Air Canada's flight attendants approved a plan for a 21-month moratorium on the airline's pension obligations and an extension of their current contract over the same period late Sunday, the Financial Post reported. The union's membership voted 63% in favour of the plan, which management has said is vital in the airline staving off a second bankruptcy filing in six years. Air Canada's pilots are expected to release the result of their own ratification vote Monday morning.
Read more
Resources Per Country
- Anguilla
- Bahamas
- Barbados
- Belize
- Bermuda
- British Virgin Islands
- Canada
- Cayman Islands
- Costa Rica
- Cuba
- Dominica
- Dominican Republic
- El Salvador
- Grenada
- Guadeloupe
- Guatemala
- Haiti
- Honduras
- Jamaica
- Mexico
- Montserrat
- Netherlands Antilles
- Nicaragua
- Panama
- Puerto Rico
- Saint Kitts and Nevis
- Saint Lucia
- Trinidad and Tobago
- Turks and Caicos Islands
- United States
- United States Virgin Islands
The massive North American auto supplier network took a major hit as Lear Corp. filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection, becoming the latest example of how the collapse in vehicle sales has spread well beyond vehicle manufacturers and deep into the thousands of firms that supply them with parts. Lear Corp., whose bankruptcy filing is the largest among auto suppliers this year, owes $7 million (U.S.) to Canadian parts makers already struggling through the worst downturn in the auto industry in a generation, The Globe and Mail reported.
Read more
The battle for bankrupt copper miner Asarco LLC continued this week, as the debtor urged creditors to approve a newly filed reorganization plan that reflects a revised offer from India-based Sterlite Industries Ltd., Bankruptcy Law360 reported. The sixth amended Chapter 11 plan filed Monday includes a deal to sell Asarco's assets to Sterlite, a subsidiary of London-based Vedanta Resources PLC, for $1.1 billion in cash and a $770 million promissory note.
Read more
Paris has set aside €100 million in stimulus funds earmarked for what the French like to call their cultural patrimony, The New York Times reported. It is a French twist on how to overcome the global downturn, spending borrowed money avidly to beautify the nation even as it also races ahead of the United States in more classic Keynesian ways: fixing potholes, upgrading railroads and pursuing other “shovel ready” projects.
Read more
Bankrupt newsprint producer AbitibiBowater Inc said that it has appointed Bruce Robertson as its chief restructuring officer, Reuters reported. Robertson, who recently served as senior managing partner at Brookfield Asset Management, will work toward a negotiated settlement of claims and a comprehensive restructuring plan, the company said in a statement. The forestry firm, headquartered in Montreal but incorporated in the United States, crumpled under an overwhelming debt-load and filed for bankruptcy protection in April this year.
Read more
Adaltis Inc, a Canadian medical device maker, said on Friday it was granted protection from its creditors by a Quebec court while it works on a reorganization plan, Reuters reported. Montreal-based Adaltis, which warned earlier this week that it was running out of money, said the Quebec Superior Court approved its application under the Companies' Creditors Arrangement Act (Canada). The court also approved debtor-in-possession financing of up to C$3 million ($2.6 million) through Victoria Square Ventures Inc to fund operations during the reorganization process.
Read more
The Vancouver 2010 Winter Olympics have become a bargaining chip at Air Canada as the country's largest airline tries to overcome labour strife and avoid filing for bankruptcy protection, The Globe and Mail reported. Air Canada mechanics and technical staff, worried about losing their jobs to El Salvador, narrowly voted down a tentative 21-month labour pact that had been recommended by union negotiators, throwing the cash-strapped carrier's recovery strategy into jeopardy.
Read more
Bankrupt commercial printer Quebecor World Inc on Tuesday gained approval of its bankruptcy reorganization plan from judges in the United States and Canada, clearing the way for the company to exit bankruptcy protection. Quebecor World, which expects to emerge from its insolvency proceedings in July, prints books, magazines, directories and advertising materials. It filed for court protection in January 2008 and has about 20,000 employees. In a rare joint cross-border hearing conducted via video teleconference, Judge James Peck of the U.S. Bankruptcy Court in Manhattan also gave U.S.
Read more
Zimbabwe’s prime minister, Morgan Tsvangirai, said Tuesday that an official he had appointed had secured lines of credit worth $950 million from China, President Robert Mugabe’s longtime ally, The New York Times reported. Mr. Mugabe’s party has mocked Mr. Tsvangirai for failing to bring home much aid from his three-week tour of the United States and Europe. Zimbabwe’s government — a virtually bankrupt contraption led by Mr. Mugabe and his rival, Mr. Tsvangirai — needs an estimated $8 billion to rebuild the country’s ruined economy.
Read more
A British company has won its bid to buy a Chicago-based clothier that made inaugural and election night suits for President Barack Obama, The Associated Press reported. U.S. Bankruptcy Court in Chicago on Friday approved the sale of Hartmarx Corp. to Britain-based Emerisque Brands and SKNL North America BV for $119 million. Hartmarx creditor Wells Fargo & Co. had previously rejected an $83 million offer. Hartmarx was forced into bankruptcy protection in January after lenders cut it off. Wells Fargo had pushed for a liquidation because Hartmarx couldn't repay $114 million.
Read more