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比较政策的博客  
中日美比较政策研究所 https://cpri.tripod.com/  
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注册日期: 2012-10-21
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最新发布
· 灵长类行为研究对人类行为的反思
· Proposal to Comcast 2025 meeti
· Shareholder Proposal to Junipe
· 无可替代的Alaska/ㄚㄌㄚㄙㄎㄚ/
· Proposal to 2025 BlackRock Sha
· Proposal to Intuitive Surgical
· academia Sinica/学术中国的方法
友好链接
分类目录
【经典哲学译注】
· 希腊哲学原初最主要名字和概念译
· Nietzsche/ㄋㄧㄑㄜ/尼采伦理哲
· ㄆㄌㄚㄊㄛㄣ/Plato/柏拉图的ㄎ
· ㄝㄆㄧㄎㄊㄝㄊㄛㄙ/Epictetus译
· Kant/ㄎㄢㄊ《哲学性神学讲义》
· Plotinus《九章集六卷》基本概念
【希腊经典新译初步】
· 希腊经典新译注
· 亚里士多德《Πολιτικ^
· 作为人类文明创新的希腊思想
· 物理学的起源新译初步
· 新译希腊哲学的初步导引
· 古希腊史新译初步
· 希腊神话新译尝试
· ㄏㄛㄇㄜㄌㄛㄙ史诗中的希腊英雄
· 古希腊城邦共和制
【基督教译注研究】
· 基督教历史神学政治译注V8
· Societas Iesu/Jesuits/ㄧㄝㄙㄨ
· Jesuits/ㄧㄝㄙㄨ/耶稣会与《圣
· 希腊Orthodox/正教译注初步
· Gnosis/ㄍㄋㄛ-ㄙㄧㄙ主义译注初
· 基督教名词转写方法论
· 《新约》“致Philemon/ㄈㄧㄌㄜ
· California/ㄎㄚㄌㄧㄈㄛ-ㄋㄧㄚ
· 《神学大全》第三部译注概要(4/
· 《神学大全》第二部第二部分译注
【犹太神学政治译注论集】
· Zionism: 犹太建国运动-2
· 犹太史译注论
· 对犹太教创始人ㄇㄛㄒㄝ/摩西传
· 《犹太古志》第13卷译注:泛希腊
· 《犹太古志》第12卷译注:希腊化
· 《犹太古志》第11卷译注:重返家
· 《犹太古志》第10卷译注:犹太王
· 《犹太古志》第9卷译注:背离律
· 《犹太古志》第8卷译注:王制的
· 《犹太古志》第7卷译注:几近完
【英国思想研究与新译】
· Britain/ㄅㄌㄧㄊㄞㄣ/不列颠文
· Hume/ㄏㄩㄇ/休谟道德哲学译注
· 第一个全球帝国兴起的简历-V3
· Locke/ㄌㄛ_ㄎ/洛克、词语与书写
· Newton/牛顿的Metaphysics/ㄇㄜ
· 第一个全球帝国的遗产考察
· 第一个近代自由国家的形成
· 英国宪政代议制度的起源初译
· 经济生活中政府的机能
· 社会组织形态的经济原理
【汉文明历史与中国社会政治】
· academia Sinica/学术中国的方法
· 亚洲纪行-11:台湾与长江流域
· 亚洲纪行-8:Academia Sinica/中
· 亚洲纪行-11:初访厦门、福州
· 亚洲纪行-6:广仁寺、西安清真大
· 亚洲纪行-5:初访兰州
· 汉文明及周边群族的书写系统-V5
· 亚洲纪行-2:汉音元素的使命
· Singapore/新加坡华文书写系统略
· 香港粤语的文字化困境
【Renaissance/ㄌㄨㄋㄧㄙㄢㄙ研究】
· 超越文艺复兴的Renaissance/ㄌㄨ
· 人文主义神学的奠基者Erasmus/ㄝ
· 《超越文艺复兴的Renaissance/ㄌ
· Renaissance/ㄌㄨㄋㄧㄙㄢㄙ宗教
· 意大利北中部的宗教艺术风土
· Renaissance/ㄌㄨㄋㄧㄙㄢㄙ时期
· Dante/ㄉㄢㄊㄜ《神圣喜剧》新译
【古罗马研究与新译】
· 罗马文明译注初步-V6
· 老小Plinius/ㄆㄌㄧㄋㄧㄨㄙ/ Pl
· Boethius/ㄅㄛㄝㄊㄧㄨㄙ《哲学
· 追随罗马帝国的遗迹
· Tacitus/ㄊㄚㄎㄧㄊㄨㄙ《历史》
