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Chapter 11 Bankruptcy Law

When a company has no more options but to declare itself bankrupt, it files under Chapter 7 of the bankruptcy law and obtains the protection of the federal government. In this endeavour, the assets will be sold and the creditors will be paid using that money. Several companies prefer to do this, but there are some companies that invariably prefer filing under the Chapter 11 bankruptcy law.

In a few words, Chapter 11 bankruptcy is when a company asks for the government's protection and does not take the option of being liquidized and entirely dissolved. This means that the company will be protected in part or in whole from its creditors and cannot be dissolved. A court will make the decision based on the debts the company has developed. According to the Chapter 11 bankruptcy, the creditors will overtake the whole company and run it.

The basic point behind Chapter 11 bankruptcy is that when assets that belong to the company are no longer enough to clear the debts, the creditors do not get their entire debt amount. Then the creditors will overtake the entire company due to the fact that its value is more than its separate assets. In these cases, a company is known to be bankrupt under the Chapter 11 bankruptcy law. In this case, the owners who are the shareholders of the company will relinquish their control on the company and then a court will rule in favor of who should take over control of the company.

In these cases, the best thing is that the creditors will receive more benefits and more money under Chapter 11 bankruptcy than what they would normally receive under Chapter 7 bankruptcy. People that work for the company that files bankruptcy do not lose their employment. The assets always stay intact also.

Creditors that register in court can be heard during Chapter 11 bankruptcy. The creditors present a restructuring plan if the debtors do not do so themselves. This plan will give them the chance to take control over the company. The shares of companies like these are generally considered to be worthless, and the owners suddenly have nothing.

The court must also confirm the creditors' restructuring plan. This implies the court must approve and accept it. Suggesting a variety of restructuring plans is very common under Chapter 11 bankruptcies. If no restructuring plan is approved from the court then the case will probably be converted into Chapter 7 bankruptcy instead.

Creditors under Chapter 11 bankruptcy are given identical preference as those under Chapter 7. Individuals who have secured debts are usually given preference. Individuals having collateral securities will be granted first preference in order to receive payments.

Another point is that until the primary creditor gets his full payment and is satisfied, the next creditor waiting will have to continue to wait. This is also true in the case of Chapter 7 bankruptcy, if a creditor hasn't registered himself within the limited time then he loses his chance. A company is always given a second chance under Chapter 11 bankruptcy.


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Bankruptcy Legislation New News

The business of bankruptcy law (The Daily Record)

The meltdown in the real estate and financial markets is accomplishing what the passage of time has failed to do: giving bankruptcy lawyers more work than they can handle.

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Financial industry may face new rules next year (MSNBC)

With the passage of the $700 billion rescue package, the financial industry will face greater congressional scrutiny in coming weeks and months.

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Financial industry may face new rules next year (Indianapolis Business Journal)

With the passage of the $700 billion rescue package, the financial industry will face greater congressional scrutiny in coming weeks and months. Further-reaching regulation is almost certain.

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Congress enacts historic bailout legislation for financial industry; Bush quickly signs it (Minneapolis-St. Paul Star Tribune)

The legislation providing government money to bring stability to reeling financial markets was approved 263-171.

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Financial crises spread in Europe (International Herald Tribune)

The growing crisis has underlined the difficulty of taking concerted action in Europe because its economies are far more integrated than its governing structures.

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