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The Spokesman-Review Newspaper
Spokane, Washington  Est. May 19, 1883

Virgin Atlantic granted protection

Virgin Atlantic Airways was granted U.S. bankruptcy protection as the carrier controlled by Richard Branson pursues a 1.2 billion-pound ($1.6 billion) rescue plan in the U.K.

The provisional ruling by U.S. Bankruptcy Judge Michael E. Wiles in Manhattan on Friday protects the airline’s American assets and ensures that the debt reorganization will be overseen under the British legal process. After the company takes its next major restructuring step in the U.K., the company will return to Wiles to ask him to make the protections permanent at a hearing scheduled for early September.

That next step will be a meeting of creditors scheduled on Aug. 25 as part of the British process, under which any holdouts can be forced to accept the restructuring even if some classes vote against it. Virgin Atlantic says that only one of four creditor groups, comprising trade suppliers, hasn’t backed the plan yet.

The rescue will bring in new money from Branson and U.S. hedge fund Davidson Kempner Capital Management, while requiring a restructuring of existing debt.

Canada recovery quicker than US

Canada’s economy recorded a third straight month of strong employment gains that have recouped more than half of losses from COVID-19.

Employment rose by 418,500 in July, bringing to 1.7 million the number of jobs reclaimed over the past three months. Canada lost 3 million jobs in March and April at the height of the pandemic. The employment rebound in Canada has outpaced the U.S., which has recovered 42% of its payroll losses.

From wire reports