· Josephus《犹太战争》译注
· ㄊㄚㄎㄧㄊㄨㄙ《编年史》翻译概
· 在政治瓦解中新生的共和精神
· 《征服ㄍㄚㄌㄧㄚ战纪》翻译要点
· 罗马神话传说初译
【America/美洲文明译注】
· 无可替代的Alaska/ㄚㄌㄚㄙㄎㄚ/
· America/ㄚㄇㄝㄌㄧㄎㄚ/美国研
· America/ㄚㄇㄝㄌㄧㄎㄚ/美国19
· 第5次探访America’s Heartland/
· America/ㄚㄇㄝㄌㄧㄎㄚ文明译注
· Hamilton/ㄏㄚㄇㄧㄦㄊㄛㄣ/汉密
· 第4次探访American Bottom/ㄚㄇ
· Mississippi/ㄇㄧㄙㄧㄙㄧ_ㄆㄧ
· 从Atlantic/ㄚㄊㄌㄢㄊㄧㄎ到Mis
· America/ㄚㄇㄝㄌㄧㄎㄚ/美国军
【南亚文明-印度经典-佛教】
· 亚洲纪行-0:Mumbai/ㄅㄛㄇㄅㄟ/
· Pakistan/ㄆㄚㄎㄧㄙㄊㄢ政府语
· 印度文明(含佛教)新译注
· India/ㄧㄣㄉㄧㄚ/南亚文明简史
· 《大唐西域记》主要地名发音新译
· ㄒㄧㄎ(Sikh锡克)周日礼拜
· 佛教基本概念翻译的新尝试
· Upanishads《ㄨㄆㄚㄋㄧㄒㄧㄚㄉ
· Bhagavad Gita《ㄅㄚㄍㄚㄨㄟㄉ
· 《ㄇㄚㄋㄨManu法典》试译引子
【Orient/ㄛㄌㄧㄣㄊ与中亚文明】
· Orient/ㄛㄌㄧㄣㄊ与中亚文明译
· Ottoman/ㄛㄙㄇㄢ/奥斯曼帝国前
· “新兴的”Baha’i/ㄅㄚㄏㄚㄧ信
· Sumer/ㄙㄨㄇㄜㄦ/苏美尔文明译
· Sufism/ㄙㄨㄈㄧ/苏菲/伊斯兰神
· Arab/ㄚㄌㄚㄅ-Islam/ㄧㄙㄌㄚㄇ
· Egyptian Magic/埃及ㄇㄚㄐㄧㄎ
· 中亚文明简史新译初步
【社会思想】
· 灵长类行为研究对人类行为的反思
· Weber/ㄨㄟㄅㄚ-/韦伯社会学的基
· 莱布尼茨伦理观的自由主义扩展
· 尼采在政治思想史上的一席之地
· 作为观念与现实的康德至善召唤
· 马克思与马克思主义的问题再考
· 《卡尔·马克思》读后感
· 自由社会秩序中的自然神祇与个人
· 代议制统治原则
· 熊彼特论帝国主义与社会阶级
【近代国际政治】
· 亚洲纪行-9:Marine Francaise/
· 近代Poland/ㄆㄛㄌㄢㄉ/波兰历史
· 解决“六四”悲剧需要民族的集体
· 切:革命英雄主义人性的典范
· 《到芬兰车站》中译本序
· 从天安门到热诺亚
· 以IBM的公司治理推动东亚的正义
· Letter to ASR editor
· 太阳普照之下韩国的地位
· 国家机构的透明化与民主化
【世界历史】
· Portugal/ㄆㄛㄦㄊㄨㄍㄚㄦ/葡萄
· 亚洲纪行-4:钓鱼城之战的历史注
· 欧洲历史文化思想译注 第4版
· 早期France/ㄈㄌㄢㄙ/法兰西文明
· Maya/ㄇㄚㄧㄚ, Aztec/ㄚㄗㄊㄝ
· Монгол/Mongol/ㄇㄛㄣㄍㄛ
· Freemasonry/ㄈㄌㄧㄇㄟㄙㄛㄣ起
· 麦基文明背景下伊斯兰的盛衰与启
· 巴黎公社的精神
· 巴黎公社的精神-2
【企业治理】
· Shareholder Proposals/股东提案
· Charles Schwab/嘉信公司2024年
· Amazon/亚马逊公司2024年股东会
· 改革Gilead公司董事会构架的2024
· 要求TD Synnex采纳简单多数可决
· 改进Applied Materials高管薪酬
· Amazon/亚马逊公司2023年股东年
· Gilead公司2023年股东会议的董事
· Gilead公司2022年股东会议的董事
· 继续改善Applied Materials高层
【企业治理-2】
· 改进The Travelers Companies/旅
· 改进Bank of America银行高管薪
· 要求Agilent采纳简单多数投票原
· 继续推动Applied Materials高层
· 2022年Amazon/亚马逊公司董事会
· 继续改善AT&T高层报酬方案的
· 2021年eBay股东会议改善高层报酬
· 改革Amazon/亚马逊公司董事会结
· 继续推动Apple/苹果公司的高层报
· Cisco/思科公司2019年股东会议的
【Shareholder Proposals】
