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    Who is going to pay for this? California Court of Appeal highlights receiver compensation issues
    2012-07-21

    Real property receivers are most commonly appointed at the request of secured creditors who are often charged with the expenses of the receivership. However, secured creditors are not the only parties who may petition for the appointment of a real property receiver.

    Filed under:
    USA, California, Insolvency & Restructuring, Litigation, Real Estate, Allen Matkins Leck Gamble Mallory & Natsis LLP, Secured loan, California courts of appeal
    Authors:
    Joshua A. del Castillo , Kim A. Bui
    Location:
    USA
    Firm:
    Allen Matkins Leck Gamble Mallory & Natsis LLP
    The cheese stands alone": United States trustee forces transfer of Houghton Mifflin Harcourt cases despite objection of all other parties
    2012-07-13

    Congratulations!  You just successfully negotiated a prepackaged chapter 11 plan of reorganization for a multi-billion dollar enterprise which leaves general unsecured creditors unimpaired and has been unanimously approved by the debtors' creditors.  It's smooth sailing from here, right?

    Filed under:
    USA, Insolvency & Restructuring, Litigation, Herrick Feinstein LLP, Bankruptcy, Debtor, Secured loan
    Authors:
    Paul Rubin , Stephen Selbst , Justin B. Singer
    Location:
    USA
    Firm:
    Herrick Feinstein LLP
    Supreme Court holds that free and clear sale plan cannot be confirmed without preserving secured creditor’s credit bidding rights
    2012-06-11

    On May 29, 2012, the Supreme Court in In RadLAX Gateway Hotel, LLC (“RadLAX”) held that a Chapter 11 reorganization plan that proposes the sale of encumbered assets free and clear of liens must honor the secured creditor’s right to credit bid its claim in order to be confirmed under the “fair and equitable” standard of the Bankruptcy Code.

    Filed under:
    USA, Insolvency & Restructuring, Litigation, Greenberg Traurig LLP, Credit (finance), Debtor, Collateral (finance), Secured creditor, Secured loan
    Authors:
    John Hutton
    Location:
    USA
    Firm:
    Greenberg Traurig LLP
    The fallout from Cherryland - will the non-recourse carve-out guaranty ever be the same again?
    2012-06-12

    The Issue  

    The issue is whether the insolvency of a borrower under a non-recourse loan can trigger recourse liability for itself and its “bad boy,” non-recourse carve-out guarantors.  

    Filed under:
    USA, Banking, Insolvency & Restructuring, Litigation, Real Estate, Haynes and Boone LLP, Debtor, Mortgage-backed security, Secured loan
    Authors:
    Trevor Hoffmann , Lawrence Mittman
    Location:
    USA
    Firm:
    Haynes and Boone LLP
    U.S. Supreme Court upholds secured lenders’ right to credit bid in sale of collateral under plan of reorganization
    2012-05-30

    The U.S. Supreme Court has ruled that a secured creditor cannot be denied its right to “credit bid”—i.e., to offset the amount of its debt against the purchase price of assets, rather than bidding in cash—in sales of collateral undertaken in connection with plans of reorganization under Chapter 11 of the Bankruptcy Code. In so ruling, the Court resolved a widely publicized split of authority among the Circuit Courts of Appeal, and rejected the Third Circuit’s ruling in the Philadelphia Newspapers case.1

    Filed under:
    USA, Banking, Insolvency & Restructuring, Litigation, Mayer Brown, Credit (finance), Collateral (finance), Statutory interpretation, Debt, Secured creditor, Secured loan, Title 11 of the US Code
    Authors:
    Brian Trust , Howard S. Beltzer , Thomas S. Kiriakos
    Location:
    USA
    Firm:
    Mayer Brown
    Supreme Court upholds credit bidding in what it calls an “easy case”
    2012-05-31

    In a decision of considerable importance for bankruptcy debtors and lenders, the Supreme Court handed down its ruling earlier today in RadLAX Gateway Hotel, LLC v. Amalgamated Bank, --- S.Ct. ----, 2012 WL 1912197 (2012). In this highly anticipated decision, the Supreme Court held that a debtor may not confirm a plan under the “cramdown” provision of 11 U.S.C. § 1129(b)(2)(A) where the plan proposes to sell a secured lender’s collateral without affording the creditor the opportunity to credit-bid for the collateral.

