This article assesses the effect of a reduction in secured creditor priority on distributions and administrative costs in liquidating bankruptcy cases by reporting the first empirical study of the effect of a priority change. Priority reform had redistributive effects in liquidating bankruptcy. As expected, average payments to general unsecured creditors were significantly higher after the reform than before the reform and payments to secured creditors decreased. Reform did not increase the size of the pie to be distributed in bankruptcy. Nor did it increase the direct costs of bankruptcy
In a structured dismissal of a Chapter 11 bankruptcy case, a bankruptcy court approves case dismissa...
(Excerpt) The culmination of a chapter 11 case is typically a plan that provides for payment to cred...
The law of creditors ’ remedies in developed western economies has a dual character. This title revi...
This article assesses the effect of a reduction in secured creditor priority on distributions and ad...
This article assesses the effect of a reduction in secured creditor priority on distributions and ad...
This article assesses the effect of a reduction in secured creditor priority on distributions and ad...
International audienceWe present new evidence on the violation of priority of claims in bankruptcy a...
International audienceWe present new evidence on the violation of priority of claims in bankruptcy a...
Parties to lending agreements can create priority rankings in two ways: by securing a lender or by p...
“Bankruptcy reallocates value in a faltering firm. The bankruptcy apparatus eliminates some claims a...
Firms create priority rankings among their creditors in three major ways: by issuing secured debt, s...
Over the past decade several countries, including the US, have introduced or redesigned legislation ...
This Article challenges the view that the absolute priority rule applies to a “structured dismissal”...
This Article considers the problem of priority-skipping distributions made by a chapter 11 debtor ou...
Section 1129(b)(2) of the Bankruptcy Code codifies a principle known as the “absolute priority rule....
In a structured dismissal of a Chapter 11 bankruptcy case, a bankruptcy court approves case dismissa...
(Excerpt) The culmination of a chapter 11 case is typically a plan that provides for payment to cred...
The law of creditors ’ remedies in developed western economies has a dual character. This title revi...
This article assesses the effect of a reduction in secured creditor priority on distributions and ad...
This article assesses the effect of a reduction in secured creditor priority on distributions and ad...
This article assesses the effect of a reduction in secured creditor priority on distributions and ad...
International audienceWe present new evidence on the violation of priority of claims in bankruptcy a...
International audienceWe present new evidence on the violation of priority of claims in bankruptcy a...
Parties to lending agreements can create priority rankings in two ways: by securing a lender or by p...
“Bankruptcy reallocates value in a faltering firm. The bankruptcy apparatus eliminates some claims a...
Firms create priority rankings among their creditors in three major ways: by issuing secured debt, s...
Over the past decade several countries, including the US, have introduced or redesigned legislation ...
This Article challenges the view that the absolute priority rule applies to a “structured dismissal”...
This Article considers the problem of priority-skipping distributions made by a chapter 11 debtor ou...
Section 1129(b)(2) of the Bankruptcy Code codifies a principle known as the “absolute priority rule....
In a structured dismissal of a Chapter 11 bankruptcy case, a bankruptcy court approves case dismissa...
(Excerpt) The culmination of a chapter 11 case is typically a plan that provides for payment to cred...
The law of creditors ’ remedies in developed western economies has a dual character. This title revi...