--Ally to receive release from legal liabilities under settlement

--Ally plans to record a $1.55 billion charge related to the settlement in the second quarter

--Ally had previously offered to pay $750 million but ResCap creditors balked at that amount

(Updates with new details throughout.)

 
   By Andrew R. Johnson 
 

Ally Financial Inc. said Thursday it will pay $2.1 billion to its mortgage subsidiary Residential Capital and the unit's creditors under an agreement reached last week that could move the Detroit-based lender closer to repaying its government bailout.

The amount is $1.35 billion more than what Ally previously offered to pay to fend off ResCap creditors trying to hold the government-owned lender responsible for billions of dollars of the mortgage subsidiary's liabilities.

"Reaching this comprehensive agreement enables Ally to turn the page on a tumultuous chapter in its history," Michael Carpenter, chief executive of Ally, said in a statement.

The deal, which requires court approval, also paves the way for ResCap to move forward on a plan that could ease its exit from Chapter 11 bankruptcy. A fight between Ally and ResCap's creditors over the parent company's financial obligations has bogged down proceedings, which have been underway for more than a year.

Under the settlement, Ally and ResCap's major creditors have agreed to support a reorganization plan that ResCap plans to file soon, according to motion ResCap filed Thursday in U.S. Bankruptcy Court.

"The resolution embodied in the agreement has garnered support from many of the debtors' largest" creditors, ResCap said, including trustees for its mortgage-backed securities, unsecured bondholders, and a committee representing ResCap's unsecured creditors, including American International Group Inc. (AIG), MBIA Inc. (MBI) and Allstate Corp. (ALL).

Ally's payment is significantly larger than its previous offer of $750 million, which Mr. Carpenter had described as a "hostage payment" to ResCap creditors.

Ally has already reserved for the $750 million it initially planned to pay and expects to take a charge of $1.55 billion in the second quarter related to the new agreement. The company's payment to ResCap's bankruptcy estate will include $1.95 billion in cash and $150 million in insurance proceeds it expects to receive under the plan.

Ally and ResCap first announced they had reached a new deal on May 14, though the parties have kept the specific details confidential until now.

The agreement also allows Ally to receive full repayment of its secured claims in ResCap's bankruptcy, which includes $1.13 billion owed to it under existing credit facilities.

ResCap's creditors, AIG, Paulson & Co., MBIA and Allstate, had balked at Ally's previous offer. They argued Ally controlled ResCap prior to the mortgage subsidiary's bankruptcy and stripped the unit of valuable assets, making it responsible for ResCap's liabilities.

Ally pushed back against such claims, arguing the companies operated independently of each other. But the scheduled release of an independent examiner's report last week helped accelerate negotiations among the parties through a court-appointed mediator.

The report's findings, which were ultimately filed under seal and have not been made public, could potentially fuel creditors' arguments that Ally exerted full control of ResCap. Judge Martin Glenn last week agreed to keep the report filed under seal until as late as July 3 as long as ResCap met certain milestones, including filing of settlement documents by Thursday.

ResCap creditor Berkshire Hathaway Inc. (BRKA, BRKB) on Wednesday filed a motion asking the court to make the report public, arguing its findings are necessary for creditors to determine if the settlement reached last week is a fair deal.

The settlement could be terminated, though, if the examiner's report is disclosed to any party before the court approves ResCap's plan support agreement, according to terms laid out in ResCap's court filing.

ResCap, once the fifth-largest mortgage servicer in the country, filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy on May 14, 2012, as litigation over soured mortgage securities mounted and bond payments loomed. The move was intended to help Ally, which is 74%-owned by U.S. taxpayers and not part of the bankruptcy, make a clean break from ResCap so it can move forward with repaying the $17.2 billion bailout it received during the financial crisis.

The company has repaid about $6.1 billion of that amount including dividends and interest, and executives have set their sights on eliminating $5.9 billion of the firm's preferred shares owned by the U.S. Treasury Department.

But uncertainty over ResCap's mortgage-related liabilities scuttled plans Ally had in 2011 for an initial public offering that could facilitate a sale of the U.S. Treasury's stake in the company and contributed to the Federal Reserve in March denying a capital plan Ally submitted under the regulator's most recent round of bank "stress tests."

Mr. Carpenter has said an IPO could still be a possibility in the future, and the company has had conversations with the Fed on submitting a new capital plan.

Ally, the former in-house financing arm of General Motors Co. (GM), wants to focus solely on its U.S. auto-lending and online-banking operations. The company generates a significant portion of its business from financing GM and Chrysler Group LLC dealers and car buyers.

-Joseph Checkler contributed to this report

Write to Andrew R. Johnson at andrew.r.johnson@dowjones.com

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