· Proposal to Comcast 2025 meeti
· Shareholder Proposal to Junipe
· Proposal to 2025 BlackRock Sha
· Proposal to Intuitive Surgical
· Proposal to 2024 Gilead Stockh
· Charles Schwab Shareholder Pro
· Shareholder Proposal to Bank o
· TRV2024 Proposal to Improve Ex
· Shareholder Proposals - V5
· Shareholder Proposal to 2023 A
【Cyrillic/ㄎㄧㄌㄧㄦ/斯拉夫/俄】
· Slav/ㄙㄌㄚㄨ/斯拉夫文明译注
· Ukraina/ㄨㄎㄌㄚㄧㄋㄚ/乌克兰
· 18-19世纪Россия/ㄌㄛ_ㄙ
· Россия/ㄌㄛ_ㄙㄧㄚ/俄罗
· 我与列宁的会见
· 托洛茨基:问题与主义
· “最好的安那祺主义者”(列宁语
· 喀琅施塔得悲剧的教训
· 苏联体制下的政治警察
· 忘记过去就是对历史的背叛
【日本政治、社会研究】
· 亚洲纪行-7:再访东京
· 纪念“大逆事件”(又称“幸德事
· Asian Regionalism and Japan
· 比较日美中“中产阶级”
· 日本向何处去﹖
· 日本警察当局的组织性犯罪
· 现代日本社会急剧增长的高龄犯罪
· 昭和天皇的战争责任
· 藤原彰《饿死的英灵们》读后感
· 日本战后左翼人物的命运
【安那祺主义Anarchism自由社会主】
· Guillaume/ㄍㄧㄩㄇ/吉约姆的传
· 网络空间的安那祺自由秩序
· 巴黎公社的精神-3
· 国际工人协会的精神和基本原则
· 阿根廷的安那祺-工联主义传统
· 自由之道:国际和公社的忠实门徒
· 马克思与巴枯宁冲突的症结
· 西班牙内战的安那祺主义教训
· 兰道尔对安那祺主义的思想贡献
· 国家权​力与无政府主义
【西班牙内战/历史/文明】
· Spanish/ㄙㄆㄟㄣ/西班牙文明译
· 从宗教艺术透视Spanish/ㄙㄆㄟㄣ
· Spain/ㄙㄆㄟㄣ/西班牙前期文明
· 西班牙内战文献
· 西班牙安那祺运动的历史经验
· 西班牙内战的安那祺主义教训
· 向加泰罗尼亚致敬(摘录)
· 西班牙内战悲剧的教训
· 西班牙内战中的安那祺主义实践
· (西班牙)卡莎维哈斯惨案
【当代中日关系】
· 亚洲纪行-3:重返日本关西
· 日本政府的信用等级
· 历史资料:请李铁映先生明断
· 钓鱼岛非主权化可解决中日争端/
· 朝日新闻2009年6月8日-日本で旅
· 《雁鸣》编辑部告读者
· 如何翻过当代中日关系史上最黑暗
· 关于钓鱼岛/尖阁诸岛的非主权方
【美日关系相关文献、资料】
· 美日物品与服务相互提供协定
· 美日安全保障协议委员会联合声明
· 驻留日本的美军地位的协议
· 美日安保条约
· “琉球国”钟原来在这里
· 美日M资金备忘录
· 1951年吉田书简(对中政策)
【文明创新/方法论】
· 中文书写系统里导入汉音元素的方
· Hangeul/韩古尔/韩文书写系统初
· 作为nation/ㄋㄟㄒㄣ语言的汉语
· Manchu/满洲文明译注的方法论基
· 亚洲纪行/Asian Mission 2023
· 以汉音元素词母创制少数民族书写
· Esperanto/ㄝㄙㄆㄜㄌㄢㄊㄛ/希
· 作为nation/ㄋㄟㄒㄣ语言的汉语
· 创制鄂温克/Эвенки[Evenki
· 藏文书写系统转写与藏文明译注初
【韦伯社会主义(译文)等】
· 目前状况下对革命的展望(韦伯)
· 社会主义的路线上的几个问题
· “共产党宣言”批判/韦伯
· 《新教伦理与资本主义精神》读后
· 3、资本主义和社会主义
· 翻译说明, 1 前言, 2 民主主义
【全球化/社会运动】
· 世界水论坛推行水的商业化和私有
· 参与硅谷人权会议的成果
· 参加硅谷人权会议后记
· 国际经济学的政治条件
· 从天安门到热诺亚
· 金融市场全球化的政治条件
· 足球比赛的政治经济学
【美日同盟及其与中国的互动】
· 在IBM股东大会上对安倍访美发出
· 所谓“吉田路线”
