REVIEW & OUTLOOKMAY 21, 2009.About Those 'Speculators' . . .
Pension funds also got whacked by Uncle Sam..Articlemore in Opinion
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Remember how President Obama blamed Chrysler's bankruptcy filing last
month on "a small group of speculators" who turned down Treasury's $2
billion final offer for their $6.9 billion in debt? Well, it turns out
that hedge funds and other short sellers weren't the only secured
creditors who got a raw deal from Uncle Sam.

Indiana Treasurer Richard Mourdock revealed this week that his state's
police and teacher pension funds have lost millions of dollars in the
Chrysler "restructuring." Indiana's State Police Fund and Major Moves
Construction Fund, which finances roads and bridges, together lost
more than $1 million. And the Teacher's Retirement Fund "suffered, at
a minimum, a loss of $4.6 million due to the action of the Federal
government," reports Mr. Mourdock.

Far from being speculators, these funds represent retired public
employees, including cops and teachers. The funds paid a premium to
buy "secured" status, only to discover that they were politically
outranked by the United Auto Workers in the White House hierarchy.

"In the past, to be 'secured' meant an investor was 'first in line' in
the event of a bankruptcy and 'non-secured' creditors would receive
value after secured-creditors were paid," Mr. Mourdock says. "In the
Chrysler bankruptcy, however, secured creditors received $.29 on the
dollar even as non-secured creditors received higher values and ended
up with a 55% ownership of the new company, which is fundamentally
wrong and a dangerous precedent to the capital markets."

We've worried that the Chrysler sandbagging would discourage bond
investment. And, sure enough, Mr. Mourdock says that from now on no
funds under his control will invest in the secured debt of "General
Motors, other manufacturing companies, or those insurance companies
who have or will be receiving bailout funds." Given the recent actions
by the feds, he adds, "the risk is too great for any prudent investor
to accept."

This isn't political grandstanding. Public investment officials like
Mr. Mourdock have a fiduciary duty to seek maximum returns for
retirees. The question for all public officials responsible for
investing pension money is whether they too should conclude that
investing in U.S.-aided companies now carries so much political risk
that it violates their legal obligations. Such are the wages of White
House disdain for legal contracts

http://online.wsj.com/article/SB124286497706641485.html#printMode
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There was a time in America when the contract between the Pension
Funds and Chrysler would have been honored, and their secured status
jealously guarded against general creditors.  We called that "Sanctity
of Contract".  So, we had a government of laws, not men.

Not anymore.

GP
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