Skip to main content
Date
Rule
802.63(b)
Staff
Tom Hancock
File Number
8912010
Response/Comments
Called to ask if loan by Debtor were made in the ordinary course of Lender?s business. He represented that it was, that Lender is in the business of making loans of this sort. On this representation I told him that the transaction described in his letter is exempt.

Question

(redacted)

Premerger Notification Office
Bureau of Competition
Federal Trade Commission
600 Pennsylvania Avenue, NW, Room 303
Washington, D.C. 20580

Re:re 16 C.F.R. 802.63(a)


Dear Mr. Hancock:


As you suggested in our telephone conversation of December 11, I am writing to determine whether the Premerger Notification Office would consider the exemption provided under 16 C.F.R. 802.63(a) applicable to the facts set forth below. More specifically, I am interested in your position on whether the situation described would be deemed an acquisition of collateral...in connection with a bonafide debt workout... under that provision.


To finance the acquisition of a certain hotel (the Hotel), Debtor, a foreign corporation, borrowed a sum of money (the Loan) from Lender, also a foreign corporation. Lender is a subsidiary of a foreign corporation which is engaged in various aspects of the insurance business. To secure the Loan, an affiliate of Debtor and the owner of the Hotel (the Mortgagor) mortgaged the Hotel giving Lender a note for a certain amount (the Note). The amount was subsequently increased to the aggregate of the Loan, and the original Note was amended. Moreover, Debtors subsidiaries, which owns the personal property used in the Hotels operations (collectively, the Guarantors) , jointly and severally guaranteed the obligations of Debtor under the Note.


Six months thereafter Debtor received an invoice for payment of interest accrued and due on the Note which it could not pay. Lender asserts that Debtor has defaulted under the Note. Consequently, Debtor and the Guarantors are now obligated to pay to Lender the entire principal balance and outstanding interest under the Note.


To eliminate the obligations of Debtor and reduce the obligations of the Guarantors created by Debtors inability to make payments due under the Note, Debtor agrees to sell its interest in the Hotel to a newly formed subsidiary of Lender. In consideration for the Hotel, Lender will cancel the Note of Debtor and reduce the liability of the Guarantors under the Guarantees. The Guarantors will remain liable under the Guarantees for the obligation of Debtor equal to the difference between the Hotel purchase price and the original amount of the Note before it was increased and other obligations guaranteed to Lender and its affiliates. Moreover, Mortgagor will be released from obligations under the Mortgage.


Although Lender anticipates operating the Hotel through a subsidiary, it does not plan to do so on a long term basis. Rather, the Hotel will be resold as soon as market conditions are favorable.


I emphasize that Lender considers Debtors failure to make timely payments under the Note to be a default under the Loan. It has decided to purchase the Hotel in efforts to avoid taking against Debtor what Lender considers to be less effective and more costly remedies. Further, I understand that in bankruptcy practice workout typically refers to debt restructuring both to avoid or cure insolvency (inability to pay debt as it becomes due) and to avoid legal proceedings exactly what the parties seek to accomplish in the situation described.


Assume that absent an exemption the transaction is otherwise reportable under Hart-Scott-Rodino.


I thank you for your prompt attention to this matter and look forward to your response. If you have questions or would like supplemental facts please call me at (212) 819-8285.


Very truly yours,





cc: (redacted)

About Informal Interpretations

Informal interpretations provide guidance from previous staff interpretations on the applicability of the HSR rules to specific fact situations. You should not rely on them as a substitute for reading the Act and the Rules themselves. These materials do not, and are not intended to, constitute legal advice.

Learn more about Informal Interpretations.