Headlines

American Apparel placed its U.K. outlets into the equivalent of chapter 11 bankruptcy protection Tuesday, as the troubled retailer looks for a buyer for its brand less than year after it exited bankruptcy in the U.S., The Wall Street Journal reported. Administrators from U.K.-based restructuring firm KPMG said American Apparel’s 13 stores were placed in administration, a process similar to chapter 11 in the U.S. The American Apparel brand and its U.S. business are being sold. The U.K.
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Brazil's telecommunications watchdog Anatel has temporarily suspended two Oi SA board members appointed by minority investor FIA Société Mondiale, on suspicion of participating in meetings and influencing decisions affecting the carrier without the agency's permission. Anatel will uphold the suspension of both board members until officials decide whether Société Mondiale requires prior regulatory consent to join the controlling bloc of Oi, Carlos Baigorri, the watchdog's head of competition, told reporters on Tuesday in Brasilia.
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Premier Oil has been forced to deny fresh doubts over its heavily delayed $2.6bn (£2.08bn) debt restructuring after the company’s share price plunged by almost 17pc amid fears its lenders are looking to abandon the deal. The North Sea’s largest independent oil company acted to calm the rising market jitters by assuring investors that none of its senior lenders have left the lender syndicate, or are proposing to exit talks at this time.
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Construction giant Saudi Oger has asked banks to agree to a freeze in repayments on at least 13 billion riyals ($3.5 billion) of debt, sources aware of the matter said, as it seeks more time to collect money owed by the kingdom's government, Reuters reported. The request opens the way for the company, owned by the family of Lebanese Prime Minister-designate Saad al-Hariri, to press ahead with seeking one of the largest debt restructuring deals in the Gulf since the slide in oil prices in June 2014.
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The Brazilian government is not considering an intervention in debt-laden carrier Oi SA at this point, on hopes creditors and shareholders can reach a negotiated solution involving no state bailout, Communications Minister Gilberto Kassab said on Monday, Reuters reported. Officials are currently working on providing Oi the necessary support to emerge stronger from bankruptcy protection, Kassab said at an event in Brasilia. The government is all for Oi to negotiate a "market-based solution" that helps it emerge stronger from creditor protection, he said.
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A squeeze in the number of buy-to-let properties available in the Irish property market is likely to happen as many interest-only arrangements end and borrowers become liable for substantially higher repayments, the Institute of Professional Auctioneers and Valuers (IPAV) has warned. In a submission to the Department of Housing, the group’s chief executive, Pat Davitt, said many investors are now reaching the end of their 10-year interest-only period and will become liable for capital repayments in addition to interest, the Irish Times reported.
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China removed its high-profile, reformist finance minister from the post in a shuffle that comes as President Xi Jinping positions trusted allies in key roles and Beijing prioritizes short-term growth over major overhauls, The Wall Street Journal reported. The shuffle put more senior government posts in the hands of Xi loyalists ahead of a twice-a-decade Communist Party Congress next fall that will shape policy for years to come. Mr.
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South Korea said on Tuesday that 94 out of 97 Hanjin Shipping Co Ltd's container ships have completed unloading as of Nov. 7, Reuters reported. Of the remaining 3 ships, two ships will be unloaded as soon as possible while relevant authorities are in talks with Shanghai port authorities to unload one seized ship in Shanghai, the country's finance ministry and the Ministry of Oceans and Fisheries said in a joint statement. Hanjin filed for court receivership on Aug. 31 after its creditors cut off financial support for the firm.
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The Ontario government is planning a major intervention in Essar Steel Algoma's recovery from insolvency, the Sault Ste. Marie Economic Development Corp. learned today. News of the funding was disclosed this afternoon at a meeting of the EDC board by James Caicco, a local director of Northern Ontario Heritage Fund Corp. (NOHFC), the provincial government's crown corporation and development agency. "We're working on a major, major funding from NOHFC to help in the restructuring," Caicco said.
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