The trustee overseeing the liquidation of MF Global Inc. has resolved all but 200 of the 28,000 claims filed by the failed brokerage's commodities and securities customers and is at a "critical stage" in talks to resolve his differences with his counterparts in the U.S. and U.K.

Trustee James Giddens "has been involved in intense discussions" with Louis Freeh, who is overseeing the liquidation of MF Global's holding company, and KPMG, MF Global's U.K. insolvency administrator, during the last several months for the return of customer property and to eliminate their competing claims.

"The Trustee does not wish to understate the difficulties and complexities of some of the issues involved," said Mr. Giddens's lawyers in an interim report filed Thursday night with the U.S. Bankruptcy Court in New York. "He believes, however, that a pragmatic, constructive approach on the part of all the parties and professionals involved has allowed these discussions to enter an advanced and critical stage."

Mr. Giddens has been sparring with the MF Global's U.K. administrators over $700 million that he says belongs to U.S. customers. The dispute hinges on whether those U.S. customers who did business in foreign markets and were supposed to have money in so-called segregated accounts can tap the assets held in a general pool of funds for U.K creditors. KPMG says $405 million should be returned to the U.K. for its commodities and securities customers

He has also been battling with Mr. Freeh, the former director of the Federal Bureau of Investigation who is overseeing the Chapter 11 case of MF Global Holdings Inc. (MFGLQ).

"The principal impediments to immediate further interim distributions to these customers, as well as to securities customers, are the large amount of 30.7 Property tied up in the U.K. and the hundreds of millions of dollars in claims filed by the Chapter 11 debtors and MFG U.K.," said Mr. Giddens.

The reference to the so-called 30.7 property concerns the property of U.S. customers trading overseas whose assets were frozen at the U.K. unit when MF Global collapsed.

Mr. Giddens has recovered about $5.3 billion of the $5.5 billion to $6 billion in U.S. customers' segregated funds held at the brokerage and has returned some $4.9 billion to customers. Despite the return of that money, he still estimates a $1.6 billion shortfall in customer accounts.

Mr. Giddens said he expects MF Global's securities' customers money will be paid in full if talks with Mr. Freeh and KPMG, which are at an advanced stage, are successful. However, he cautioned commodities customers that "even successful resolution of these negotiations would not yield a one hundred% distribution of allowed net equity claims."

For that to happen, Mr. Giddens said, "would require substantial success in the pending litigations."

That litigation, in addition the disputes in the U.K., includes a civil suit against former MF Global Chief Executive Jon S. Corzine and other former executives. In that case Mr. Giddens joined with a group of investors suing Mr. Corzine and others for breaching their fiduciary duty to MF Global's brokerage customers.

Mr. Giddens is winding down MF Global's broker-dealer business under the authority of the Securities Investor Protection Act, which governs the liquidation of failed brokerage firms. The liquidation is separate from the bankruptcy case of MF Global Holdings, the parent company, which filed for Chapter 11 protection last fall.

MF Global, led by former New Jersey governor and Goldman Sachs Group Inc. (GS) Chairman Jon S. Corzine, collapsed in October 2011 when customers panicked over the New York firm's large bets on European debt. The firm's collapse into bankruptcy exposed a $1.6 billion shortfall in U.S. customer accounts.

MF Global's top executives, including Mr. Corzine, have denied any wrongdoing in connection with that shortfall. While investors have filed a number of civil suits against the firm's top brass no one has been charged with criminal wrongdoing.

(Dow Jones Daily Bankruptcy Review covers news about distressed companies and those under bankruptcy protection. Go to )

Write to Patrick Fitzgerald at patrick.fitzgerald@dowjones.com. Follow him on Twitter @WSJBankruptcy

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