We study the role of distressed bank debt in affecting the outcome of Swedish bankruptcy auctions. The auction determines the going-concern premium, i.e., the premium over the piecemeal liquidation value to be paid for the right to acquire the bankrupt firm as a going concern. We show that since the distressed debt is akin to an equity position ('creditor toehold'), the bank has an incentive to finance a bidder and to induce the coalition to overbid. Moreover, the coalition's optimal bid equals the revenue-maximizing reservation price of a monopolist seller of the bankrupt firm. The empirical analysis identifies significant creditor toehold effects: the greater the toehold, the greater the winning going-concern premium, as predicted. Moreov...