Xu Che.  Bankruptcy is a legal status of a person or organization that cannot repay the debts it owes to creditors.  Liabilities exceed Assets  Negative.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Accounting for Legal Reorganizations and Liquidations
Advertisements

Chapter 9-Section 2 Bankruptcy Choices. Bankruptcy  A legal procedure to relieve a person of excessive debt.  Voluntary bankruptcy-the individual asks.
Bankruptcy. “One could always begin again in America, even again and again. Bankruptcy, which in the fixed society of Europe was the tragic end of a career,
Bankruptcy. What is Bankruptcy? Bankruptcy is a legal proceeding in which a person who cannot pay his or her bills can get a fresh start by canceling.
Course Layout: M&A & Other Restructuring Activities
What is important is not adding more years to life but more life
1 CHAPTER 25 Bankruptcy, Reorganization, and Liquidation.
Ronald F. Singer FINA 4330 Financial Distress Lecture 28
Copyright © 2011 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved. McGraw-Hill/Irwin Chapter 20 Corporations in Financial Difficulty.
40.1 b a c kn e x t h o m e  Identify the purposes for bankruptcy and who may file for it.  Describe the procedures in a bankruptcy (liquidation) case.
Chapter Thirteen Accounting for Legal Reorganizations and Liquidations
By Nick Sushkov. Questions to Generate Discussion What is bankruptcy? Bankruptcy is a federal court process that can help one eliminate legal responsibility.
Corporate Liquidations and Reorganizations
Bankruptcy & Reorganization Business Finance 335 Supplemental Material.
© 2004 West Legal Studies in Business A Division of Thomson Learning 1 Chapter 30 Bankruptcy Law Chapter 30 Bankruptcy Law.
Financial Distress. What is Financial Distress? A situation where a firm’s operating cash flows are not sufficient to satisfy current obligations and.
© The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc., 2004 Slide 13-1 McGraw-Hill/Irwin Chapter Thirteen Accounting for Legal Reorganizations and Liquidations.
BANKRUPTCY Ken Bakondi Kara Brausen. Bankruptcy  Defined  History  Statistics  Chapter 11  Chapter 7  Questions?
1 Chapter 15 FINANCIAL DISTRESS: TURNAROUND OPPORTUNITY OR LIQUIDATION ENTREPRENEURIAL FINANCE.
Laws Protecting Debtors/Creditors and Bankruptcy Unit C Basic Business Law Objective 6.02 Part D.
25 Bankruptcy and Insolvency © Oxford University Press, All rights reserved.
Problems With Credit Chapter 19.
Stock Market Analysis and Personal Finance Mr. Bernstein Bankruptcy and Distressed Securities May 28, 2014.
Lecture 4: Financial instruments and regulation
Bankruptcy Jing Zhang. Reasons of Bankruptcy Balance Sheet Asset Equity Liability Asset= Liability + Equity.
Bankruptcy, Reorganization, and Liquidation
13.0 Chapter 13 Leverage and Capital Structure Key Concepts and Skills Understand the effect of financial leverage on cash flows and cost of equity.
Chapter 16 Financing. Learning Objectives  Identify the common methods of debt financing for firms.  Identify the common methods of equity financing.
Finance Structures and Issues in the UAE Financial structure is a mixture of long–term debt and equity that a company uses to finance its operations, it’s.
1 Chapter 19 Business failure Copyright © Nelson Australia Pty Ltd 2003.
Bankruptcy Chapter 7 & 11 By: Carmen English. Groups Employees Shareholders Suppliers Bond Holders Secured claimants Unsecured claimants Scenario: Business.
T OPIC 12 Consumer Protection Laws. T OPIC 12: C ONSUMER P ROTECTION L AWS Learning Objectives Describe consumer laws that impact clients, including bankruptcy,
Corporate Liquidation and Reorganization Pertemuan Mata kuliah: F Akuntansi Keuangan Lanjutan II Tahun: 2010.
40.1 Law for Business, 15e by Ashcroft Chapter 40: Bankruptcy Law for Business, 15e, by Ashcroft, © 2005 West Legal Studies in Business, a Division of.
© 2004 by Nelson, a division of Thomson Canada Limited Chapter 20: Corporate Restructuring Contemporary Financial Management.
©2003 Prentice Hall Business Publishing, Advanced Accounting 8/e, Beams/Anthony/Clement/Lowensohn Corporate Liquidations and Reorganizations Chapter.
25-1 Chapter 28 Bankruptcy and Reorganization. Introduction to Bankruptcy and Reorganization  Bankruptcy Reform Act of 1978  Debtor friendly  Bankruptcy.
7 - 1 Lecture Nine Raising Capital: Sources of Long Term Financing Internal Sources: Retained Earnings Depreciation External Sources: Borrowing: Bonds.
© 2010 Cengage Learning. All Rights Reserved. May not be scanned, copied or duplicated, or posted to a publicly accessible Web site, in whole or in part.
Chapter 18 Capital & Capital Market Financial Management  It deals with raising of finance, and using and allocating financial resources of a company.
Financial plan. Forms of Financing  Major categories of financing: 1) debt 2) Equity.
Chapter 36 Bankruptcy Twomey, Business Law and the Regulatory Environment (14th Ed.)
McGraw-Hill/Irwin Copyright © 2012 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved.
Bankruptcy and Financial Distress Professor XXXXX Course Name / Number.
Law for Business Mr. Bernstein Notes, pp What is Bankruptcy? January 13, 2015.
Prentice Hall © PowerPoint Slides to accompany The Legal Environment of Business and Online Commerce 5E, by Henry R. Cheeseman Chapter 29 Bankruptcy.
McGraw-Hill/Irwin Copyright © 2011 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved. Chapter 20 Creditors’ Rights and Bankruptcy.
© 2007 Thomson South-Western Chapter 25 Bankruptcy and Financial Distress Professor XXXXX Course Name / Number.
Debt Restructuring, Corporate Reorganizations, and Liquidations Chapter 21.
Financial Management FIN300 Leverage and Capital Structure.
Chapter 35 BANKRUPTCY. 2 Bankruptcy Law Jurisdiction over bankruptcy cases is in U.S. district courts, which may refer all cases and related proceedings.
Chapter Thirteen Accounting for Legal Reorganizations and Liquidations Copyright © 2015 McGraw-Hill Education. All rights reserved. No reproduction or.
Getting Unstuck. 20/10 Rule Total borrowing should not exceed 20% of annual take-home pay. Monthly Credit payments should not exceed 10% of monthly take-home.
LESSON 9-2 BANKRUPTCY CHOICES Learning Goals: - Explain the reasons for and purposes of bankruptcy and list strategies for avoiding bankruptcy. - Describe.
Copyright ©2003 South-Western/Thomson Learning Chapter 22 Corporate Restructuring.
Copyright © 2006 by Pearson Prentice-Hall. All rights reserved Slides developed by Les Wiletzky PowerPoint Slides to Accompany ESSENTIALS OF BUSINESS AND.
Monitoring the Business + - x ÷ ÷ x x ÷ : : : : Ratio Analysis C. O' Brien Chanel College.
Business Law – week 7 Secured Transactions Bankruptcy Law Quiz Introduction to Employment Law Next Week.
To play click on circle Back to menu BankruptcyCredit Loans Potpourri.
Chapter 7 Obtaining the Right Financing for Your Business University of Bahrain College of Business Administration MGT 239: Small Business MGT239 1.
Bonds and Their Valuation Chapter 7  Assessing Risk 7-1.
Chapter 21 Creditors’ Rights and Bankruptcy Copyright © 2015 McGraw-Hill Education. All rights reserved. No reproduction or distribution without the prior.
Chapter 12.2: Bankruptcy.
FINANCIAL DISTRESSS; TURNAROUND OPPORTUNITY OR LIQUIDATION
Financial Market Theory
Corporate Senior Instruments Markets: II
The longest journey begins with the first step.
Corporate Finance reorganization.
Introduction to Law of U.S. Corporate Reorganizations
Ch.13: Leverage & Capital Structure
Presentation transcript:

