Tag: Insolvency

  • Cross-Border Insolvency Forum Shopping Naivete

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    by Ted Janger and John Pottow

    Recently, two U.S. law professors and a third from Singapore offered unsolicited advice to the United Nations Commission on International Trade Law (“UNCITRAL”) regarding that organization’s ongoing efforts to harmonize and modernize the law of cross-border insolvencies.  They wrote an open letter (the “Letter”) to the Secretariat—joined by a number of other academic signatories—that calls upon UNCITRAL to abandon one of the core principles of its Model Law on Cross Border Insolvency (the “MLCBI,” adopted as chapter 15 of the U.S. Bankruptcy Code): that, other things being equal, a cross-border bankruptcy case should be based where the debtor is located. 

    This principle is implemented by according special deference and comity to the insolvency case located at the debtor’s center of main interest (the “COMI”).  The debtor’s COMI is the jurisdiction where it carries out its activities and, hence, is the jurisdiction that is known and readily apparent to third parties.  It therefore is predictable.  The COMI principle thus has a lot to recommend it.  In most cases it will enhance the legitimacy of bankruptcy outcomes by simultaneously furthering administrative convenience, increasing transparency, vindicating creditor expectations, and respecting national sovereignty.  Like most rules of private international law, it is rooted in common sense.

    Notwithstanding COMI’s many virtues, the Letter’s authors recommend jettisoning COMI in favor of a regime of unfettered forum choice and jurisdictional competition; the main proceeding entitled to deference in a multinational insolvency should be freely selected by the debtor.

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  • Bankruptcy Modification and the Emperor’s New Clothes

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    A new argument being advanced against bankruptcy modification is that it will result in trillions of dollars of losses and the collapse of the financial system.  This is the "the sky will fall" argument.  

    Leaving aside the grossly inflated numbers, let's be really clear that these are not losses that would be caused by bankruptcy modification.  These losses exist with or without bankruptcy modification.  All bankruptcy modification does is force these losses to be recognized now, rather than at some point down the road.  Bankruptcy modification doesn't change the underlying insolvency of many financial institutions.  One way or another, there are a lot of financial institutions that have to be recapitalized. 

    Financial institutions want to delay loss recognition as long as possible.  Maybe they're hoping that the market will magically rebound.  Maybe they think that 2006 prices are the "real" prices and "2009" prices are a very short-lived aberration.  But here's the crucial point:  homeowners bear the cost of delayed loss recognition by financial institutions.  Delayed loss recognition means homeowners floundering in unrealistic repayment plans and then losing their homes in foreclosure.  Delayed loss recognition means frozen credit markets because no one trusts financial institutions' balance sheets.  Delayed loss recognition means magnifying, shifting, and socializing losses.  We only make matters worse when we try to pretend that these losses don't exist.  

    We all know the story of the Emperor's New Clothes, and how everybody plays along with the emperor's conceit until a little boy points out that the emperor is stark naked.  To suggest that widespread financial institution insolvency would be caused by bankruptcy modification is akin to blaming the little boy for the emperor's nudity.