INSOL International What makes a good insolvency regime INSOL International What makes a good insolvency regime? Richard Heis, Partner, KPMG, London INSOL Executive Committee Helsinki 25 August 2015
Something that can cope with this …
All the way to this …
Debtor – focused regimes Chapter 11 Most continental European regimes China and Japan
Creditor – focused regimes UK Most Commonwealth countries
State – controlled regimes Bank resolution Criminal enterprises Critical infrastructure
Debtor-in-possession v. insolvency practitioner DIP IP Familiarity Cost Independence Fraud Disruption “Chapter 33” problem
Court v. out of court processes Cost Speed Fairness International recognition
Immediate process v negotiated process People business Banks Value Preservation Best price ? Fairest outcome Transparency
Pre-packs Valuation/value break Management Marketing New structure Viability “show me the money” Information Phoenix transactions Good and bad pre-packs
Non-insolvency solution Debt-for-equity swaps Cramdown Excluded creditors Binding the minority Mechanism: By consent By court By vote Valuation issues Shareholder veto
International issues “regime change” Centre of main interest Other international tricks Co-operation/reciprocity Model law Territoriality v universalism v modified universalism
Questions
Thank you Presentation by Richard Heis
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