    Filed under:
    USA, Insolvency & Restructuring, Litigation, Locke Lord LLP, Bankruptcy, Credit (finance), Debtor, Collateral (finance), Consideration, Secured creditor, Secured loan
    Authors:
    Jason Marechal Cerise , Joseph B. DiRago
    Location:
    USA
    Firm:
    Locke Lord LLP
    In re Heritage Highgate, Inc.: timing is everything to secured creditors facing valuation issues
    2012-05-25

    On May 14, 2012, the United States Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit upheld a ruling by the Bankruptcy Court for the District of New Jersey that the fair market value of a creditor’s collateral as of the plan’s confirmation date is the proper method of valuing a secured creditor’s claim pursuant to section 506(a) of the Bankruptcy Code.  The Third Circuit also adopted a “burden-shifting framework,” finding that a secured creditor will bear the ultimate burden of proving the extent to which its claims are secured pursuant to section 506(a).

    Background

    Filed under:
    USA, Insolvency & Restructuring, Litigation, Cadwalader Wickersham & Taft LLP, Collateral (finance), Legal burden of proof, Fair market value, Valuation (finance), Secured loan, United States bankruptcy court, Third Circuit
    Location:
    USA
    Firm:
    Cadwalader Wickersham & Taft LLP
    Credit bidding and the Supreme Court: what happens next?
    2012-03-08

    On December 12, 2011, the Supreme Court granted a petition for certiorari in a case raising the question of whether a debtor's chapter 11 plan is confirmable when it proposes an auction sale of a secured creditor's assets free and clear of liens without permitting that creditor to "credit bid" its claims but instead provides the creditor with the "indubitable equivalent" of its secured claim. RadLAX Gateway Hotel, LLC v. Amalgamated Bank, No. 11-166 (cert. granted Dec. 12, 2011).

    Filed under:
    USA, Insolvency & Restructuring, Litigation, Jones Day, Credit (finance), Debtor, Secured creditor, Secured loan, Title 11 of the US Code
    Authors:
    Beth Heifetz , Kevyn D. Orr , Dan T. Moss
    Location:
    USA
    Firm:
    Jones Day
    U.S. Supreme Court to decide lenders' credit bidding rights
    2011-12-13

    From time immemorial, banks and other secured lenders have relied on their ability to "credit bid" for their collateral as a key source of protection and negotiating leverage against debtors and competing bankruptcy acquirors. Credit bidding secured debt rather than paying cash for collateral has been an effective counterweight against a debtor’s protections of the automatic stay and its exclusive right to control the plan formulation process and bankruptcy sales under Section 363 of the Bankruptcy Code.

    Filed under:
    USA, Banking, Insolvency & Restructuring, Litigation, Torys LLP, Credit (finance), Debtor, Collateral (finance), Secured loan, Title 11 of the US Code, Seventh Circuit
    Authors:
    Alison D. Bauer
    Location:
    USA
    Firm:
    Torys LLP
    Can a refinancing be "collapsed" with a prior leveraged acquisition and avoided as a fraudulent transfer?
    2011-11-10

    A recent decision of the Delaware bankruptcy court serves as a reminder of a key risk for lenders who finance leveraged transactions—namely, that a bankruptcy court may “collapse” the components of a leveraged transaction in order to avoid the lender’s liens and the debtor’s loan obligations as fraudulent transfers.

    Filed under:
    USA, Delaware, Insolvency & Restructuring, Litigation, Blank Rome LLP, Bankruptcy, Credit (finance), Debtor, Fraud, Refinancing, Default (finance), Sponsor (commercial), Leverage (finance), Secured loan, United States bankruptcy court
    Authors:
    Mathew S. Rotenberg
    Location:
    USA
    Firm:
    Blank Rome LLP

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