--- title: "It's not just the United States; Europe is also infested with credit \"cockroaches\"!" type: "News" locale: "zh-HK" url: "https://longbridge.com/zh-HK/news/279390454.md" description: "The protective mechanisms of the credit market have simultaneously collapsed in the United States and Europe. JPMorgan Chase CEO Jamie Dimon has warned that credit issues will not be isolated. Recently, European borrowers such as Altice have initiated debt management operations, indicating market vulnerability. Altice USA has sued major creditors for alleged illegal cartel activities, and if successful, it will weaken lenders' self-protection capabilities. Investors need to pay attention to the legal terms of credit documents, as they have become a core risk variable" datetime: "2026-03-17T08:01:45.000Z" locales: - [zh-CN](https://longbridge.com/zh-CN/news/279390454.md) - [en](https://longbridge.com/en/news/279390454.md) - [zh-HK](https://longbridge.com/zh-HK/news/279390454.md) --- > 支持的語言: [简体中文](https://longbridge.com/zh-CN/news/279390454.md) | [English](https://longbridge.com/en/news/279390454.md) # It's not just the United States; Europe is also infested with credit "cockroaches"! The protective mechanisms in the credit market are simultaneously collapsing across two continents. JPMorgan Chase CEO Jamie Dimon warned last year that the issues in the credit market would not be isolated incidents—"seeing one cockroach often means there are more behind it." This assessment is now being validated in Europe. According to a report by the Financial Times on Tuesday, **the vulnerability of the European credit market has become undeniable as a number of high-profile borrowers, including Altice, Ardagh, and Victoria, have initiated "liability management exercises" (LME).** More concerning is that Altice's U.S. business, Altice USA, has recently sued major creditors such as Apollo, Ares, and BlackRock in a federal court in New York, accusing them of forming an "illegal cartel" through their cooperation agreements. If this lawsuit is successful, it could fundamentally weaken lenders' ability to coordinate self-protection and may provide a legal blueprint for European borrowers to follow. For investors, this means that the legal terms of credit documents have escalated from technical details to core risk variables. In a market environment where protective clauses in loan agreements are becoming increasingly lax, those who can understand the documents will hold the initiative. ## The European LME Wave: A Full-Scale Offensive by Borrowers Over the past two years, the European credit market has experienced a wave of intense LME shocks. Altice France, Altice International, glass packaging giant Ardagh, UK flooring manufacturer Victoria, Swiss vending machine operator Selecta, and Dutch lingerie retailer Hunkemöller have all initiated liability management exercises between 2023 and 2025. **The essence of LME is that borrowers restructure their balance sheets through legal and financial engineering—transferring valuable assets outside the scope of creditor claims, or replacing old debt with new debt to bypass existing contractual constraints, forcing lenders to accept "haircuts" rather than recovering principal at face value upon maturity.** The root of this phenomenon lies in the negotiating advantages that borrowers have gradually accumulated since the 2008 financial crisis—management and business owners have leveraged their bargaining power to secure increasingly lenient protective terms in loan agreements, while lenders have repeatedly made concessions under competitive pressure. In response to the borrowers' offensive, lenders began to fight back starting in 2023, primarily using two types of weapons: first, incorporating "blocker provisions" in contracts that explicitly prohibit certain types of LME transactions; second, signing "cooperation agreements" to establish coordination mechanisms among lenders to prevent borrowers from being picked off one by one. The combination of these two tools has proven quite effective—but it has also triggered a strong backlash from borrowers. ## Altice Lawsuit: A Legal Battle That Could Rewrite the Rules Altice Group billionaire owner Patrick Drahi's latest move has escalated this game to a new intensity. According to the Financial Times, Drahi persuaded JP Morgan to provide refinancing loans for Altice USA (which includes the Optimum Communications business) to lift the existing strict lender protection clauses and release some valuable assets—this is a key step in addressing the group's $26 billion debt pile. **The new loans provided by JP Morgan explicitly include anti-collaboration agreement clauses, which are also binding on any subsequent assignees of the loans that JP Morgan may transfer.** Drahi did not stop there. Altice USA immediately filed a lawsuit in the New York federal court against major creditors including Apollo, Ares, and BlackRock, accusing them of forming an "illegal cartel" that excludes the company from the U.S. leveraged finance market. The potential impact of this lawsuit extends far beyond the Altice case itself. If the court rules that the collaboration agreement is anti-competitive, the core tool for lenders to coordinate self-protection will be undermined, significantly reducing the resistance borrowers face in advancing LME. More concerning is that if Altice wins in the U.S., European issuers are likely to introduce the same legal arguments into their local judicial systems, further eroding the defensive space for European lenders. Even if this lawsuit ends in defeat for Altice, borrowers have already demonstrated a willingness to include anti-collaboration clauses in new loan documents, making this trend difficult to reverse. As noted by Sabrina Fox, founder of Fox Legal Training, the weakening of lender protection mechanisms has irreversibly changed the landscape of the credit market. In this never-ending game, those who truly hold the advantage are those who can accurately interpret legal documents—and the lawyers who originally drafted those lenient terms. Risk Warning and Disclaimer The market carries risks, and investment should be approached with caution. This article does not constitute personal investment advice and does not take into account the specific investment goals, financial situation, or needs of individual users. Users should consider whether any opinions, views, or conclusions in this article are suitable for their specific circumstances. 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