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Bankruptcy and Restructuring: What Distressed Companies Should Know



Bankruptcy and restructuring help distressed companies reorganize debt, sell assets, or liquidate through Chapter 11, Chapter 7, workouts, and creditor negotiations.

Which path fits depends on whether the business can survive as a going concern or must wind down, and choosing a bankruptcy and restructuring strategy means weighing the automatic stay, financing, creditor priorities, and asset sales.

Contents


1. Understanding Bankruptcy and Restructuring for Businesses


Bankruptcy and restructuring are the legal and financial processes a company uses to address debt it cannot pay on existing terms.

They range from private negotiations with lenders to formal court proceedings. The right path depends on the size of the debt, the number of creditors, and whether the business can survive as a going concern. Title 11 of the U.S. Code governs the formal side, while contract and state law shape private workouts.



What Bankruptcy and Restructuring Mean


Bankruptcy and restructuring mean reorganizing, selling, or liquidating a company's assets and obligations under a defined legal framework.

Restructuring focuses on changing the terms of debt so a viable business can continue. Bankruptcy is the formal court process that can either reorganize a company or liquidate it. A company may restructure without ever filing, or it may use a court filing to bind creditors who will not agree voluntarily.



In-Court Versus Out-of-Court Restructuring


Out-of-court restructuring is a private renegotiation of debt, while in-court restructuring uses the bankruptcy system to bind all creditors.

Out-of-court options include forbearance, maturity extensions, covenant waivers, and debt-for-equity swaps. These are faster and less costly, but they require creditor cooperation, since a single holdout can block a deal. When holdouts or litigation make a private deal impossible, a court filing provides tools to impose a plan. Companies planning an orderly exit sometimes combine restructuring with closing a business strategies to limit personal liability.



The Main Bankruptcy Options for Companies


Companies most often use Chapter 11 to reorganize or Chapter 7 to liquidate, with other chapters for specialized cases.

The choice determines who controls the business, how creditors are paid, and whether operations continue. Cross-border cases and smaller businesses have tailored procedures. The table below compares the main options.



Chapter 11 Reorganization


Chapter 11 lets a company reorganize its debts while continuing to operate as a debtor in possession.

Existing management usually stays in control and runs the business under court supervision, often alongside an official committee of unsecured creditors appointed under 11 U.S.C. § 1102. The debtor has an exclusive period, generally the first 120 days under § 1121, to propose a plan of reorganization, and the court confirms a plan under § 1129. A plan can be confirmed over a dissenting class through cramdown if it is fair and equitable and follows the absolute priority rule. Subchapter V offers a streamlined Chapter 11 for smaller business debtors, subject to a debt limit that has changed over time, so the current threshold should be confirmed.

ChapterPurposeWho ControlsTypical Party
Chapter 11Reorganization or saleDebtor in possessionCompanies of most sizes
Chapter 7LiquidationCourt-appointed trusteeBusinesses winding down
Subchapter VStreamlined Chapter 11Debtor, with a trusteeSmaller businesses
Chapter 15Cross-border casesForeign representativeMultinational debtors


Chapter 7 Liquidation and Cross-Border Cases


Chapter 7 liquidates a company's assets through a trustee, while Chapter 15 coordinates cross-border insolvencies.

In Chapter 7, a trustee sells the company's assets and distributes proceeds to creditors according to statutory priorities, and the business ceases operating. Chapter 15 gives foreign companies a way to seek U.S. .ecognition and assistance for a proceeding pending in another country. Both differ sharply from Chapter 11, where the goal is usually survival rather than shutdown. The facts of the business decide which chapter fits.



2. How the Bankruptcy Process Protects and Binds Parties


Filing for bankruptcy triggers protections for the debtor and rules that bind creditors.

These mechanisms create breathing room to reorganize while ensuring creditors are treated according to a defined order. Understanding them helps both debtors and creditors protect their positions. Missing a deadline in this process can forfeit valuable rights.



The Automatic Stay and Debtor-in-Possession Financing


The automatic stay immediately halts most collection efforts the moment a bankruptcy petition is filed.

Under 11 U.S.C. § 362, the stay stops lawsuits, foreclosures, repossessions, and collection calls without further court action. Some actions are excluded from the stay or may be lifted, so creditors should seek relief from stay before acting against estate property. In Chapter 11, the debtor in possession keeps operating and may obtain court-approved debtor-in-possession financing under § 364, sometimes with priority or priming liens, to fund operations during the case. This combination gives a company time to stabilize and negotiate.



