Do You Have a Trade? Recent Decision Highlights Need for Clarity in Trading Bankruptcy Claims

U.S. Bankruptcy Court for the Southern District of New York

In the trading world for bankruptcy claims, traders often ask their lawyers, “Do I have a binding trade?” This is a critical question on which both risk management and subsequent trading strategy depends. Often, however, the answer is unclear. Unlike markets for distressed bank debt or restructured equity, there is less certainty as to whether a binding claims trade exists at the moment the parties reach agreement on the asset, price and size. Claims trades commonly involve extended negotiations of bespoke terms, involving commercial actors who are not professional traders. As such, determining when a legally binding trade exists can be a complex and fact-specific undertaking where expectations that may be valid in other markets do not necessarily apply. The complexity of such analysis is illustrated in a recent decision by U.S. Bankruptcy Judge Michael Wiles in In re Westinghouse Electric Co., 588 B.R. 347 (Bankr. S.D.N.Y. 2018). His decision rejected a contention that two parties had reached a binding agreement to trade and offers valuable lessons for parties who wish to avoid a similar fate.

Claims Trading Market Practice



Trading practices in the claims market differ from practices in related markets, such as the over-the-counter market for syndicated bank debt. Original holders of claims against bankrupt debtors are regular participants in this particular market. Such holders are typically not market professionals and may have no familiarity with trading conventions or practices. Transaction terms are often heavily negotiated. No widely-accepted standardized claims trade documentation exists.

As in the syndicated loan market, buyers and sellers conduct negotiations and reach initial agreement on material terms verbally or through an exchange of emails or Bloomberg messages. In the loan trading market, for example, it is a long-standing industry custom that a binding trade exists at the time of that initial agreement. A binding trade occurs in that market even where the parties agree, as they commonly do, that the trade is “subject to documentation.”

In the claims market, however, the consensus as to when a binding trade exists is not as well-established, due in large part to the bespoke nature of the underlying asset and the transaction agreements. Moreover, because claim diligence and negotiation of a written agreement for a claims trade may require substantial time to complete, there is a higher failure rate for such trades than for loan trades. When a bankruptcy claims trade does fall apart, conditional or qualifying language in the parties’ preliminary agreement can create legal uncertainty as to each side’s rights and obligations.