Herrick Restructuring Review
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Herrick's Restructuring & Finance Litigation Group is comprised of an agile team of accomplished restructuring, litigation, and corporate attorneys with decades of experience advising creditors and debtors in all phases of complex chapter 11 cases and related litigation.
Herrick Restructuring Review
1y ago
In re Boxed, Inc., No. 23-10397 (Bankr. D. Del.)
New York based e-commerce and software company, Boxed, Inc., filed for bankruptcy after failing to generate needed capital in a 2021 SPAC.
Boxed, Inc. tried to sell its e-commerce retail business and its software and service business either together or separately in 2022, but despite an extensive process could not find a buyer.
Boxed, Inc. now hopes to sell its software company via a private sale in bankruptcy and wind down the e-commerce business. At the first day hearing, the bankruptcy court explained that approval will depend on the stance ..read more
Herrick Restructuring Review
1y ago
Bankrupt cryptocurrency lender Celsius Network LLC recently sought permission to sell some of its “stablecoin” for U.S. dollars to continue operations through its Chapter 11. Celsius requires court approval for the sale pursuant to an earlier order requiring court authorization to convert its cryptocurrency to cash. According to Celsius, the sale of its stablecoins would pose no risk to creditors due to the relative stability provided by stablecoins versus traditional cryptocurrencies. Stablecoins are fiat-pegged cryptocurrency meant to track government issued currencies, usually the U.S. doll ..read more
Herrick Restructuring Review
1y ago
Herrick’s Work on Behalf of Well-Renowned Bankruptcy Professors Supported Dismissal
In October 2021, LTL Management LLC (“LTL”), an entity created by Johnson & Johnson (“J&J”) to hold its liabilities to cancer victims exposed to talc in J&J’s products, filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection. The Herrick team filed amicus briefs on behalf of a group of well-renowned bankruptcy professors in support of the Official Committee of Talc Claimants’ motion to dismiss LTL’s chapter 11 case.
The matter was originally heard before the Bankruptcy Court, where the court denied a motion ..read more
Herrick Restructuring Review
1y ago
In a recent Delaware Supreme Court decision, the Court held that there is no “insolvency exception” to the requirement in Section 271 of the DGCL that a transfer of all or substantially all of a corporation’s assets foreclosure transfer be approved by the corporation’s shareholders.
The Delaware Supreme Court overruled a decision by the Delaware Chancery Court that used Section 271—which requires a shareholder vote when a corporation sells all or substantially all of its assets—to interpret a Class Vote Provision in Stream TV Networks, Inc.’s charter. The Chancery Court also read a Delaware co ..read more
Herrick Restructuring Review
1y ago
In re Compute North Holdings, Inc., No. 22-90273 (Bankr. S.D. Tex.)
The bankruptcy court approved a portion of proposed bid procedures for the sale of Compute North.
Debtors sought an expedited sale timeline, with bids due by October 27, 2022, but the Compute North UCC objected. The parties agreed the sale timeline would be addressed at an October 21 hearing.
Compute North contractual counterparties objected, seeking favorable carveouts and clarifications in the approved sale procedure, which were also pushed to the October 21 hearing.
Other provisions of the sale procedure were a ..read more
Herrick Restructuring Review
1y ago
In re Compute North Holdings, Inc., No. 22-90273 (Bankr. S.D. Tex.)
Compute North Holdings, Inc., a large data center with a focus on cryptocurrency mining, files for Chapter 11 protection amidst an atrocious business environment for all things crypto.
Compute North was pushed into bankruptcy after its relationship with one of its primary lenders broke down.
Debtors’ plan to sell all its assets quickly may be a challenge for unsecured creditors.
The Filing: Compute North Holdings, Inc. and related entities, a data center company with a focus on blockchain and cryptocurrency mining, recently ..read more
Herrick Restructuring Review
1y ago
Last November, Judge John Dorsey of the Delaware Bankruptcy Court held in the Mallinckrodt chapter 11 case that the debtors did not have to pay a $94 million “make-whole” premium that was provided for in an indenture governing first lien notes. The indenture provides for automatic acceleration following an Event of Default, which includes a bankruptcy filing. Acceleration makes “the principal of, premium, if any, and interest on all the Notes . . . immediately due and payable . . . .”
A “make-whole” premium is a loan provision to compensate a lender if a borrower repays the debt before maturit ..read more
Herrick Restructuring Review
1y ago
On September 8, 2022, the Second Circuit held that lenders to Revlon, Inc., a global cosmetics company, must return approximately $500 million to Citibank N.A., which Citibank had inadvertently paid on Revlon’s behalf. The decision vacated a lower court’s ruling from 2021 that the lenders could retain the funds.
On August 11, 2020, Citibank, as agent under a term loan agreement, intended to process a $7.8 million interest payment by Revlon to its lenders. Instead, Citibank mistakenly wired the entire principal loan balance of nearly $1 billion from Citibank’s own account, giving the lenders a ..read more
Herrick Restructuring Review
1y ago
On November 22, 2021, the United States Bankruptcy Court for the Southern District of New York announced a modification to its judge-assignment scheme for “mega chapter 11 cases.” Under the new Local Bankruptcy Rule 1073-1(f), which took effect on December 1, 2021, mega chapter 11 cases will be randomly assigned among each of the district’s nine Bankruptcy judges irrespective of the courthouse in which the case is filed. A case will be considered a “mega” case if either the assets or liabilities of the debtor are at least $100 million (or in a multi-debtor case if the cumulative ..read more
Steven Smith Discusses the Recent Supreme Court Decision, Siegel v. Fitzgerald, with the ABF Journal
Herrick Restructuring Review
1y ago
Restructuring and Finance Litigation partner Steven B. Smith recently met with Phil Neuffer, the Managing Editor of ABF Journal, to discuss the recent United States Supreme Court decision Siegel v. Fitzgerald, No. 21-441, in which the Court unanimously held that a significant quarterly fee increase applicable to debtors in the United States Trustee judicial districts and not to debtors in the Bankruptcy Administrator judicial districts located in North Carolina and Alabama violated the uniformity requirement of the Constitution’s Bankruptcy Clause. The ABF Journal interview will be featu ..read more