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by nl
1069 days ago
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> 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 |
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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.