· 全球化格局下参与国际新秩序的改
· 奥巴马-安倍联合声明的问题
· 美日关系的基础
· 安保条约的修订及其反对斗争
· 美日安保体制的“再定义”与克林
· 以股东大会推动东亚太平的新途径
· 在日美军地位协议
· 违宪的日本国家军队“自卫队”
【国家形态与社会秩序】
· 国家教育制度与民主主义
· 乌托邦的共产性格
· 国民主权的立法精神
· 近代国家存立的形态规格
· 社会秩序的宗教伦理
· 国家形态与社会秩序/前言
· 《近代诸社会形态之系统》札记
· 熊彼特论帝国主义与社会阶级
【文学与文学评论】
· 亚洲纪行-1:徐志摩纪念馆
· 从诗词中读出什么?
· 我的几个先生(巴金/民国29年版)
· 我的幼年(巴金,民国29年版)
· 克鲁泡特金的亲笔短信
· 三十年代日本文学界民族主义和国
【政治经济学】
【旧文】
· 基督教神学政治译注论V5
· 2024年改革Gilead公司董事会构架
· 改进Bank of America/ㄚㄇㄝㄌㄧ
· 改进The Travelers Companies/旅
· America/ㄚㄇㄝㄌㄧㄎㄚ/美洲史
· 亚洲纪行/Asian Mission 2023
· 亚洲纪行-8:Academia Sinica/中
· 改进Applied Materials高管薪酬
· Amazon/亚马逊公司2024年股东会
· Charles Schwab/嘉信公司2024年
存档目录
11/01/2024 - 11/30/2024
10/01/2024 - 10/31/2024
09/01/2024 - 09/30/2024
08/01/2024 - 08/31/2024
07/01/2024 - 07/31/2024
06/01/2024 - 06/30/2024
05/01/2024 - 05/31/2024
03/01/2024 - 03/31/2024
02/01/2024 - 02/29/2024
01/01/2024 - 01/31/2024
12/01/2023 - 12/31/2023
11/01/2023 - 11/30/2023
10/01/2023 - 10/31/2023
09/01/2023 - 09/30/2023
08/01/2023 - 08/31/2023
07/01/2023 - 07/31/2023
06/01/2023 - 06/30/2023
05/01/2023 - 05/31/2023
04/01/2023 - 04/30/2023
03/01/2023 - 03/31/2023
02/01/2023 - 02/28/2023
01/01/2023 - 01/31/2023
12/01/2022 - 12/31/2022
11/01/2022 - 11/30/2022
10/01/2022 - 10/31/2022
09/01/2022 - 09/30/2022
08/01/2022 - 08/31/2022
07/01/2022 - 07/31/2022
06/01/2022 - 06/30/2022
05/01/2022 - 05/31/2022
04/01/2022 - 04/30/2022
03/01/2022 - 03/31/2022
02/01/2022 - 02/28/2022
01/01/2022 - 01/31/2022
12/01/2021 - 12/31/2021
11/01/2021 - 11/30/2021
10/01/2021 - 10/31/2021
09/01/2021 - 09/30/2021
08/01/2021 - 08/31/2021
07/01/2021 - 07/31/2021
06/01/2021 - 06/30/2021
05/01/2021 - 05/31/2021
04/01/2021 - 04/30/2021
03/01/2021 - 03/31/2021
02/01/2021 - 02/28/2021
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Agenda: Bonuses Slapped Down at Bankrupt PG&E
   

