European Restructuring Insights
Stay informed about the dynamic world of financial restructuring with regular updates on recent cases, developments, trends and insights across the UK, Europe and beyond.
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European Restructuring Insights
The majority of all 2023 EMEA restructurings involving an equitisation and/or a maturity extension required the provision of new money. While equitisation can solve for an over-leveraged capital structure, and maturity extensions can provide runway for business recovery and turnaround, those steps alone are often insufficient without there also being a contemporaneous solution for liquidity. This has been the experience on many of our recent matters, and arguably is a symptom of the covenant-lite debt documents which dominate the market, and which often don't default until there is a liquidity crunch.
European Restructuring Insights
European Restructuring Insights
On 28 March 2023, the UK Office of Financial Sanctions Implementation of HM Treasury (“OFSI”) issued the “Bond amendments and restructurings for non-Designated Persons” general licence (General Licence - INT/2023/2824812) (the “Bond Amendment GL”) under the Russia (Sanctions) (EU Exit) Regulations 2019 (the “UK Russia Sanctions Regulations”).
European Restructuring Insights
In this edition of the Restructuring Watch, we cover several significant developments in the world of corporate restructuring and insolvency. We examine the effective operation of the special resolution regime in relation to Silicon Valley Bank, draw out key takeaways from numerous recent restructuring plans, and discuss the most recent government report on the permanent reforms introduced by the Corporate Insolvency and Governance Act 2020. We also explore a recent judgment in the Sova Capital special administration and take a deep dive into the long-awaited Sequana judgment.
European Restructuring Insights
Since Russia’s invasion of Ukraine in February 2022, we have seen an extraordinary range of sanctions and export controls restrictions introduced by tens of countries worldwide. The current sanctions imposed on Russia by the United States (US), the United Kingdom (UK) and the European Union (EU) are unprecedented in both their scope and application, while Russia’s countersanction responses are similarly far-reaching and unprecedented. These sanctions restrictions, which vary by jurisdiction and continue to evolve, are impacting (and will continue to impact) restructuring transactions which we have been involved in, and navigating the resulting transactional complexities will be critical for the foreseeable future – particularly as we anticipate that further sanctions and export controls will be introduced as the war continues.
European Restructuring Insights
When the Corporate Insolvency and Governance Act 2020 (CIGA) introduced the restructuring plan in England, comparisons with plans of reorganization under chapter 11 of the United States Bankruptcy Code (U.S. Bankruptcy Code) were inevitable.