The Future of Solvency and Adequate Capitalization Analysis

posted in: Valuation | 0

By Michael Simkovic, Seton Hall University School of Law

Valuation, solvency, and adequate capitalization analyses play a crucial role in corporate reorganization. Courts and bankruptcy professionals have often complained about the expense, delay, subjectivity, and unpredictability inherent in traditional approaches to valuation.

However, newer methods based on market prices for equity, debt, or options and derivatives are supplementing, and in some cases supplanting more established approaches. One proposal is that instead of looking to bond or equity prices, courts should look to credit spreads between corporate and treasury bonds. Because investors could eliminate almost all credit risk by selling a corporate bond and purchasing a treasury bond, the difference in yield between a corporate bond and a treasury bond must compensate investors for the additional risks of non-payment of corporate bonds.

Credit spreads offer a clear indicator of market actors’ expectations about the likelihood of default and the likely losses given default. With a single assumption about recovery rates—which can be grounded in historic data or sometimes backed out from contemporaneous market data—one can reconstruct a daily market estimate of a debtors’ probability of default.

Credit-spread based approaches are faster, less expensive, and more objective than current approaches. An example is provided below using data for Caesar’s Entertainment Operating Company:

 

Figure 1. Caesars risk-neutral market-implied probability of default from CDS and bond spreads (preliminary analysis).

 

The traditional financial analysis performed by the Examiner in Caesars required months of work and only looked at a few specific dates. The preliminary market-based analysis above was completed by a law professor in a few days, and indicates capital adequacy on a daily basis.

If market-based approaches to solvency analysis could be used with confidence in many large corporate bankruptcy cases, the collective savings to debtors’ estates over a decade could easily be in the tens of millions of dollars.

 

28 Law Firms Publish White Paper Addressing Trust Indenture Act Complications In Debt Restructurings

posted in: Workouts and Pre-Packs | 0

By David A. Brittenham, Matthew E. Kaplan, M. Natasha Labovitz, Peter J. Loughran, Jeffrey E. Ross, and My Chi To of Debevoise & Plimpton LLP

On April 25, 2016, 28 leading U.S. law firms published a legal opinion white paper (the “Opinion White Paper”) addressing recent decisions of the United States District Court for the Southern District of New York interpreting Section 316(b) of the Trust Indenture Act of 1939 (the “TIA”) in the Marblegate and Caesars Entertainment cases. These decisions contain language that suggests a significant departure from the widely understood meaning of TIA § 316(b) that had prevailed for decades among practitioners. They have introduced interpretive issues that have disrupted established legal opinion practice and created new obstacles for out-of-court debt restructurings.

Section 316(b) of the TIA generally provides that the right of any holder of an indenture security to receive payment of principal and interest when due may not be impaired or affected without the consent of that holder. These recent decisions suggest that TIA § 316(b) protects more than the legal right to receive payment of principal and interest in the context of a debt restructuring.

The Opinion White Paper presents general principles that can guide opinion givers until the interpretive questions raised by these recent cases are resolved through future judicial opinions or legislative action.

The Opinion White Paper and further discussion of these cases are available here: Opinion White Paper.

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The Bankruptcy Roundtable has previously posted on the Trust Indenture Act as well as the Marblegate and Caesars Entertainment cases. Most recently, Mark Roe posted an article on the underlying policy behind 316(b) and suggested regulatory and legislative changes to address the problems of bondholder holdouts and coercive exit consents: The Trust Indenture Act of 1939 in Congress and the Courts in 2016: Bringing the SEC to the Table. Additionally, the Roundtable posted the National Bankruptcy Conference Proposed Amendments to Bankruptcy Code to Facilitate Restructuring of Bond and Credit Agreement Debt.