By Joseph Checkler 
   Of DOW JONES DAILY BANKRUPTCY REVIEW 
 

Lehman Brothers Holdings Inc. (LEHMQ) has struck a deal with J.P. Morgan Chase & Co. (JPM) to drastically slash a $710 million claim the bank filed against Lehman's bankruptcy estate, and it plans to distribute money J.P. Morgan was holding to satisfy the claim to its other creditors soon.

In a Wednesday filing with U.S. Bankruptcy Court in Manhattan, Lehman said $699.2 million of the claim, which is related to third-party investment funds, will go to Lehman creditors, and the failed investment bank is asking for a quick hearing on the matter. The settlement needs bankruptcy court approval, and Lehman wants to be able to distribute the money during its first creditor distribution, which could be as soon as March 31.

The claims are related to 70 investment funds that got advice from J.P. Morgan. The bank was trying to satisfy, on those funds' behalf, claims using collateral that J.P. Morgan got from Lehman the week before its September 2008 bankruptcy filing.

J.P. Morgan spokesman Joe Evangelisti said there's "no financial impact" to the bank from the Lehman deal.

Under the terms of the settlement, the J.P. Morgan funds will give $699.2 million that's currently being held as collateral to Lehman, and the money will be disbursed to other Lehman creditors. Judge James Peck of U.S. Bankruptcy Court in Manhattan has scheduled a hearing for Feb. 15 on the deal. In return, J.P. Morgan will have some other claims reinstated and get $15 million in cash.

"After the Funds' return of the $699.2 million, the Funds will only be recovering two percent of their total claims against LBHI," Lehman said in the Wednesday filing. Lehman, in fighting the claim last October, said that J.P. Morgan's attempt to treat those funds like they were subsidiaries "runs contrary to all notions of fair and equitable treatment of creditors."

The $710 million is actually a rather small chunk of a larger dispute between Lehman and J.P. Morgan, as Lehman is also trying to drastically reduce another nearly $30 billion in claims that J.P. Morgan has filed in the Chapter 11 case. Lehman declined to comment on those efforts.

Since the beginning of the more than three-year-old case, J.P. Morgan has held the dual role as both a key Lehman adversary and one of the largest holders of claims against both the Lehman parent company and its subsidiaries. With Lehman's creditor-payment plan now approved by the court, the failed investment bank's lawyers are identifying claims they can reduce in order to determine how the money will be divvied up among those seeking recoveries. Lehman aims to start returning money by the end of the first quarter.

Aside from the claims' dispute, the two sides are suing each other over what happened in the tumultuous days of September 2008, with Lehman alleging J.P. Morgan illegally siphoned billions of dollars from Lehman just before the bankruptcy and J.P. Morgan countering that Lehman used "collusion and deception" when it told J.P. Morgan that an emergency loan it made was backed by $70 billion in securities.

Lehman collapsed into the largest bankruptcy in history in September 2008, and since then a team of bankruptcy professionals under the direction of Alvarez & Marsal Inc. has managed its assets, including real-estate holdings, corporate debt and derivatives.

Peck in early December approved Lehman's creditor-payback plan, which should distribute about $65 billion and treats creditors of Lehman subsidiaries better than those of the parent company.

Despite the confirmation of the plan, the company still has billions of dollars in real estate and other assets and will continue to exist as it unloads and manages those investments.

Late last week, Lehman said it wants to soon begin distributing about $10.7 billion to its creditors.

(Dow Jones Daily Bankruptcy Review covers news about distressed companies and those under bankruptcy protection.)

-By Joseph Checkler; Dow Jones Newswires; 212-416-2152; joseph.checkler@dowjones.com

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