Bankruptcy Update: General Growth Properties Wins Creditor Approval

November 24th, 2009 by Reed Allmand

Share on TwitterSubmit to redditShare via email

Mall operator General Growth Properties Inc., which filed Chapter 11 bankruptcy in April with over $27 billion, has won the approval of its lenders to restructure $8.9 billion in shopping mall mortgage loans.

The lenders agreed to extend the due dates on the loans to between January 2014 and as far off as 2018. But in return, they will be getting back what they originally were owed, plus interest and other bankruptcy-related costs. In addition, General Growth will be held to stricter oversight on its loans, including a requirement that it beef up its reserves in certain conditions.

The due date extension is a sign that General Growth’s creditors have faith that the retail and real estate industries will rebound to its original profitability by 2014. But some analysts are sure that those industries will ever regain the value held during the bubble.  General Growth’s repayment of debt in full is an unusual stipulation; but a possibly profitable move by General Growth which could actually benefit greatly if the malls survive and become profitable again by 2014.  As a part of their bankruptcy agreement to repay creditors in full, General Growth will be allowed to retain the equity in the 70 malls that the agreement covers. The company is hoping to secure a similar deal in bankruptcy that would restructure $6 billion in mortgage loans on other shopping malls.

General Growth made history as the largest U.S. real estate bankruptcy case in history after filing Chapter 11 bankruptcy with over $27 billion of debt and 200 malls nationwide. Without the bankruptcy filing, the company would have been unable to survive and would have faced liquidation and closure.

Share on TwitterSubmit to redditShare via email
avatar

About Reed Allmand

Website

Allmand's vision is rooted in his own financially precarious childhood in Abilene "My father always had difficulty holding a job and supporting our family, so after my parents divorced when I was 12, my sister and I got jobs to help make ends meet," he recalls. "I remember what it felt like as a child to worry that our car would be repossessed or home foreclosed on."

View all posts by Reed Allmand

Subscribe

Subscribe to our e-mail newsletter to receive updates.

Leave a Reply

FAQ

Why do I need to submit a new wage order when I modify my plan

When we modify your bankruptcy plan we are changing your plan payments. This means that we have to get with your employer and change the terms and amount of your wage order. The only way we can do that is by filling out a new wage order form.  

Learn More
What happens if the stay terminates on my home?

If the bankruptcy stay terminates on your home that means that even though your in bankruptcy, your creditor can pursue all there legal remedies they can pursue if you were not in bankruptcy. This includes foreclosure, and having your house sold and evicting you from your house.

Learn More

Find Location

map
  • Dallas Bankruptcy

    5646 Milton Street, Ste. 120 Dallas, Texas 75206
  • Fort Worth Bankruptcy

    5601 Bridge Street # 300 Ft Worth, TX 76112

Meet Our Clients