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Background

German insolvency law prohibits managing directors from making payments on behalf of the company after it has become illiquid or over-indebted. This does not apply to payments made when acting with the due care and diligence of a prudent business manager. Such payments are privileged as they do not reduce the insolvency estate and do not disadvantage creditors if they allow the business to continue and enable corporate recovery.

Decision

Background

When the validity of an agreed interest rate is the subject of a dispute between the parties to a loan agreement in Germany, the insolvency courts do not have jurisdiction to deal with the dispute. This is something only the civil courts can do.

Impact

If lenders provide sufficient evidence of the loan interest amount, ie usually the loan agreement, the debtor is required to prove that the interest rate contradicts public policy or is unreasonably high.

Law No. 47/2010/QH12 on credit institutions has been amended pursuant to Law No. 17/2017/QH14 (“Amended Law”) passed by the National Assembly. The Amended Law came into effect on 15 January 2018.

The Amended Law provides grounds for special control by the State Bank of Vietnam (“SBV”) against underperforming credit institutions which:

  • have failed to maintain liquidity requirements;

  • have accumulated losses exceeding 50% of the charter capital and reserve funds as recorded in the latest audited financial statements;

Summary

Bankruptcy in Vietnam applies to enterprises (including foreign invested enterprises), co operatives and co operative unions (hereafter collectively referred to as enterprises). Unlike certain countries, this does not apply to individuals.

Bankruptcy Law

Bankruptcy procedures are governed by the Law on Bankruptcy No. 51/2014/QH13 which came into effect on 1 January 2015: