Weekly News – June 20

NYS Champerty bill dies but Congress takes on litigation finance, New Fortress Energy toppling over, Wellness Pet LME explained, Gatto on credit, and much, much more…

Creditor Corner

Your weekly curated content from the Creditor Rights Coalition

Over 3,100 member subscribers and growing!

We bring you exclusive content from leading data and research providers 

Sign Up Here

CRC in Action

CRC Advocates Successfully Against NYS Champerty Bill

Creditor Corner

Champerty bill dies but Congress takes on litigation finance, New Fortress Energy toppling over, Wellness Pet LME explained, Gatto on credit, and much, much more…

+

Featured Content
Bruce Richards on the Markets

Do’s & Dots

Scroll through to read all of ou?r content?

Tweet Of The Week

a new type of creditor on creditor violence

Advocacy Efforts

Champerty Bill Dies….

The CRC together with the LSTA successfully opposed Senate Bill S.1477 and Assembly Bill A.643 that sought to re-impose the champerty defense under New York law against payment of valid obligations owed by sovereign debtors.

Read the Advocacy Memo Here

The Advocacy efforts of the Coalition do not necessarily reflect the views of any individual Contributor or Advisory Board Member.

In the news

uh… oh…. litigation finance in the cross hairs…

Click Above to Access Content

In the news

toppling over…

Exclusive Content

Click above to access content

One-time registration required

Exclusive Content

latest LME explained…

Click above to access content

Exclusive Content

LME Chapter 22…

Click above to access content

What we’re listening to

Michael Gatto on credit…

Click above to access content

One-time registration required

Exclusive Content

weight loss

Click above to access content

One-time registration required

In the news

Envision LME windfall

Click Above to Access Content

Featured Content

Do’s & Dots


The Federal Reserve concludes its two-day meeting today, with markets virtually certain that rates will remain unchanged in the 4.25% – 4.50% range—marking the seventh consecutive month at this level. While the rate decision itself holds no surprises, traders are positioning for nuance. Bloomberg reports that savvy investors have taken long positions, anticipating Chair Powell will adopt a more dovish tone that signals future rate cuts. The real risk lies in the updated dot plot projections. A hawkish shift showing fewer anticipated cuts would likely disappoint both Fed watchers and markets, potentially triggering volatility despite the expected rate hold.


Economic fundamentals suggest the Fed will eventually ease policy as growth moderates in the second half of 2025, down from the current 2% pace. The recession narrative has largely faded, with even previously bearish economists revising their outlooks upward. This shift reflects underlying economic resilience that has surprised many forecasters throughout the cycle. For the latter half of 2025, expect GDP growth to decelerate to a more sustainable 1% – 1.5% range—a pace that should provide the Fed with sufficient justification to begin cutting rates without signaling economic distress.


When the Fed does resume its easing path, I expect:


– Treasury rates to decline approximately 50 basis points over that year, with short-term yields leading the decline as the market prices in policy normalization.


– Refinancing activity to accelerate across high-yield and broadly syndicated loan markets as credit spreads tighten and all-in borrowing costs fall.


– Corporate earnings growth to initially slow alongside GDP deceleration, then recover modestly once Fed easing begins to support economic activity.


– M&A activity to rebound significantly as companies that have been hoarding cash and preserving liquidity regain confidence to deploy capital.


– Capital expenditure to increase meaningfully


—a long-overdue development that’s critically needed.


– Housing market activity to strengthen as lower mortgage rates improve affordability and unlock pent-up demand. 


– Financial and technology sectors to outperform given their sensitivity to funding costs. 


– Credit market conditions to improve broadly, driving increased demand for private credit while reducing default risks across industry sectors.

To follow Bruce’s thoughts on the markets, investing and more, follow

@bruce_markets

Exclusive Content

staying pat…. for now…

Click above to access content

One-time registration required

Upcoming Events


9fin: Webinar – Navigating the shifting sands of LME

June 24, 2025

Learn More

NYU Stern: Distressed Foundations for Lawyers

July 30-31, 2025

Learn More

The Data Download

Bringing Transparency to the Bankruptcy Process

Click Above to Access The Data Download

Our Take:

The Daily Cost of BK Legal fees Are Increasing.

Are we shocked? No.

We took a deep dive to see what is driving up the daily cost of restructurings and the culprit: Increasing Legal Hourly Rates. We analyzed final fee apps for top debtor law firms from 2018 to 2024 and found average hourly legal fees have increased by over 65% since 2018. Maybe a little bit of sunlight is the right disinfectant to help remedy the problem….

Meet Our 2025 Contributors

Thank You to Our 2025 Sponsors

Platinum Sponsors

Gold Sponsors

Silver Sponsors


Have Something to Share?

Email us at info@creditorcoalition.org