Takata Corp's US unit reached a settlement with its creditors, lawyers for those injured by its deadly air bags and automakers that smoothes the way to end its Chapter 11 bankruptcy and sell its viable operations, according to court papers. The Japanese company's air bags can explode with too much force and have been linked to hundreds of injuries and at least 21 deaths, prompting the largest recall in automotive history and forcing Takata and its US unit, TK Holdings Inc, into bankruptcy.
The US unit was gearing up for a court fight starting on Tuesday to get a judge's approval for its plan to exit bankruptcy over the opposition of a committee for injured drivers and a separate committee of unsecured creditors. However, those two committees, automakers and Key Safety Systems, which is acquiring the viable business lines of Takata, reached a deal that resolves the biggest objections to the plan, according to court documents filed on Saturday.
Under the agreement, a trust will be established to pay compensation for those injured or killed by the air bags, which will be funded in part by automakers surrendering some of their claims against Takata. The 13 automakers which joined the agreement include General Motors Co, Ford Motor Co, Toyota Motor Corp, and the US affiliates of Honda Motor Co Ltd and Volkswagen AG.
An amended plan of reorganization that incorporates the settlements will be filed with the US Bankruptcy Court soon, according to Takata's US unit. A spokesman for the US unit and lawyers for the committee of injured drivers did not immediately respond to a request for comment.
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