Creditor Priorities and Asset Sales


Creditors are paid in a defined order, and companies can sell assets during a bankruptcy case.

Secured creditors are paid from the value of their collateral, while unsecured priority claims are ranked under 11 U.S.C. § 507 before general unsecured claims and equity interests. This structure underlies the absolute priority rule applied at plan confirmation. Companies can also sell assets free and clear of many claims under § 363, a tool used in distressed corporate divestitures and going-concern sales and acquisitions. Creditors seeking to protect their recovery often act through debt collection litigation before a filing occurs.

If your company is nearing default, evaluate options before missing a payment. Early action preserves more restructuring choices and reduces the risk of forced liquidation.



3. Risks, Duties, and Getting Professional Help


Corporate bankruptcy carries specific legal risks for directors and prior transactions.

Decisions made in the months before a filing can be scrutinized and even reversed. Directors must also weigh their responsibilities as a company approaches insolvency. These risks make early, informed planning important.



Director Duties and Clawback Risks


Directors face heightened scrutiny near insolvency, and some pre-bankruptcy transfers can be clawed back.

As financial distress deepens, directors should document that they considered enterprise value, creditor impact, available alternatives, and the company's best interests under applicable state law, an approach tied to sound corporate risk and governance. Payments to creditors made within 90 days before filing, or one year for insiders, can be recovered as preferences under 11 U.S.C. § 547, though defenses may apply, including ordinary-course, contemporaneous-exchange, and new-value defenses. Section 548 generally reaches certain fraudulent transfers made within two years before the filing. Weak documentation can increase litigation, fiduciary-duty, or avoidance-action risk.



When to Seek Restructuring Counsel


You should seek restructuring counsel as soon as financial distress appears likely, not after a default.

Early advice allows a company to compare out-of-court and in-court options while it still has leverage and liquidity. Counsel can model creditor recoveries, prepare a filing if needed, and help directors reduce avoidable risk. Because bankruptcy deadlines and clawback periods are fixed by statute, timing matters. If your business is under financial pressure, consult qualified restructuring counsel to review your options.



4. Bankruptcy and Restructuring Faq: Business Insolvency Questions


These are the questions companies and creditors ask most about bankruptcy and restructuring, from how the chapters differ to how financing and asset sales work. Each answer is written to stand on its own.



What Is the Difference between Chapter 11 and Chapter 7?


Chapter 11 is a reorganization in which the company usually keeps operating and proposes a plan to restructure its debts. Chapter 7 is a liquidation in which a trustee sells the company's assets and the business stops operating. Chapter 11 aims at survival, while Chapter 7 aims at an orderly shutdown.



What Is the Automatic Stay?


The automatic stay is an immediate halt on most collection activity that begins when a bankruptcy petition is filed. Under 11 U.S.C. § 362, it stops lawsuits, foreclosures, repossessions, and collection calls. Some actions are excepted or can be lifted, so creditors should seek relief from the stay before acting.



What Is Dip Financing in Chapter 11?


DIP financing is debtor-in-possession financing that a company obtains after filing Chapter 11 to fund operations during the case. Approved by the court under 11 U.S.C. § 364, it can carry priority or priming liens to attract lenders. It helps a business maintain liquidity while it works toward a reorganization plan.



What Is a Section 363 Sale?


A Section 363 sale is a court-approved sale of a debtor's assets during bankruptcy, often free and clear of most liens and claims. Under 11 U.S.C. § 363, it lets a company sell some or all of its business, frequently through an auction, and can deliver value faster than a full reorganization plan.



What Is Out-of-Court Restructuring?


Out-of-court restructuring is a private renegotiation of debt without filing for bankruptcy. It can include forbearance, extended maturities, covenant waivers, or debt-for-equity swaps. It is faster and cheaper than a court case, but it requires creditor cooperation, since one holdout can block an agreement.



Do Directors Face Risk in a Corporate Bankruptcy?


Directors can face risk if their decisions near insolvency are challenged or if pre-filing transfers are later avoided. Payments before filing may be recovered as preferences or fraudulent transfers. Documenting decisions under applicable state law and seeking early counsel help directors reduce litigation and fiduciary-duty risk.


27 Oct, 2025


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