By Jacqueline Palank

Eastman Kodak Co. (EKDKQ) will seek to step closer toward the exit from bankruptcy protection by asking a judge to let its creditors start voting on its restructuring plan.

The Manhattan bankruptcy court on Thursday will review Kodak's disclosure statement, the outline of its restructuring plan that creditors will use to cast their votes.

That plan, which Kodak will ask the court to review in August, would see Kodak exit Chapter 11 protection under the control of its bondholders and unsecured creditors. Bondholders owed $375 million would get 85% of Kodak's new common shares, while unsecured creditors--a group that includes retirees--would get the remaining 15% on account of claims worth as much as $2.2 billion.

Assuming the company is worth $441 million at the time it exits Chapter 11 protection, as it expects, the bondholders' controlling stake would be worth $374.85 million and the unsecured creditors' stake worth $66.15 million.

The plan also includes a settlement with Kodak's U.K. pension plan, which is slated to take control of the company's personalized-imaging and document-imaging businesses to satisfy a $2.8 billion claim. Those businesses include Kodak's cameras, retail photo-printing kiosks, photo paper, scanners and other products and services.

Kodak's shareholders' equity would be canceled, and they wouldn't receive any payment under the plan.

Based in Rochester, N.Y., Kodak sought Chapter 11 protection in January 2012 and hopes to exit bankruptcy in the third quarter of this year.

Residential Capital LLC on Wednesday will ask the Manhattan bankruptcy court to let it pay back more than $1.1 billion it owes to parent to Ally Financial Inc. and to send another $800 million to bondholders.

By paying down its entire debt to its parent plus a portion of the $2.1 billion in principal it owes to bondholders now, the mortgage lender said it can eliminate millions of dollars in future interest payments. Interest payments to bondholders alone could reach $20 million a month and that cash, ResCap said, could instead go to its other creditors.

"Each dollar of interest that accrues on the [bondholders'] secured claims is one less dollar available for distribution to the debtors' unsecured creditors," ResCap said in court papers.

Paying down the debt to Ally, ResCap said, constitutes "a critical component" of ResCap's recent deal with its parent and unsecured creditors committee over its plan to exit Chapter 11.

The deal calls for Ally to pay $2.1 billion to ResCap and its creditors, a group that includes American International Group Inc. (AIG), Paulson & Co., MBIA Inc. (MBI) and Allstate Corp. (ALL). Some of the creditors had threatened to hold the government-owned Ally responsible for billions of dollars of its subsidiary's mortgage losses.

Also next week, Arcapita Bank will seek the Manhattan court's approval for its creditor-payment plan.

The Bahrain investment firm is due in court Tuesday for a hearing on the plan, which it gives it time to exit its investments and use the sale proceeds to pay creditors. Arcapita is also seeking to secure $350 million in exit financing from Goldman Sachs Group Inc. (GS), which has offered to replace Arcapita's existing bankruptcy financing with a $175 million financing offer.

The company recently cleared a major hurdle to confirmation of its creditor-payment plan: it has resolved the objections of key creditor Standard Chartered Bank. Under a settlement, the lender's claims would be paid in cash from the proceeds of the exit facility, in return for which it will accept the plan.

Arcapita, which filed for Chapter 11 protection in March 2012, manages real estate, infrastructure, private equity and venture capital investments that are compliant with Islamic Sharia law.

-Patrick Fitzgerald contributed to this article.

Write to Jacqueline Palank at jacqueline.palank@dowjones.com

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