By Peg Brickley Of DOW JONES NEWSWIRES
Some three dozen institutional investors have joined in the fight over billions of dollars in cash, potential tax refunds and other leavings of the biggest bank collapse in U.S. history, that of Washington Mutual Bank, or WaMu.
Coalesced into an informal group of WaMu bondholders, the insurance companies, investment banks and hedge funds signed papers Friday setting out their claim for payments from WaMu's former parent company, Washington Mutual Inc. (WAMUQ), which is liquidating under the protection of the U.S. Bankruptcy Court in Wilmington, Del.
WaMu and Washington Mutual Inc. each have creditors clamoring for payment, including bondholders owed billions of dollars. The two creditor camps are grappling with each other and with WaMu's acquirer, JPMorgan Chase & Co. (JPM), over assets that went up for grabs when the thrift was taken over by regulators in September 2008.
(This article also appears in Daily Bankruptcy Review, a publication from Dow Jones & Co.)
One of the biggest assets - already claimed by the former parent company and by JPMorgan - is the tax refund expected due to the losses tracked to WaMu, a lender in the subprime mortgage market. Counted back against prior years of taxes paid, the 2008 losses could mean more than $2 billion in federal tax checks for creditors of WaMu, creditors of the former parent company or both.
WaMu's bondholders say they're entitled to a share of the tax refund and to some of the $4.4 billion the Seattle banking company stored up in WaMu accounts. Nobody can locate signature cards or deposit agreements governing the cash in the bank accounts, according to WaMu's bondholders. Therefore they could have as much right as anyone else to the money in the former parent company's accounts, according to the bondholder claim documents.
"The only fact which can be established is that (WaMu's former parent) had access to very substantial capital that it should have injected into (WaMu), but did not," lawyers for the informal group of WaMu bondholders wrote.
The Federal Deposit Insurance Corp. is serving as receiver for WaMu and is charged with attempting to cover the bondholder losses. From the start, however, WaMu's bondholders hired their own lawyers to press their claims, independent of the federal agency's actions.
Lawsuits, some old and some yet to be filed, are also in the crosshairs of WaMu's bondholders, the claim document says.
They signaled they'll press the former parent company to pay them damages for alleged "failure to properly support its thrift subsidiary," which was deemed unsafe by regulators after a run on the bank by depositors who withdrew billions of dollars.
Additionally, WaMu bondholders said they're entitled to a share of more than $400 million from lawsuits against the government that date back to the acquisition of American Savings Bank in 1996.
WaMu's bondholders also staked claims in potential lawsuits against the former parent company for alleged wrongs connected to the thrift's collapse and seizure, ranging from running afoul of banking regulations to misrepresenting its ability to prop up WaMu.
It could take years for the Chapter 11 claims-sifting process to conclude in the former parent company's bankruptcy case, which is one of several arenas dealing with the competing claims to WaMu's leftovers.
Separately, a group of WaMu bondholders sued JPMorgan in Texas state court, accusing the thrift's acquirer of engineering the conditions that led to the regulatory seizure.
"Motivated by greed and unrestrained by moral or legal boundaries, (JPMorgan) exploited a perceived liquidity crisis in the banking industry to improperly take advantage of the financial difficulties of Washington Mutual," said a February complaint filed in state court in Galveston, Texas.
JPMorgan has denied any wrongdoing in the Texas case, which accuses it of interfering with the contract between WaMu and its bondholders.
With an assist from the Federal Deposit Insurance Corp., JPMorgan has moved to push the case into federal court. Forcing it to stand trial in Texas "will offend traditional notions of fair play and substantial justice," JPMorgan says.
WaMu's informal bondholders group includes affiliates of Aegon USA Investment Management LLC, Transamerica Financial Life Insurance Co., Barclays Plc (BCS), Cedar Hill Capital Partners LLC, Cerberus Partners LP and the Royal Bank of Scotland Group (RBS), among others.
-By Peg Brickley, Dow Jones Newswires; 302-521-2266; peg.brickley@dowjones.com
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(END) Dow Jones Newswires
03-30-09 1207ET
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