Bonuses Slapped Down at Bankrupt PG&E

By Tony Chapelle September 23, 2019 

Agenda (a newsletter circulated to business leaders by Financial Times)

Top executives at embattled PG&E had their request for $11 million in performance bonuses quashed last month by the federal bankruptcy court in charge of the company’s restructuring.

Creditors and others affected by the company cheered the Aug. 30 decision. The judge overseeing the case ruled that he wouldn’t allow the utility company’s managers to receive any incentive pay without them showing a clearer link to safety improvements. He also questioned whether the company could afford to pay added compensation. PG&E went into bankruptcy last January after claiming it faces $30 billion in potential liability because of its role in causing a rash of California wildfires.

“The judge made a common-sense judgment,” writes activist investor Jing Zhao in an e-mail. “In fact, it is not enough to deny new million-dollar compensation to the new executives. [The judge] should claw back the millions already paid to the old executives.”

Zhao’s proposal to eliminate the subsidiary layer at PG&E went to a proxy vote this year. Thirteen percent of shareholders supported his resolution to streamline the corporate makeup, which he claimed would save on management compensation.

“This is very supportive [of] my request to dramatically reduce executive pay [by] at least half,” Zhao concluded.

Yet bankruptcy judges and trustees frequently allow boards to pay executive bonuses while they’re reorganizing under Chapter 11. So even though survivors of the catastrophic wildfires consider it unthinkable that some of the same managers who were around when the firm ran into insolvency are seeking incentives, governance and bankruptcy experts predict that it’s not a matter of if but how much they’ll ultimately be awarded.

Last April, Judge Dennis Montali, who is presiding over the case at the federal bankruptcy court for the Northern District of California, approved a $235 million annual bonus plan for 10,000 mid-level PG&E employees. The top 12 executives, who did not include new CEO William Johnson, didn’t participate in that pool. But on Aug. 9, attorneys for PG&E argued that the executives should be awarded bonuses to “appropriately incentivize”  them. To that, Montali quipped, “If they’re not incentivized enough, they ought to find another job, frankly.”

That misses the mark from a legal standpoint, says Howard Brod Brownstein, who has been a chief restructuring officer in bankruptcies. “One has to focus on the overall recovery of the company.”

Brownstein is a director at P&F Industries as well as a certified turnaround professional who operates Brownstein Corporation, a turnaround management firm. He and other directors maintain that, since bankruptcy is the process by which creditors (and shareholders, if there’s anything left to pay them) receive money or assets from the crippled company, it’s vital that the enterprise that emerges from bankruptcy be strong enough to operate. For that, says Brownstein, “you need a knowledgeable and capable management team, who understandably will require more pay … for taking the risk of being at a company that may not survive.”

The Ghost of AIG

Dennis Chookaszian, who has served on 13 public company boards and who teaches corporate governance at the University of Chicago, says the PG&E case reminds him of the infamous bonus controversy that occurred at AIG Group in the wake of the global financial crisis.

Although AIG was the company that most directly wrecked the financial system due to its enormous market in subprime-mortgage credit default swaps, the federal government still assured the company it would be bailed out. In 2008, Treasury Secretary Hank Paulson appointed Ed Liddy as CEO of the troubled company. Liddy requested to be paid only $1 a year. Yet just months after AIG accepted a $37 billion loan from Uncle Sam, other managers at the insurer feasted on $165 million in retention bonuses.

Contractually, Liddy was obligated to pay the bonuses. But he appealed to the executives’ consciences and asked them to return the extra pay so the company could climb back into the black quicker. Many likely declined his request, although the response to the giveback request was not revealed. His only other recourse would have been to bring a lawsuit, which Chookaszian thinks Liddy would have lost. “So he had to pay them so as to keep those executives working for AIG and keep the company going,” Chookaszian says.

The situation is similar with PG&E, Chookaszian says. “The judge probably has to pay some bonuses to keep the people.”

The Haggle

Chookaszian predicts there will be continuing negotiations between the judge and the utility’s attorneys. He says the judge probably will attempt to help the company hold on to the maximum amount of money it can to pay as much of the $30 billion in legal liabilities as possible. “He’s probably going to have to blink to keep from diminishing the value of the company. But there are no rules on this. It’s whatever the judge can work out to keep the people. He starts out by saying he’s not going pay anything. They come back and put pressure on him. It goes back and forth.”

