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Chapter 11

Fordham Law School

Bankruptcy Law

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Full-Text Articles in Law

The Bankruptcy Abuse Prevention And Consumer Protection Act: An Empirical Examination Of The Act's Business Bankruptcy Effects, Foteini Teloni May 2015

The Bankruptcy Abuse Prevention And Consumer Protection Act: An Empirical Examination Of The Act's Business Bankruptcy Effects, Foteini Teloni

SJD Dissertations

This paper uses a multivariate logistic regression model to examine empirically and quantify for the first time the effect of the Bankruptcy Abuse Prevention and Consumer Protection Act (BAPCPA) on the Chapter 11 landscape. Two samples are tested: a general sample consisting of firms from various corporate sectors, and a sample consisting only of retailers. Both studies show that the 2005 amendments had a statistically significant effect on traditional Chapter 11 practice. In particular, post-BAPCPA we observe a rise in rapid dispositions through the form of a sale of all or substantially all debtor assets. Indeed, in the post-amendments era, …


Chapter 11 Duration, Preplanned Cases, And Refiling Rates: An Empirical Analysis In The Post-Bapcpa Era, Foteini Teloni May 2015

Chapter 11 Duration, Preplanned Cases, And Refiling Rates: An Empirical Analysis In The Post-Bapcpa Era, Foteini Teloni

SJD Dissertations

This article empirically examines and quantifies the effect of the Bankruptcy Abuse Prevention and Consumer Protection Act (“BAPCPA”) on three distinct aspects of the Chapter 11 process: a) the duration of traditional Chapter 11 cases; b) the use of prepackaged and prenegotiated bankruptcies; and c) debtor refiling rates. The sample studied consists of companies with more than $100 million in assets that both filed for and exited Chapter 11 between 1997 and 2014. BAPCPA is found to be associated with shorter Chapter 11 case duration, and an increased use of prepackaged and prenegotiated bankruptcies. Additionally, BAPCPA is found to be …


Preserving Value In The Post-Bapcpa Era — An Empirical Study, Foteini Teloni May 2015

Preserving Value In The Post-Bapcpa Era — An Empirical Study, Foteini Teloni

SJD Dissertations

Through the use of a multivariate regression model, this article studies the effect on debtor reorganization values of the shortened reorganization timeframe imposed by the Bankruptcy Abuse Prevention and Consumer Protection Act (“BAPCPA”). The study shows that BAPCPA is positively correlated at a statistically significant level with higher reorganization recoveries. This result is attributed to the increased proportion of prepackaged and prenegotiated bankruptcies observed in the post-2005 era, as these “fast-track” bankruptcy cases entail lower costs and better preserve the firm’s value.


What We “Know” About Chapter 11 Cost Is Wrong, Stephen J. Lubben Jan 2012

What We “Know” About Chapter 11 Cost Is Wrong, Stephen J. Lubben

Fordham Journal of Corporate & Financial Law

Among the collective wisdom about large corporate bankruptcy cases, the following points are almost undisputed: Longer chapter 11 cases cost more; prepackaged chapter 11 cases cost less; cases filed in New York or Delaware cost more; and fee examiners control the costs of big chapter 11 cases. But each of these points is wrong, and in most cases entirely backward. This Article provides empirical evidence to show why. Ultimately, I argue that the complexity of the bankruptcy and the compensation structure of the professionals retained (which may itself reflect further aspects of complexity) are the key determinants of cost. The …