Xu Che

 Bankruptcy is a legal status of a person or organization that cannot repay the debts it owes to creditors.  Liabilities exceed Assets  Negative Equity

 External business conditions  Internal business conditions  Severe monetary problems

Bankruptcy Law  Chapter 7- Liquidation for individual and businesses  Chapter 11- Reorganization  Chapter 13- Personal

 The company stops all operations and goes completely out of business.  Collateral Assets serves as protection for a lender against a borrower’s default.  Remaining Assets are liquidated

1. Secured creditors- collateral 2. Unsecured creditors - employees, suppliers, banks, government (taxes) and bondholders 3. Stockholders - preferred stock holders and common stock holders

 Company still run business and control the bankruptcy process.  Voluntary or Involuntary A corporation which continues to operate its business under chapter 11 bankruptcy proceedings is a debtor-in-possession.

Federal Court will appoint one or more committees to represent the interests of creditors and stockholders in working with the company to develop a plan of reorganization to get out of debt.  A Vote on the plan - 2/3 groups say Yes- Pass  Cancel the existing equity shares

 Success - reshaping the company into a profit entity  What if it fails? - Chapter 7

 How many firms filed Chapter 11 from Year 1993 to 2007? A. 521 B. 821 C D  How many firms emerging from bankruptcy as public companies during this period? A. 216 B. 516 C. 816 D. 1216

Year Chapter 11 bankruptcy filed Number of firms filed chapter 11 Number of firms successfully re-structured Total

 Bankruptcy is a legal status of a person or organization that cannot repay the debts it owes to creditors.  Three main causes of Bankruptcy  Chapter 7- Liquidation -Order of payment  Chapter 11- Reorganization

 “Emerging from Bankruptcy with When-Issued Trading,” Raymond M. Brooks and J. Jimmy Yang Financial Review (The), vol. 47, pp , (Aug 2012)  s-Bankruptcy.brc s-Bankruptcy.brc    comparison.aspx comparison.aspx  