Ich bin der Meinung, dass es heute nicht um eine Klagezulassung geht, sondern um ein Urteil!
Das Geld gehört eindeutig WMI. Dieser Betrag wurde schon bei den Operations Reports einbelanziert (Opening Balance, unrestricted cash and cash equivalents)
Das Problem bei den 3.67 MRD ist:
1.
JPM-Anwälte haben schon geantwortet, dass sie wmi das streitige Geld überweisen würden, jedoch sie es aus gesetzlichen gründen nicht dürfen, da wmi sich in chapter 11 befindet! Erlaubnis vom Konkursgericht sollte das problem schnell lösen!
2.
Einige Parteien z.B. Bondholter haben schon Anspruch auf das streitige Geld gestellt!
Alte News dazu
Judge may rule by next month in WaMu/JPMorgan case
Wed May 20, 2009 2:05pm EDT
WILMINGTON, Delaware (Reuters) - A bankruptcy court judge on Wednesday said she may rule by next month on efforts by Washington Mutual Inc to get back more than $4 billion in cash deposits to which it lost access when the bank was sold to JPMorgan Chase & Co (JPM.N) last year.
U.S. Bankruptcy Judge Mary Walrath said at a brief court hearing in Wilmington, Delaware, that she may decide on Washington Mutual's request for summary judgment on the matter before a June 24 scheduled court hearing.
Washington Mutual contends in court papers that JPMorgan is withholding deposits without any legitimate basis.
Washington Mutual Bank was closed by the U.S. government in September, in one of the largest bank failures in U.S. history.
Its banking assets were sold the same day to JPMorgan for $1.9 billion, and the parent holding company filed for bankruptcy protection a day later in Delaware.
WaMu has said that JPMorgan improperly claims it acquired the $4 billion in deposits as part of the takeover but that this money should have been treated like any other deposit at the bank.
WaMu has said it needs access to that cash to come up with its Chapter 11 plan, and that by withholding the deposits, JPMorgan could be earning as much as $200 million per year in interest.
A JPMorgan Chase spokesman said the company had no comment.
The lawsuit was filed as an adversary proceeding to WaMu's main bankruptcy case.
The bankruptcy case is In re: Washington Mutual, Inc. U.S. Bankruptcy Court, District of Delaware, No. 08-12229.
(Reporting by Jessica Hall; writing by Martha Graybow and Chelsea Emery; editing by Gerald E. McCormick)
www.reuters.com/article/businessNews/...;feedName=businessNews
An der Börse sind 2 mal 2 niemals 4, sondern 5 minus 1.
Man muß nur die Nerven haben, das minus 1 auszuhalten.