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Corporate Restructuring: How to Fix the Balance Sheet before It Breaks



A company that cannot service its debt has two choices: address the capital structure privately with creditors while operations continue, or file for Chapter 11 protection and address it under court supervision. The first path moves faster, costs less, and keeps the business out of public proceedings. The second creates the automatic stay, the DIP financing framework, and the cramdown mechanism that courts provide when consensual resolution has failed.


1. What Corporate Restructuring Involves and When Out-of-Court Solutions Work


Corporate restructuring covers any process by which a company modifies its capital structure, debt obligations, or operational profile to address a mismatch between the business's cash generation and its financial obligations.

Out-of-court restructuring allows a company to negotiate with creditors without filing for bankruptcy protection, preserving operational continuity and avoiding the public disclosure and administrative cost that Chapter 11 requires. The most common out-of-court tools include exchange offers, in which the company offers existing creditors new securities at different economic terms in exchange for their current claims; consent solicitations, in which the company seeks creditor approval to amend indenture covenants that limit flexibility; debt-for-equity swaps, in which creditors exchange debt claims for equity ownership, reducing leverage at the cost of diluting existing equity holders; and maturity extensions and forbearance agreements, in which lenders defer payment deadlines while the company pursues a longer-term solution. Out-of-court solutions require the consent of all affected creditors or a sufficient majority to achieve the economic result without court compulsion, and a single holdout creditor who declines to participate can block an otherwise viable transaction.

The choice between out-of-court and Chapter 11 turns on the company's creditor composition, the urgency of the liquidity situation, and whether the economic terms of a restructuring can be achieved without court enforcement. Before launching an out-of-court process, the company must identify who holds the debt, what consent thresholds apply, and whether holdouts can block the intended result. A company with a concentrated creditor group, a cooperative lender, and a balance sheet that needs modification rather than complete overhaul can often complete an out-of-court restructuring in weeks. A company with public bonds held by dispersed anonymous creditors, contested valuations, and a business that needs both financial restructuring and operational changes may require the court's cramdown authority to achieve a durable solution.



How Exchange Offers, Recapitalizations, and Consent Solicitations Are Structured


Out-of-court restructuring transactions are negotiated commercial agreements, and their success depends on assembling a deal that enough creditors accept to achieve the intended capital structure change.

Exchange offers require the company to register the new securities being offered or qualify for an exemption, which in practice means most exchange offers to public bondholders proceed under Rule 144A or Regulation S exemptions. A minimum tender condition ensures the company does not partially exchange into a worse capital structure: if fewer than the threshold percentage of bondholders tender, the exchange is typically cancelled. A consent solicitation accompanying an exchange offer asks tendering holders to approve amendments to the existing indenture that strip protective covenants from the bonds remaining in non-tendering holders' hands, making holdout economically disadvantageous. The combination of economic incentive and covenant stripping is the primary mechanism by which exchange offers achieve the participation rates necessary to restructure public debt out of court.

Recapitalizations restructure the equity side of the balance sheet rather than the debt, typically by issuing new equity to reduce leverage, repurchasing existing equity at distressed prices, or creating preferred equity structures that give new investors a priority return. A recapitalization should be evaluated for solvency, value transfer, and fraudulent-transfer risk before it is implemented, because a transaction that reduces the company's ability to pay its creditors at the time it is executed can be unwound by a trustee or creditors' committee if the company later enters bankruptcy. Out-of-court restructurings and recapitalizations require solvency and fraudulent transfer analysis at the time of execution, not as an afterthought.



2. What Board Members Owe As Insolvency Approaches and How Duties Are Framed


A board's fiduciary obligations are owed to equity holders when a company is solvent and operating normally. As the company approaches insolvency and eventually becomes insolvent, the corporate governance framework shifts in ways that have direct consequences for how the board documents and defends its decisions.

Under Delaware law, directors do not owe new direct fiduciary duties to creditors merely because the company is in the zone of insolvency. When the company is actually insolvent, creditors may gain standing to pursue derivative claims on behalf of the corporation, but the duties remain duties owed to the corporation, not direct duties owed to individual creditors. The practical implication is that a board approaching insolvency should continue to manage in the corporation's best interests, avoid transactions that shift value from creditors to equity holders, document the business judgment basis for major decisions, and obtain independent valuations when transactions involve related parties or reduce the asset pool available to creditors.

When the company files for Chapter 11, the board continues to manage the company as debtor-in-possession, but its authority becomes subject to oversight of the Bankruptcy Court and the U.S. Trustee. Major transactions outside the ordinary course of business require court approval under 11 U.S.C. § 363. The appointment of an unsecured creditors' committee under 11 U.S.C. § 1102 creates an organized constituency with standing to challenge management decisions, investigate prepetition conduct, and participate in plan negotiations. Corporate governance and breach of fiduciary duty analysis must begin before the company files, not after, because prepetition decisions are examined retrospectively by creditors and trustees throughout the Chapter 11 case.



