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Creditors

Consumer Creditor Crunch: Navigating Adjusted (and Potentially New) Landscapes

On Dec. 1, 2025, amendments to Bankruptcy Rule 3002.1 were implemented, creating new forms and enhanced response requirements for mortgage creditors in chapter 13 cases. This panel will provide an overview of the 2025 amendments to Bankruptcy Rule 3002.1, how chapter 13 trustees are handling the additional oversight obligations, and best practices employed by creditors to address certain blind spots and ambiguities. The panelists will discuss the In re Klemkowski decision and its potential impact on the mortgage-servicing landscape. In particular, the panelists will address the benefits (but associated risks) in a debtor’s use of online payment portals during a consumer bankruptcy case.Learning Objectives:Attendees will understand the key amendments to Bankruptcy Rule 3002.1, including new forms and enhanced response requirements for mortgage creditors in Chapter 13 cases.Attendees will gain insight into how Chapter 13 trustees are handling increased oversight responsibilities and the resulting impact on case administration.Attendees will learn practical strategies and best practices for mortgage creditors to ensure compliance, address ambiguities in Rule 3002.1, and evaluate risks associated with online payment portals during bankruptcy cases. 

ABI-Live: Structure and Implications of Liability-Management Exercises

Liability management exercises (LMEs) have become an increasingly prominent tool for financially distressed companies seeking to raise new capital, refinance existing obligations, and restructure debt outside of bankruptcy. From uptiers and drop-downs to double-dips and pari-plus transactions, courts are now confronting the enforceability of these transactions and defining their limits. This panel will examine the structural mechanics of LMEs, survey the evolving litigation landscape, and consider the broader implications for borrowers, lenders and the restructuring market.
$200.00

Keynote Speaker

Private credit has rapidly become one of the most dynamic areas of the capital markets, with significant implications for corporate restructurings and bankruptcy practice. Morgan O’Neill of Sound Point Capital Management will explore how private credit is shaping financing strategies, influencing restructuring outcomes, and redefining the relationships among borrowers, lenders and investors. Attendees will gain insights into current market trends, the opportunities and risks driving private credit, and what these developments mean for the future of distressed investing and restructuring.
$200.00

The Rise of Private Credit’s Role as Key Creditors in Restructurings

Private credit has rapidly grown into a multi-trillion-dollar market, reshaping the landscape of corporate finance and restructuring. With global private credit expected to rise from nearly US$2 trillion in 2023 to US$3 trillion by 2028, the influence of private credit funds as key creditors is undeniable. But questions remain as to how these funds will behave in the next major downturn, given their limited experience in workouts and restructuring. This panel will explore the evolving dynamics among private credit funds, banks, private equity and ratings agencies, and consider whether the growth of “private” markets reflects innovation or regulatory arbitrage. Attendees will gain practical insights into what restructuring professionals need to know as private credit cements its role at the center of future distressed situations.
$200.00

Great Debates | 2025 Views from the Bench

Resolved: The doctrine of in pari delicto should bar a trustee from recovering solely for the benefit of creditors.Resolved: The above transaction is an avoidable fraudulent conveyance, and the original lenders may recover more than via a general unsecured claim.A debtor engaged in an LME transaction in which the debtor received substantial liquidity by subordinating a debt secured by a first lien on the debtor’s principal assets to a new, more senior first lien. The debtor received desperately needed liquidity, but the subordination substantially impaired the recoveries received by the original first-lien lenders. A subsequent bankruptcy was filed within 18 months. Unsecured creditor recoveries will be 2%. The court determined that the subordination agreement violated the terms of the original loan agreements.
57 minutes 19 seconds
$200.00