Lori Fife, a partner at Weil Gotshal & Manges and Lehman's lead bankruptcy lawyer, added in an interview with Reuters, “we believe, right now, that we have enough support to confirm a plan…We hope it will get confirmed by the end of the year, and we hope to make distributions early next year."
According to Ehrmann, the company is proposing a $65 billion liquidation plan that will enable it to pay off about $370 billion in claims. Since July this year, Lehman has speeding up its efforts to reach settlement agreements with its creditors, after spending the last three years caught up in disputes over Chapter 11 proceedings.
In its latest court filing for the Chapter 11 proceedings, the company announced that it had locked up nine new, major settlement agreements with its creditors that included affiliates such as Lehman Brothers International (Europe) and outside creditors such as Deutsche Bundesbank.
The creditors have until November 4th to vote on the plan though Ehrmann is confident that there will be little to no resistance. Only one key affiliate hasn’t settled, and its vote isn’t needed, said Ehrmann, adding that creditors would be receiving about 14 cents on the dollar for their claims, and in some cases almost 16 cents.