Implementation of Preventive Restructuring – A Revolution in Czech Insolvency Law

Implementation of Preventive Restructuring – A Revolution in Czech Insolvency Law

Czech Republic
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A long-awaited bill on preventive restructuring (Bill), implementing the directive on preventive restructuring frameworks, will introduce a brand-new legal tool preventing the insolvency of viable enterprises in temporary financial difficulties.

The Bill is in the legislative process and should become effective as of July 2022. Although it may still undergo some changes, it is already obvious that it will revolutionize Czech insolvency law.

Objective

Today, a distressed company in the Czech Republic may try to achieve an out-of-court arrangement with its creditors. This is a contract-based solution requiring the consent of all affected creditors with the terms of such restructuring. If a timely agreement with all affected parties cannot be achieved, the distressed company risks the deterioration of its financial situation or even insolvency.

The aim of the Bill is to enable debtors to restructure effectively at an early stage and to avoid insolvency, prevent the unnecessary liquidation of viable enterprises, and restore them to economic health. Unlike today, it will be possible to accomplish preventive restructuring with the involvement of key creditors only.

Qualification Conditions

Access to preventive restructuring is limited to legal entities that meet the following fundamental conditions: (1) the entity should be in good faith that its restructuring plan, as a key document of the whole process, will prevent the likelihood of insolvency; (2) the entity is not insolvent in the form of illiquidity – preventive restructuring should not apply in case of serious insolvency situations, but is aimed at continuation of the business by restructuring its assets and liabilities and by implementing operational changes; and (3) the financial difficulties are significant enough that declining the adoption of restructuring measures would – by the mere passage of time – result in the entity’s insolvency. This should exclude the preventive restructuring of financially healthy entities manipulating their creditors or business partners to provide relief beyond the ordinary course of business.

Main New Features

Since the Bill will introduce a wide range of new measures, only some of the most distinctive aspects illustrating the preventive restructuring framework will be mentioned:

Restructuring with Key Creditors Only

Compared to insolvency proceedings, preventive restructuring does not have to involve all the existing creditors of the business entity. The circle of creditors (affected parties) is chosen by the entity itself and will likely include the key creditors only – usually the banks and the top business partners. The claims of unaffected parties will be set aside as unchanged and will be satisfied within the due dates.

Protection for New and Interim Financing

The Bill provides for special protection of new and interim financing, which should create a framework for willingness of the creditors, primarily the banks, to provide new financing to the distressed business entity.

Cross-Class Cram Down

Although preventive restructuring is based on the broadest possible consensus between the business entity and its creditors when it comes to the intended restructuring measures indicated in the restructuring plan, it is possible, subject to certain conditions, to also ‘impose’ the agreement on dissenting creditors.

Limited Court Involvement

During preventive restructuring, the court will be involved only partially and subject to specific conditions in case of “partial proceedings.” In insolvency proceedings, the entity is constantly a party to the court proceedings.

Conclusion

In the aftermath of the COVID-19 pandemic, which has caused some businesses in the Czech Republic to fall on hard times, the preventive restructuring process to be introduced by the Bill is now needed more than ever.

By Ondrej Havlicek, Head of Banking & Finance, and Natalie Rosova, Attorney at Law, Schoenherr

This Article was originally published in Issue 8.11 of the CEE Legal Matters Magazine. If you would like to receive a hard copy of the magazine, you can subscribe here.