Hacker News new | ask | show | jobs
by nl 1069 days ago
> this approach allows J&J to determine their maximum liability by only spinning off a certain amount to the subsidiary.

This is not what they did.

To quote Levine's piece:

> the box where J&J put its talc claims — could draw at least $61.5 billion from J&J to pay off those claims. The point here, the bankruptcy court concluded, was not to keep J&J from having to pay talc claims; the entire value of J&J’s consumer business was still on the line for those claims.

For emphasis: the entire value of J&J’s consumer business was still on the line for those claims

3 comments

So they weren't bankrupt, then, because they had funding available for the entirety of any claims.

Which is why the judge dismissed the bankruptcy proceedings.

There's more nuance though than that.

> Moreover, New JJCI has agreed to fund the Debtor LLC’s Chapter 11 case and contribute $2 billion into a settlement trust for the benefit of the talc claimants as part of a Chapter 11 reorganization plan.

$2B = a lot less than $61.5B. And you can guarantee that J&J (who refiled the bankruptcy proceeding within 3 hours of it being dismissed) will fight that vehemently.

I like Matt Levine's reporting, but you'll forgive people for taking Bloomberg taking a pro-business position with more than a little grain of salt.

In your heart of hearts, do you really believe that J&J wants to make things right and pay these claimants what they’re owed, or do you think J&J is trying to minimize what they pay out by any means necessary? Note that J&J shareholders likely interpret the latter as their fiduciary duty.
Here's the problem. Who?

The CEO and eveyone near him is rich, they company going out of business won't affect them. I'm sure they'll be able to get high paying jobs. In fact the negative association with this case would have me wanting to move on

A large portion of the CEO’s wealth is almost certainly tied up in company equity, and this is true for the shareholders by definition. Anyway, it’s not about teaching them anything, it’s about influencing the risk/reward calculus of other companies that are considering skipping steps and releasing unsafe products.
I disagree about influencing the risk reward calculation because the punishment is supposed to be a deterrent.

If it's just a fine then the money is like fee to do something and remember that it's not always caught.

Imagine if the punishment for murder was $1 million dollars and only if I'm caught.

If the fine is so large it bankrupts the company, I feel optimistic about its effectiveness as a deterrent.
Owners. Behind all of the corporate management theatre are always some owners that will squeeze everyone in any way possible to protect their money.
Like pension funds?
Good point, we should never hold public companies accountable for anything because it will hurt grandpa’s pension. Think of all those poor retirees! We’re not monsters.
As an investor in a company, even if it's a fund, you are part of the risk. If something fails and the pension fund is wiped out that's what happens
Wouldn't the spin off and it's executives installed specifically for this maneuver have to initiate the lawsuit to pay unfunded liabilities?

Isn't the alternative of directly attacking j&js resources made fantastically harder and more uncertain? The net effect of which is to make claimants more likely to choose the safe path of accepting the figure chosen by the guilty party rather than letting judge or jury directly decide.