How Chapter 11 Provides the Automatic Stay, Dip Financing, and Plan Confirmation


Chapter 11 gives a distressed company tools that out-of-court restructuring cannot: an automatic stay that halts all collection actions and litigation, debtor-in-possession financing that provides operating liquidity when conventional credit is unavailable, and a court-supervised plan process that can bind non-consenting creditors.

The automatic stay under 11 U.S.C. § 362 takes effect immediately upon the bankruptcy filing and halts all actions by creditors to collect pre-petition debts, foreclose on collateral, enforce judgments, or terminate contracts based on financial condition defaults. DIP financing under 11 U.S.C. § 364 allows the company to borrow on a priority basis with court approval, typically with super-priority status that makes lenders willing to extend credit to a company in bankruptcy. Plan confirmation under 11 U.S.C. § 1129 requires the Bankruptcy Court to find that the plan satisfies the absolute priority rule, which requires creditors to be paid in full before equity holders receive any distribution. The cramdown mechanism allows the Court to confirm a plan over the objection of a dissenting class when the plan satisfies the absolute priority rule and provides the dissenting class at least as much as it would receive in a Chapter 7 liquidation.

A prepackaged Chapter 11, in which the company solicits votes on the plan before filing and files simultaneously with a confirmable plan, combines the speed of an out-of-court transaction with the binding force of a court confirmation. The prepackaged structure is most effective when a majority of creditors have already agreed to the plan terms and the primary benefit of the court process is the cramdown mechanism binding holdouts. Financial restructuring and insolvency and debt restructuring require evaluating whether the creditor support necessary for a prepackaged plan can be assembled before any formal process begins.


WARN Act obligations under 29 U.S.C. § 2101 require companies conducting restructurings that involve significant workforce reductions to provide 60 days' advance notice to affected employees, state agencies, and local governments before plant closings or mass layoffs. WARN Act exceptions, including the unforeseeable business circumstances exception and the faltering company exception under 20 C.F.R. § 639.9, are limited and narrowly applied. Bankruptcy does not automatically excuse WARN compliance, and the company must analyze notice obligations before any layoffs or plant closings occur regardless of whether a bankruptcy filing is planned. Tax implications of restructuring are equally significant: IRC § 382 limits the use of net operating loss carryforwards following an ownership change, and IRC § 108 provides an exclusion from cancellation of indebtedness income for debt discharged in a Title 11 case. IRC § 382(l)(5) and § 382(l)(6) may provide special rules for ownership changes in bankruptcy restructurings, but the analysis depends on creditor and shareholder continuity, the value of the reorganized company, and the consequences of any later ownership change. Corporate restructuring and corporate reorganization planning must account for WARN Act and tax consequences before any path is selected.



3. How Distressed M&A Fits within Corporate Restructuring and When a 363 Sale Wins


A corporate restructuring does not always end in a reorganized company. Sometimes the best outcome for creditors is a sale of the business as a going concern to a buyer who can operate it without the legacy liabilities that burdened the seller.

A section 363 sale can transfer assets free and clear of interests in the property when the statutory requirements of 11 U.S.C. § 363(f) are satisfied and the sale order is properly entered. Buyers still need careful order language addressing assumed liabilities, excluded liabilities, successor-liability risk, cure obligations for contracts being assigned under § 365, and the treatment of claims not clearly covered by the free and clear order. The 363 sale process typically involves a stalking horse bidder who sets the floor price and bid protections, a court-approved marketing and bidding procedures order, an auction if qualified competing bids emerge, and a sale hearing at which the Court approves the transaction. The combination of clean title, elimination of properly addressed legacy liabilities, and speed of execution makes 363 sales attractive to buyers who would not acquire the business through a conventional M&A process because of contingent liability exposure.

The choice between a reorganization plan and a 363 sale turns on whether the business has sufficient reorganized enterprise value to satisfy creditor claims at confirmation, whether management has creditor support and a credible operating plan, and whether a market process produces a value that exceeds the reorganized value the plan would generate. A business with strong operations but unsustainable legacy costs, pension obligations, or litigation liabilities may produce better creditor recoveries through a 363 sale than through a plan that preserves those liabilities. Distressed M&A and creditors' committees practice requires modeling both paths before any filing strategy is determined.



What Makes a Corporate Restructuring Succeed and What Causes It to Fail


Most corporate restructurings that fail do not fail because the business is unviable. They fail because the process started too late, the creditor support was not assembled before the transaction launched, or the operational changes needed to make the capital structure sustainable were not addressed alongside the financial ones.

