After four years and four tries, El Paso Electric Co. (EPE) has finally got a plan, and a ticket out of bankruptcy. EPE's fourth amended reorganization plan has been approved by the federal bankruptcy court as well as federal and state regulators, and received near-unanimous acceptance by creditors and stockholders.
The plan proposes two alternative methods of emerging from bankruptcy. Under the preferred alternative, EPE would use the proceeds from an underwritten public offering of first mortgage bonds to repay the claims of existing secured creditors in full. If market conditions in early 1996 do not permit an underwritten offering, however, EPE would have to distribute new senior secured debt to settle the claims of secured creditors. In either case, unsecured creditors will receive cash, new secured debt, preferred stock, and 85 percent of the reorganized company's common stock. Existing preferred and common shares will be canceled, and holders will receive 15 percent of the reorganized company's common stock (em 12 percent to preferred shareholders, and 3 percent to existing common shareholders.