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by Kon-Peki
1238 days ago
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The court doesn't need to force J&J to provide open-ended backing. LTL already have it: > The Funding Agreement merits special mention. To recap, under it LTL had the right, outside of bankruptcy, to cause J&J and New Consumer, jointly and severally, to pay it cash up to the value of New Consumer as of the petition date (estimated at $61.5 billion) to satisfy any talc-related costs and normal course expenses. Plus this value would increase as the value of New Consumer’s business and assets increased. App. 4316-17 (Funding Agreement 4-5, § 1 Definition of “JJCI Value”).15 The Agreement provided LTL a right to cash that was very valuable, likely to grow, and minimally conditional. And this right was reliable, as J&J and New Consumer were highly creditworthy counterparties (an understatement) with the capacity to satisfy it. My question, inspired by yours, is why? Why did J&J provide such a generous funding agreement if it didn't have to? Or did it? The only thing I can think of is that they needed to do so, but it wasn't supposed to matter as LTL filed bankruptcy two days later. |
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If you make an agreement to pay an unlimited amount of money to a spin-off, obviously you're not doing it to save money.
You're doing it to retain control, even when you have to pay extremely large amounts of money.