Chookaszian says once PG&E emerges, it will likely be sold to one or more investors who’ll probably create a new public company.


“One thing you know for sure: there’s going to be a new PG&E.” Chookaszian explains that the only mystery is whether the new company will keep all of the assets or if the judge will spin off multiple companies to different parts of the state.

Until then, however, Chookaszian says, the judge will have to approve bonuses to appease the managers. “If not, the power shuts down in California.”

Montali acknowledged that the executive bonus plan had been vetted by independent compensation consultants to bring it comparatively close to what the market would bear. But in bankruptcy cases, outright retention bonuses are verboten. Executives at bankrupt companies must prove they’re being incentivized based on performance.

Retention vs. Performance

Up until 2005, companies that filed voluntary Chapter 11 petitions routinely asked the court for bonuses through so-called key employee retention plans, or KERPs, explains Shepherd Pryor IV. He’s a former deputy head of corporate banking at Wells Fargo and former director at Taylor Capital Group. “The KERP would coax key employees to stay through resolution of the bankruptcy, and things would work out … better for both employees and the company,” writes Pryor in an e-mail.

But in 2005, when the bankruptcy code was overhauled, KERPs for senior executives suddenly were viewed as a way for failed managers to remain ensconced in their positions. What are called key employee incentive plans, or KEIPs, took the place of KERPs.

Pryor states that the difference is that KEIPs don’t aim to save the company from losing value through key departures but, instead, incentivize and require managers to perform better before they earn additional money. “Still, in a litigious atmosphere, KEIPs are often criticized in litigation for being disguised KERPs,” he says.

Indeed, the San Francisco Chronicle reported that Montali ruled that PG&E’s bonus plan failed to show an “ascertainable connection between the officers’ performance and the metrics.” He did, however, leave open a door for bonuses after the company brushed up its act. The newspaper reported that Montali said he’d let PG&E propose a new plan that did not include cash payments but that was “solely motivated by safety metrics.”

An outside counsel representing PG&E in the bankruptcy case, Stephen Karotkin at the law firm Weil Gotschal, did not return calls for comment.

Stephen H. Case, a retired senior partner at law firm Davis Polk & Wardwell and a specialist in bankruptcy and restructurings, applauds the position that Montali took. He claims the PG&E board needs to tighten up and address performance issues the way the court does.

Indeed, Case, who was chairman of Motors Liquidation Co., which had been General Motors until its assets were unwound after the financial crisis, isn’t completely sure PG&E has to pay the bonuses at all.

“Running a utility, in my limited experience, basically requires competent engineering skills, and in America there are a lot of competent engineers. Couldn’t the board hire a headhunter and in short order replace the top 20 people at PG&E? Do you really need to pay a large bonus to keep people? So it makes sense to me that Judge Montali says, ‘Come on, guys. You can do better than paying bonuses just to keep them here. Show me that they’re doing their job and doing it well.’”

On Sept. 13, PG&E announced a preliminary court settlement with insurance companies and hedge funds that had invested in insurance claims that will repay the bulk of fire victims from Northern California wildfires in 2017 and the Camp Fire in 2018. The company says the agreement covers 85% of these so-called subrogation claims. In addition, PG&E asked the court to cap its direct payments to fire victims at $8.4 billion. The requests are subject to approval by the bankruptcy court.

But on Sept. 19, bondholders – including hedge fund Elliott Management Corp. – and a court-authorized committee that represents the fires victims asked the bankruptcy court’s permission to file a competing chapter 11 plan that would pay $24 billion to victims.

PG&E issued a statement complaining that the bondholders already were to be paid in full for their bonds under its proposed plan, and therefore should not have voting rights on the bankruptcy terms. PG&E claims Elliott and its allies are trying to “get more than they are entitled to under the law,” which ultimately will cost the utility’s customers extra billions of dollars.

The bondholders dispute that. According to the Wall Street Journal, they said they were “cheated [out] of their contract rate of interest as well as premiums they say are due on the debt.” Meanwhile, they’ve offered to give PG&E an infusion of $28.4 billion in exchange for 59% of the equity in the new company that emerges from bankruptcy.

Editor's Note: This story was updated to include information about the settlement announced today.


 
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