A restructuring that fixes the debt without addressing the operating costs, competitive dynamics, or management execution problems that caused the distress produces a company that will return to the same problems on a longer timeline. The most durable restructurings address both the balance sheet and the operational issues simultaneously, which is why Chapter 11 plans often include changes in management, rejection of burdensome contracts under 11 U.S.C. § 365, and operational restructuring measures alongside the financial terms.

Building the creditor coalition before the process launches, through pre-filing negotiations that produce a restructuring support agreement from key creditors, is the practice that separates successful complex restructurings from protracted value-destroying ones. A restructuring that faces creditor opposition, competing plans, or contested valuations moves slowly, depletes liquidity on professional fees, and may end in a liquidation that all parties were trying to avoid. Restructuring and insolvency and corporate M&A practice in distressed contexts requires creditor relationship management to begin well before any formal process is necessary.



4. Frequently Asked Questions about Corporate Restructuring


Corporate restructuring questions arrive from executives whose company is approaching a debt maturity it cannot refinance, from creditors holding debt in a company that has stopped paying and want to understand how to protect their position, from boards evaluating fiduciary obligations as the company's financial condition deteriorates, and from buyers evaluating distressed acquisition opportunities.



What Is the Difference between Out-of-Court Restructuring and Chapter 11?


Out-of-court restructuring is a negotiated process in which a company modifies its capital structure by agreement with creditors without filing for bankruptcy. It is faster, less expensive, and less public than Chapter 11, but it requires consent of all or a sufficient majority of affected creditors to be effective. Chapter 11 provides tools that out-of-court processes cannot: an automatic stay halting all creditor collection actions, DIP financing providing operating liquidity, and a cramdown mechanism allowing the court to confirm a plan over a dissenting class's objection. The choice depends primarily on creditor composition, liquidity urgency, and whether the economic terms can be achieved without court compulsion.



When Should a Company Choose Chapter 11 Instead of an Out-of-Court Restructuring?


Chapter 11 becomes the better path when holdout creditors cannot be managed through economic incentives and covenant stripping, when a liquidity crisis requires the immediate protection of the automatic stay to prevent foreclosure or asset seizure, when the company needs to reject burdensome executory contracts or leases under 11 U.S.C. § 365, when DIP financing is required to fund operations during the restructuring, or when cramdown authority is necessary to bind a dissenting class to a plan that satisfies the absolute priority rule. Companies facing active litigation, lender acceleration, or counterparty termination that would destroy the business without an immediate stay should evaluate Chapter 11 as a stabilization tool, not only as a last resort.



How Should Boards Manage Fiduciary Duties As Insolvency Approaches?


Under Delaware law, directors do not owe new direct fiduciary duties to creditors merely because the company is in the zone of insolvency. When the company is actually insolvent, creditors may gain standing to bring derivative claims on behalf of the corporation, but the duties remain owed to the corporation itself, not directly to individual creditors. A board approaching insolvency should avoid transactions that shift value from the creditor pool to equity holders, document the business judgment basis for major decisions, scrutinize related-party transactions for preference and fraudulent transfer exposure, and obtain independent professional advice on the company's financial condition when solvency is uncertain.



What Is a 363 Sale and When Is It the Right Restructuring Outcome?


A section 363 sale transfers assets free and clear of interests in the property when the statutory conditions of § 363(f) are satisfied and the sale order is properly entered, but buyers need careful order language addressing assumed and excluded liabilities, successor-liability risk, cure obligations, and contract assignments. It is the right restructuring outcome when reorganized enterprise value is insufficient to satisfy creditor claims under a plan, or when legacy liabilities would prevent a conventional buyer from acquiring the business at a price reflecting its operating value. The court-supervised auction produces competitive pricing, provides title certainty, and can be completed quickly once bidding procedures are approved.



How Does Irc § 382 Affect Corporate Restructuring Decisions?


IRC § 382 limits the annual use of pre-change net operating loss carryforwards following an ownership change, defined as a more than 50-percentage-point shift by five-percent shareholders within a rolling three-year period. A debt-for-equity swap that transfers more than 50 percent of the company's equity to creditors triggers this limitation. In bankruptcy restructurings, IRC § 382(l)(5) and § 382(l)(6) may provide special rules, but they do not automatically preserve all NOL value. The analysis depends on creditor and shareholder continuity, the value of the reorganized company, and whether any later ownership change eliminates the § 382(l)(5) protection. IRC § 108 separately provides an exclusion from cancellation of indebtedness income for debt discharged in a Title 11 case, which is often the most immediately valuable tax benefit in a Chapter 11 restructuring.


23 Jun, 2025


The information provided in this article is for general informational purposes only and does not constitute legal advice. Prior results do not guarantee a similar outcome. Reading or relying on the contents of this article does not create an attorney-client relationship with our firm. For advice regarding your specific situation, please consult a qualified attorney licensed in your jurisdiction.
Certain informational content on this website may utilize technology-assisted drafting tools and is subject to attorney review.

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