[Home] [Databases] [World Law] [Multidatabase Search] [Help] [Feedback] | ||
England and Wales High Court (Chancery Division) Decisions |
||
You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Chancery Division) Decisions >> Thames Water Utilities Holdings, Re [2024] EWHC 3310 (Ch) (17 December 2024) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Ch/2024/3310.html Cite as: [2024] EWHC 3310 (Ch) |
[New search] [Printable PDF version] [Help]
BUSINESS AND PROPERTY COURTS OF ENGLAND AND WALES
INSOLVENCY AND COMPANIES LIST (ChD)
7 Rolls Buildings Fetter Lane London |
||
B e f o r e :
____________________
IN THE MATTER OF THAMES WATER UTILITIES HOLDINGS AND | ||
IN THE MATTER OF THE COMPANIES ACT 2006 |
____________________
MR ADAM AL-ATTAR KC and MR EDOUARDO LUPI instructed by Akin Gump LLP appeared on behalf of a Group of Class A Plan Creditors
MR MARK PHILLIPS KC, Mr TONY SINGLA KC, MR MATTHEW ABRAHAM and MR JAMIL MUSTAFA instructed by Quinn Emanuel Urquhart & Sullivan UK LLP appeared on behalf of a Group of Class B Plan Creditors
MR WILLIAM WILSON instructed by Hogan Lovells International LLP appeared on behalf of Lloyds Bank Corporate Markes and BNP Paribas
MR ANDREW THORNTON KC instructed by Freshfields Bruckhaus Deringer LLP appeared on behalf of Thames Water Limited and certain creditors of Kemble Water Finance Limited and Thames Water (Kemble) Finance Plc
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
MR JUSTICE TROWER:
a. The Liquidity Facilities comprising the Class A DSR Liquidity Facility, the Class B DSR Liquidity Facility and the O&M Reserve Facility. The full amount of £550 million is undrawn and I say no more about it for these purposes.
b. The Class A Debt comprising Class A RCFs, Class A term loans, Class A Private Notes and Class A Public Bonds, all borrowed or issued by TWUL or TWUF. There are more than 60 different issues of Class A debt with different maturity dates and carrying different rates of interest. An Ad Hoc Group of holders (the "Class A AHG") has been represented at the hearing by Mr Adam Al-Attar KC and Mr Edoardo Lupi, instructed by Akin Gump. The evidence is that the amount outstanding as at the end of March 2024 was some £14.747 billion.
c. The Class B debt, comprising Class B RCFs, Class B Term loans and Class B Public Bonds all borrowed or issued by TWUL or TWUF. An Ad Hoc Group of holders of Class B debt holders (the "Class B AHG") has been represented at the hearing by Mr Mark Phillips KC, Mr Matthew Abraham and Mr Jamil Mustafa, instructed by Quinn Emanuel. As at the end of March 2024, the amount outstanding in respect of the Class B debt is said to be some £1.366 billion.
d. Debt arising out of interest rate and index hedging agreements. Certain hedging counterparties were represented at the hearing by Mr William Wilson, instructed by Hogan Lovells. Approximately £1.7 billion was the mark-to-market figure in respect of that debt as at the end of March 2024.
e. Debt arising out of currency hedging agreements.
f. Subordinated loans, which are owed by the Plan Company to TWL in the total figure of about some £3.4 billion.
a. the fees, interest and principal under the liquidity facilities
b. scheduled amounts payable under the interest rate and index hedging agreements
c. interest and certain fees and commissions under the Class A debt, all amounts under the interest rate and index hedging agreements, some amounts under the currency hedging agreements and all underwriting commission under the Class A debt
d. the principal under the Class A debt and the remaining amounts under the currency hedging agreements
e. any make-whole amount under the Class A debt
f. any interest and commission under the Class B debt
g. principal under the Class B debt; and
h. any make-whole amount under the Class B debt.
TWUL has also been subject to penalties, fines and remediation costs as a result of its underperformance and other regulatory breaches. It is also said by the Plan Company that a further pressure on the Group is the material uncertainty arising out of Ofwat's periodic price reviews. It says that its ability to implement a restructuring to address these issues has been constrained by the uncertainty around what is called the PR24 final determination, which is now expected to be published by Ofwat on 19 December. Amongst other matters, this will set limits on TWUL's revenue collection from customers during the period 2025 to 2030, having regard to the Group's capital expenditure proposals.
"As explained in Part 1 … paragraph 4.38 of the explanatory statement… , following careful consideration of the Class B Proposal, and confirmation in correspondence that a significant majority in value of the Class A Creditors did not consider the Class B proposal to be implementable, the Thames Water Companies have concluded that the Class B proposal is not a viable, implementable, or deliverable alternative to the Interim Platform Transaction."
32. It appears that one of the Plan Company's most substantial objections to the Class B proposal relates not to the terms of the proposed financing, per se, but rather that its implementation would be likely to lead to an event of default arising under the finance agreements. The argument with which the Plan Company is concerned, is that an event of default will arise where an insolvency event or insolvency proceeding occurs in relation to the Plan Company. It is said that an application for a convening order is, arguably, an insolvency proceeding, because an "insolvency event" includes "the initiation of or consent to insolvency proceedings", and the definition of "insolvency proceedings" includes "the seeking of … reorganisation … arrangement, adjustment".
a. the creditor's rights that fall to be considered are both their existing rights against the company and the rights conferred by the scheme or plan which is before the court;
b. the existing rights must be assessed in the context of the relevant comparator described by Hildyard J in Re APCOA Parking (UK) Ltd [2014] EWHC 997 (Ch) at [32], as "what would be the alternative if the scheme does not proceed";
c. it is rights not interest that fall to be taken into account for the purposes of class composition. Without attempting an exhaustive definition, rights of the creditors against third parties (for example, against guarantors of the company's debts) will generally constitute interests as opposed to rights
d. even if there are differences in rights as between different groups of creditors, that is not necessarily fatal to them being placed in the same class. It is still necessary to consider whether the differences are such that it is impossible for them to consult together with a view to their common interest, or whether there is more that unites than divides them.
a. the liquidity facility lenders;
b. the interest rate and interest hedging providers;
c. the Class A lenders, the Class A private noteholders and the Class A public bondholders in respect of the Class A debt instruments (Make-Whole);
d. the Class A lenders, the Class A private noteholders and the Class A public bondholders and the Class A accretion agreement providers in respect of the Class A debt instruments (Non-Make-Whole);
e. the Class B lenders and the Class B public bondholders
f. the currency hedge providers
g. the subordinated creditor
"87. Different judges have sought to explain how to make this judgment in various ways, but the modern trend has certainly been to resist any tendency to increase the number of classes. So, for example, in Re Anglo American Insurance Limited [2001] 1 BCLC 755 at 76, Neuberger J observed in the context of an insurance company scheme that practical considerations were not irrelevant, and that the court should not get too picky about potential different classes, or one could end up with virtually as many classes as there are members of a particular group. In Equitable Life Assurance Society [2002] BCC 319, policyholders with a wide variety of mis-selling claims were placed into a single class. And in Telewest Communications plc (No. 1) [2004] BCC 342 at [40] David Richards J held that it was appropriate to place into the same class two groups of sterling and dollar bondholders who were treated differently by the use of a particular currency conversion date under the scheme than if there had been a winding-up, remarking that there is a great deal more which unites the bondholders than divides them. In making that judgment, as those cases make clear, it is also important to bear in mind that the safeguard against minority oppression is that the court is not bound by the decision of the class meeting, but retains a discretion to refuse to sanction the scheme: see, eg, Hawk at [33] (Chadwick LJ) and [59] (Pill LJ)."