118M and divide by 60 minutes =

$1.96 million every minute

Take $1.96m and divide by 60 seconds =

$32,777 spent on QE every second of the day...
So the lesson of the story is don't think for a moment Detroit won't receive a bailout if/when asked....
Their total debt is $20 billion which is under 1/4th of one month of QE

And don't think for a moment others won't follow..  Maybe even whole states will get in on the act... California has been needing one for a decade but just refuse to be the first to ask...

And while all this is going on, the stock market keeps rising,  people are flocking to the movies to watch cartoons and other crap to escape their lives in 90 min intervals...
And we think there was some local trial somewhere that really has no bearing outside its local jurisdiction except for some race-peddlers in the White House and elsewhere seeking to turn a tea pot into a tempest..

'Don't galvanize and march because of Detroit... or the utter bleakness of this economy..  or even all the black on black crime gripping the nation...'

Nope.. March for a thug who tried to kill a Hispanic man who was following him too closely..  After all, 35yrs ago that could have been our President..

Ask people about that trial and many will provide every minute minuscule detail of the case-- gotta thank CNN for that..

Ask about Detroit and other than identifying their sports teams, you get collective blanks....

We end with a few stats and an overall warning that your local metropolitan area could very well be next...
**  In 1950, there were about 296,000 manufacturing jobs in Detroit.  Today, there are less than 27,000.  There are lots of houses available for sale in Detroit right now for $500 or less; approximately 78,000 abandoned homes in the city.

**  About one-third of Detroit's 140 square miles is either vacant or derelict.

**  Over 60% of Detroit's children live in poverty
**  Less than half of the residents of Detroit over the age of 16 are working at this point.

**  Detroit was once the fourth-largest city in the United States, but over the past 60 years the population of Detroit has fallen by 63 percent.

Wheww.. So much doom and gloom on a sunny-cheery summer day in July..  Crikey!  Let's all go see a Disney Pixar movie as a nice pick-me-up...

So sayeth the Grasshopper...