December 14th, 2007 . by mcarey
Here a just a few Headlines from the American Bankruptcy Journal:
1. Foreclosure Reach Record Highs - Click Here for CNN Money Article.
2. Auto Loan Deliquencies Surge - Click Here for WSJ Article
3. Central Banks Launch Effort to Free Up Credit - Click Here for WSJ Article
4. Commentary: Analysts Late to the Alarm on Subprime Crisis - Click here for Washington Post Article
And this is just the last two weeks. My prediction (and I am definitely not alone or unique in this opinion)…the storm has just started
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August 28th, 2007 . by mcarey

Auction Date: 7/12/07
Bidders: 5
Property Location: 16 Western Avenue, Augusta, ME
High Bid: $700,000
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March 2nd, 2007 . by Brecht Palombo
While restructuring options for troubled companies over the past five years have been characterized by the easy availability of cash and lower business bankruptcy numbers, many experts are expecting business filing numbers to increase as these funding options dry up in 2007, according to the March edition of CFO Magazine. Nearly 70 percent of restructuring professionals surveyed last year by the American Bankruptcy Institute (ABI) and Dow Jones believe that there will be an increase in U.S. corporate restructurings this year. Restructurings in 2007 confront a far different business environment than the wave experienced in 2001, a year marked by corporate scandals, terrorism and the bursting of the technology bubble. The nature of financing has changed as companies have now contracted with a plethora of lenders in multiple tranches, “guaranteeing a knife fight down at the bankruptcy court,” quips John Penn, a partner at Haynes and Boone. “The number of junior liens out there tells me that companies are starting to get stretched,” he said. “After a boom time, people get the mentality that it’s impossible to fail. They either get into a market they shouldn’t get into or expand a product line that’s unwise, and take on too much leverage.” The second lien market, in fact, skyrocketed to $23 billion in loans in 2006, up from $16 billion in 2005. Click here to read the full article.
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