In Re Asarco LLC

441 B.R. 813, 2010 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 142168, 2010 WL 3452384
CourtDistrict Court, S.D. Texas
DecidedAugust 20, 2010
Docket5:09-po-00194
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 441 B.R. 813 (In Re Asarco LLC) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, S.D. Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In Re Asarco LLC, 441 B.R. 813, 2010 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 142168, 2010 WL 3452384 (S.D. Tex. 2010).

Opinion

MEMORANDUM OPINION AND ORDER

ANDREW S. HANEN, District Judge.

ASARCO Incorporated and Americas Mining Corporation (together, the “Parent”) have appealed the Bankruptcy Court’s Order Approving the Expense Reimbursement in Connection with the Auction and Proposed Sale of the SCC Judgment (the “Reimbursement Order”), arguing that the Bankruptcy Court applied the wrong standard in evaluating the Debtor’s Motion for an Order Approving the Expense Reimbursement in Connection with the Auction and Proposed Sale of the SCC Judgment (the “Reimbursement Motion”) and that the Reimbursement Order is contrary to the proper legal standard. (Doc. Nos.3, 25.) The Reimbursement Order authorized the Debtor, subject to vetting procedures set out in the order, to reimburse certain bidders who participated in the auction of the SCC Judgment. (See R. 15.) Having considered the briefs and oral arguments of the parties, and for the reasons set forth below, the Court hereby AFFIRMS the Reimbursement Order.

I. Background

A. The Bankruptcy Case and the SCC Judgment

This appeal arises out of an arduous, but successful bankruptcy reorganization proceeding. Ultimately, two plans of reorganization were submitted for consideration by the Bankruptcy Court and this Court— one filed by the Parent and one filed by the Debtor. Each plan provided for a unique disposition of the SCC Judgment, a substantial asset of the Debtor. 1 The Parent’s proposed plan essentially excused the Parent from its obligations under the SCC Judgment, but in exchange provided a significant infusion of cash from the Parent so as to satisfy the various creditors’ claims. A key element of the Debtor’s proposed plan, however, was its use of the SCC Judgment to pay some of the creditors’ claims. The proposed plan contemplated the creation of a trust that would liquidate the SCC Judgment. Upon liquidation of its legal claims, the trust would distribute proceeds to various creditors holding interests in the trust. 2

Before one can truly grasp the issues in this appeal, it is critical to have an understanding of how the SCC Judgment itself was reached. 3 The full background can be found in this Court’s prior opinions, 4 but *816 for the purposes of this opinion, the Court will provide a brief summary.

It begins with a mining company. AS-ARCO 5 was primarily a mining concern, and one of the primary products from its mining operations was copper. ASARCO possessed large copper ore reserves in the United States, as well as Chile and Peru. It had longstanding business relations with Grupo Mexico, S.A.B. de C.V. (“Grupo”), a Mexican corporation that was also involved in the mining industry. When Grupo decided to expand its mining concerns, AS-ARCO was one of two companies that caught its eye. In its 1999 accelerated acquisition of ASARCO, Grupo financed the purchase in part by negotiating a $817 million loan from Chase Manhattan Bank and Chase Securities Inc. Once the acquisition was complete, the $817 million debt was transferred to ASARCO. Combined with ASARCO’s pre-existing debt, it was saddled with a total long-term debt of $1,767 billion.

On top of the substantial long-term debt, ASARCO was also responsible for a $450 million revolving credit facility that was secured by ASARCO’s assets, including 43,348,949 shares of Class A Common Stock that ASARCO held in Southern Peru Copper Company (“SCC”), representing a controlling (54.18%) interest. These particular shares were special “Founder’s Shares” with enhanced voting rights.

According to certain governing provisions of the stock, the super-voting rights of any shares that were transferred to a party that was not an affiliate would be terminated. Grupo’s concern was that if it pledged the SCC shares directly as collateral for the credit revolver, it would trigger the loss of the super-voting rights. Grupo thus implemented a restructuring in which it created Southern Peru Holding Company (“SPHC”), a totally owned subsidiary of ASARCO (and thus an affiliate) which would hold the SCC shares. Then, ASARCO pledged the SPHC stock as collateral. Grupo also formed AMC as a holding company for its mining interests and transferred all of its ASARCO stock to AMC. The result was a structure in which Grupo wholly owned AMC, which wholly owned ASARCO, which wholly owned SPHC, which owned the stock in SCC.

In addition to the debt it acquired from the 1999 leveraged buy-out, ASARCO was beset with legal troubles arising from environmental and asbestos claims, and the strain on ASARCO’s finances began to take its toll. By the fall of 2001, ASARCO technically defaulted on the credit revolver, fell behind on its payments to critical vendors, and lacked the $50 million necessary to pay a bond debt that had become due. As a result of low copper prices, which languished at less than a dollar per pound (and were about 60 cents per pound in November 2001), ASARCO’s sales volume and profit were not sufficient to cover its tremendous debt. The financial troubles continued through 2002: in January, ASARCO stopped paying various creditors and contractors, and it could not even pay the experts that it had retained to help it through its cash crisis. With limited options available to attempt to right the ship and mounting pressures from creditors (notably the head bank in the credit revolver threatening to foreclose on the security interests, including the SCC stock), *817 especially with the low price of copper at the time, AMC and Grupo decided that their best option was to sell ASARCO’s most valuable asset, its SCC shares.

Not wanting to lose control of the SCC shares, Grupo’s aim was to transfer them to AMC in a manner that would avoid a fraudulent conveyance action. Despite this aim, neither AMC/Grupo/ASARCO nor any third party marketed the SCC stock in a public fashion, nor solicited or sought third-party offers. Ultimately, the shares were transferred to AMC on March 31, 2003, in exchange for $672,653,400, most of which was distributed to various creditors. SPHC received a $123.25 million note from AMC, and ASARCO/SPHC also received forgiveness of a $41.75 million note that they owed to AMC and the Larrea family. 6

Despite the sale, ASARCO continued to have financial difficulties. While it was able to pay off some of its debts (including the revolver and $100 million of bonds that had come due) with the proceeds from the sale of the SCC stock, it did not have sufficient cash flow to make payroll, fund its mining operations, or cover its growing liabilities from environmental and asbestos-related litigation. In August 2005, ASARCO reluctantly filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy. The fraudulent transfer suit was later filed by ASARCO and SPHC against AMC.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
441 B.R. 813, 2010 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 142168, 2010 WL 3452384, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-asarco-llc-txsd-2010.